Dayton Daily News

Mental health provider cuts ties with county

ADAMHS partner runs crisis hotline, receiving center.

- By Samantha Wildow Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937503-5305 or email samantha. wildow@coxinc.com.

RI Internatio­nal, a mental health and substance use crisis service provider, will stop providing crisis services such as the Crisis Now hotline and the Montgomery County Crisis Receiving Center on behalf of Montgomery County Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services later this month.

RI Internatio­nal informed Montgomery County ADAMHS on Wednesday that it would no longer be delivering crisis services in Montgomery County effective May 22.

The Montgomery County Crisis Receiving Center will remain open until May 22. It is unclear if the center will be closed after May 22 or if Montgomery County ADAMHS will contract with another provider prior to May 22.

“Montgomery County ADAMHS is working hard to identify a provider for the seamless transition of crisis services. We plan to share more details with the community in the coming weeks,” said Tina Rezash Rogal, director of strategic initiative­s and communicat­ion at Montgomery County ADAMHS.

Trio of services

RI Internatio­nal was the service provider for the three-tiered approach Montgomery County ADAMHS and other partners, including the Montgomery County Jail Coalition, have been working to put in place in recent years to offer quick help to those going through a mental health crisis and separate those calls from calls to law enforcemen­t.

The Crisis Now hotline (833-580-CALL, or 833-5802255) in Montgomery County is separate from 988 and launched approximat­ely six months ahead of 988. It has been managed by RI Internatio­nal and funded by Montgomery County ADAMHS.

It was previously believed that 988 would replace Crisis Now, but Montgomery County ADAMHS continued to operate Crisis Now due to Crisis Now providing local services and other additional services.

“For us, it is our 988,” Helen Jones-Kelley, executive director of Montgomery County ADAMHS, said in November 2023.

The Crisis Now hotline operates from 7 a.m. to midnight, with calls after midnight transferri­ng to the 988 call centers. The 988 call center assigned to Montgomery County will also transfer some of its calls to the Crisis Now hotline, according to Montgomery County ADAMHS.

Crisis Now receives approximat­ely 1,600 to 1,800 calls a month, Joy Brunson-Nsubuga, chief operating officer for RI Internatio­nal, said last year. Brunson-Nsubuga also said RI Internatio­nal dispatches its mobile unit between 100 and 140 times a month.

Mobile crisis units, receiving center

In May 2023, Montgomery County ADAMHS received $3 million in federal funding to create new and strengthen existing mobile crisis response teams, to be led by RI Internatio­nal. The funding from Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion is a four-year grant.

In coordinati­on with local law enforcemen­t, the crisis response teams respond to mental health and substance use crises in high-need areas. One of the goals behind the crisis response teams was to reduce the number of calls made to law enforcemen­t and connect people to treatment instead of sending them to jail, officials previously said.

The Montgomery County Crisis Receiving Center has been funded through a combinatio­n of federal and state grants and a portion of Montgomery County levy dollars, according to Montgomery County ADAMHS last year. The agency also said it invested $2.3 million in federal, state and local dollars to fund the call center and the mobile crisis response teams.

The crisis receiving center operates as a “living-room style” emergency facility and offers a place where adults with short-term crisis needs can go to receive care and support. The amenities include the facility’s 16 reclining chairs, where people in crisis can rest and talk over next steps with nurses, psychology profession­als, social workers and others.

RI Internatio­nal and ADAMHS originally wanted to put the crisis receiving center at the former AAA building at 825 S. Ludlow St., but the Dayton Board of Zoning Appeals denied a variance request in March 2022.

RI Internatio­nal and Montgomery County ADAMHS settled on 601 S. Edwin C. Moses Blvd. in Dayton, the site of the former St. Elizabeth and Elizabeth Place medical facilities, for the crisis receiving center.

In April 2023, Montgomery County Sheriff Rob Streck said the sheriff’s office receives between 120 to 160 calls concerning a mental health issue each week. The types of calls range from people needing referral to resources to those thinking of hurting themselves or others, Streck said.

Streck previously said it’s not uncommon for his deputies to respond to a call, “pink slip” them and have them released before their incident report is even finished. They end up responding to another call for that individual where they are ultimately taken to the Montgomery County Jail.

Getting “pink-slipped” refers to when someone is brought to a hospital, such as by law enforcemen­t, to undergo an involuntar­y mental health assessment. The individual may be hospitaliz­ed and go through the civil commitment process through the county probate court or may get released after the assessment.

Those seeking mental health support have other options, including:

■ Finding resources for mental health and substance use at mc.localhelpn­ow.org.

■ Calling 988, the National Mental Health Hotline.

■ Texting 4Hope to 741741, the Crisis Text Line

■ Calling 937-528-7777, the Miami Valley Warmline

Those experienci­ng a mental health crisis and needing immediate care should call 911 or go to the nearest hospital emergency room.

The Dayton Daily News reached out to RI Internatio­nal for comment.

 ?? MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF ?? The Montgomery County Crisis Receiving Center, 601 S. Edwin C. Moses Blvd., Dayton.
MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF The Montgomery County Crisis Receiving Center, 601 S. Edwin C. Moses Blvd., Dayton.

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