Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Mental health services on some suburban ballots

Voters to decide on tax hikes to pay for more funding

- By Robert McCoppin

Some suburban voters in Tuesday’s election will be asked if they want to pay for better mental health services in their communitie­s.

Addison, Naperville, Lisle and Winfield townships in DuPage County; Schaumburg and Wheeling townships in Cook County; Vernon Township in Lake County; and all of Will County will hold referendum­s on whether to establish property tax levies to fund services for mental health, developmen­tal disabiliti­es and addiction.

It’s a question that Lorri Grainawi, a League of Women Voters of Illinois mental health specialist, has taken personally since the death of her 24-year-old son, Adam, in 2016, when he was struck by a train.

Adam battled schizophre­nia for years. He had no case manager or social worker to help him follow his recovery plan. His mother believes his death was accidental but might have been prevented with follow-up services. She knows other families that went through similar tragedies, and some that got more help and are doing well.

A community mental health board, like those proposed by petition in Tuesday’s election, would provide grants to local agencies to provide such potentiall­y lifesaving services. Some 90 existing mental health boards in Illinois pay for things like drop-in crisis centers, screening youths

for mental illness, and social workers who help police department­s deal with people in mental crisis.

“By doing it locally,” Grainawai said, “you’re able to serve more local needs.”

Opponents counter that numerous agencies already spend millions of dollars providing such services. Federal Medicaid and Medicare, county health department­s and the Illinois Department of Human Services provide mental health services.

Dan Patlak, president of the Republican­s of Wheeling Township and former

township assessor, said suburbanit­es pay too much in property taxes. Local government­s in Illinois had the second-highest property tax rate among all states, according to WalletHub.

Similar to some other townships, Wheeling Township already gives about $575,000 in grants to social service agencies, much of it for behavioral and mental health and intellectu­al disabiliti­es, Patlak said.

“A lot of people including myself are sympatheti­c to the idea that mental health problems are serious and need to be addressed,”

Patlak said. “Better to reallocate money that’s already out there, than to tax people further and hurt their ability to support their families, and for businesses to stay and employ people.”

Conservati­ve business owner Richard Uihlein donated $25,000 to oppose the measure, Patlak said. Opponents sent mailers to registered voters in Wheeling Township.

The proposed tax increase is small compared with most other government­al units, such as schools. Under state law, referendum proposals for mental health boards

have a maximum property tax rate of 0.15%,. but such boards typically tax at a lower rate. Advocates in Wheeling Township are calling for a tax rate of 0.026% to raise $1.5 million, for an estimated tax of roughly $28 on a home worth $335,000.

In Milton Township, voters narrowly approved a mental health board in 2021. Geri Kerger, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness in DuPage County, said her tax bill for the board was $21 for the year.

But any mental health board would be appointed by the township supervisor, and nobody knows what tax rate they’ll settle on, Patlak said. If they choose the maximum rate in Wheeling Township, he calculated, the tax bill for the average home would be much higher, at $151, or for a business, $375.

However it’s funded, the need for mental health care far outweighs availabili­ty.

In Illinois, thousands of people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es are on a yearslong waiting list for services.

Nationally, 14 million people had serious mental illness in the past year, and 40 million had a substance use disorder — but only a fraction of those got help for those problems, a federal survey found.

Not coincident­ally, overdose deaths have skyrockete­d, and the rate of suicide nationally rose 4% in 2021, to about 48,000 people — more than twice the number of homicides — with the increase most pronounced among young adults.

Kerger said the nation is in a mental health crisis that was only made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic. But she said programs funded by mental health boards include recovery specialist­s who can help people form a recovery plan and connect them with the services to do so.

The National Alliance on Mental Illness’ educationa­l programs in high schools, she said, include people living in recovery from substance abuse or mental illness.

“Kids know people who are ill, and think there’s nothing to be done,” Kerger said. “They give you hope to recover.”

 ?? STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Lorri Grainawi stands outside the Arlington Heights Village Hall on Thursday and hands informatio­n to early voters about a referendum to create a tax levy for a mental health board.
STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Lorri Grainawi stands outside the Arlington Heights Village Hall on Thursday and hands informatio­n to early voters about a referendum to create a tax levy for a mental health board.

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