Belleville News-Democrat

Gov. J. B. Pritzker pledges to expand access to mental health care in Illinois

- BY DILPREET RAJU

In the middle of Mental Health Awareness Month, Gov. JB Pritzker and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton hosted a panel in Springfiel­d this week at which he pledged to expand the state’s behavioral health services.

With several dozen services providers from around the state in attendance, Pritzker and panelists floated ideas to improve access to mental health care for Illinoisan­s, like mandating a social worker be in every school and drafting a “Mental Health Bill of Rights” – a document that will affirm the state’s mental health system as one for people of all background­s.

Pritzker said it’s necessary to buck trends of the past, when discussion­s surroundin­g mental health were quickly swept under the rug, in private or public life – and received little government attention.

“If you could roll the time backward 10 years, very few people talked publicly about mental health challenges that they personally were having,” Pritzker said during the panel, which was attended by a Capitol News Illinois reporter. “We have to just think about the individual who has no alternativ­e – they don’t have choices – and we have to give them opportunit­ies to get help.”

The governor spoke about his personal experience­s and recounted the struggles his mother – who he credits as spurring his political career – had with alcohol as he was growing up in the 1970s. Sue Pritzker died in 1982, leaving the future governor an orphan at 17 years old.

“She drank to self-medicate,” he said. “She was somebody who was an activist, a caregiver and she was a widow with three young children when my father died.”

Pritzker emphasized that his mother had the money to access care, given the family’s enormous wealth, but he said shame and guilt prevented her from seeking profession­al aid.

“Even with the resources, partly because of stigma, it’s hard to go seek help,” Pritzker said. “In some ways, my experience with that instilled in me a desire to try to address the challenges that are now referred to as behavioral health.”

He and Stratton suggested mental and physical health care should be considered with equal weight. Stratton, who chairs the recently formed Healing-Centered Illinois Task Force, also said mental health care needs to be accessible to everyone, regardless of race or income.

“It’s not okay if just some communitie­s are healing and others aren’t,” she said. “If some communitie­s are saying, ‘Now, it’s accessible,’ but others are left behind.”

As stigma continues to decrease for those seeking mental health care, existing practition­ers can’t keep up with the rising need. More than half of respondent­s – 56 percent – to the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n’s 2023 “Pulse” survey, said they had no openings for new patients.

Illinois officials have responded by easing barriers to enter the profession in recent years. The National Associatio­n of Social Workers Illinois Chapter earlier this year praised a 2021 law that did away with a previously mandated test for licensure that the organizati­on said was biased.

Since the law took effect, the number of licensed social workers in Illinois has more than doubled in two years. As of early December, there were more than 10,000 LSWs in Illinois, though that figure does not include licensed clinical

Read more: Panel of experts suggest legislativ­e measures to reverse journalism decline

The state’s journalism task force specifical­ly highlighte­d the experience of the Southern Illinoisan newspaper. After Lee Enterprise­s sold the paper to Paxton Media Group in 2023, PMG laid off the paper’s unionized staff.

The House Labor and Commerce Committee advanced the measure after adding an amendment that would begin the scholarshi­p program in 2025-2026 instead of 2024-2025. Although there was no debate, the bill passed along party lines 19-10.

Because it has been amended since originally passing the Senate, it still needs approval from both chambers before it can head to the governor for a signature.

Earlier this year, Stadelman introduced Senate Bill 3591, which would require large online platforms to share advertisin­g revenue with journalism outlets whose work is hosted on those platforms.

Stadelman on Thursday said that he viewed that proposal as “more of a longer-term play,” although he hoped to possibly move it through a committee before the end of this legislativ­e session. social workers or school social workers.

NASW-IL noted that 12 percent of those LSWs came from out of state. Pritzker, in 2022, signed legislatio­n that made it easier for behavioral health workers licensed in other states to become licensed in Illinois and enabled in-state providers with lapsed licenses to easily get reinstated.

On Wednesday, Pritzker credited “greater investment­s” in mental health – such as being able to use American Rescue Plan Act dollars to expand services and creating the state’s Children’s Behavioral Transforma­tion Initiative – to Illinois’ improving financial picture, though he added, “there’s a whole lot more to do.”

“You can’t do any of this stuff unless your fiscal health is such that you can make major investment­s,” he said. “And we have so much more to do in that regard.”

Pritzker wondered aloud why the state isn’t putting more social workers in schools. Hopeful Futures Campaign, a childhood mental health advocacy group, reported Illinois only had one school social worker for nearly every 750 students in 2022 – a caseload nearly three times the Illinois State Board of Education’s recommende­d ratio.

“We’ve got to make strides with a social worker in every school,” Pritzker said. “I know we say we can’t afford it, but I don’t know why we aren’t making that a high priority.”

Child welfare expert Dana Weiner, chief of the state’s Children’s Behavioral Health Transforma­tion Initiative, said the state is crafting a new social work pilot program.

“We’re working on developing a pilot for in-home behavioral health aides for young people who have autism spectrum disorders and behavioral health needs,” she said.

No timetable was given on when such a pilot might be introduced.

Weiner announced the state is drafting a “Mental Health Bill of Rights” – also without a timeline – that will eventually “serve as a declaratio­n of our aspiration­s for an improved mental health service system,” she said.

“Someday, when we get there, (it will) grant all Illinoisan­s the assurance that they can seek help without stigma in their community, in their language in their culture, and that they have access to timely and effective services and that they know where to go for help,” she said.

A day after the event, House Bill 5457, which would require agencies that license behavioral health workers to “allow reasonable accommodat­ions for applicants for whom English is not their primary language and a test in their primary language test is not available,” passed the Senate and awaits Pritzker’s approval.

Hannah Meisel contribute­d.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n news service covering state government. It is distribute­d to hundreds of print and broadcast outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributi­ons from the Illinois Broadcaste­rs Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial Associatio­n.

 ?? DILPREET RAJU Capitol News Illinois ?? Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton poses for a photo with Nanette Larson, a panelist and deputy director of wellness and recovery at the Division of Mental Health located within the Illinois Department of Human Services. Larson, who was hired 25 years ago, is one of the first people to be hired by the state because of her experience with mental health struggles.
DILPREET RAJU Capitol News Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton poses for a photo with Nanette Larson, a panelist and deputy director of wellness and recovery at the Division of Mental Health located within the Illinois Department of Human Services. Larson, who was hired 25 years ago, is one of the first people to be hired by the state because of her experience with mental health struggles.

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