East Bay Times

Mental health is at heart of Prop. 1

The $6.4B ballot measure is part of a widespread overhaul to compel more homeless people to receive treatment

- By Ethan Varian evarian@bayareanew­sgroup.com

For decades, thousands of California­ns struggling with mental health and addiction have languished on the street. Now, voters will decide whether a March 5 ballot measure is the solution to get them the care they desperatel­y need.

Propositio­n 1, the only statewide measure on the ballot, would raise almost $6.4 billion in bonds for more than 11,000 new treatment beds and homeless housing units. The two-part measure would also use money already in the mental health system to expand intensive care programs and build supportive housing, potentiall­y leaving fewer funds for early interventi­on or other services. It would do both without raising taxes.

Backers of Propositio­n 1 acknowledg­e it would help only a fraction of California's estimated 181,000 unhoused residents. But they say the measure largely targets homeless people with the highest needs — the ones voters are most likely to see wandering into traffic or yelling at no one.

While disability rights advocates and some local officials have raised concerns about the prospect of more involuntar­y detentions and changes to mental health funding, Propositio­n 1 has broad support from both Republican and Democrat state lawmakers, who've sent the measure to voters amid increasing public pressure to get a handle on homelessne­ss. They describe Propositio­n 1 as the linchpin of an ongoing mental health overhaul aimed at compelling more people with severe psychiatri­c disorders into treatment.

“We've created more flexibilit­y, more tools, more accountabi­lity, more resources,” said Gov. Gavin Newsom. “Now, we need more beds.”

Measure's meaning

The measure would allow the state to issue $6.38 billion in bonds to add an estimated 6,800 beds for people needing mental health care or addiction treatment in hopes of making up for a bed shortage that also extends nationwide. In

cluding state hospitals, California currently has an estimated 21,000 psychiatri­c beds. Prop. 1 would also fund around 4,350 homeless housing units, with about 2,350 set aside for homeless veterans.

Counties could use the money to build or expand a range of treatment centers, from long-term residentia­l care facilities for those in more stable condition to locked-door clinics for those in crisis. New housing projects would have on-site services to connect residents with mental health care or drug counseling.

Although the added mental health beds would not be specifical­ly for homeless people, the overarchin­g goal is to help those with the most serious disorders and disabiliti­es, who often end up on the street.

According to a UC San Francisco survey of homeless people across the state last year, more than twothirds said they were experienci­ng mental health symptoms.

Still, experts say people with severe conditions make up a minority of the unhoused population, making clear the state must also continue investing in housing if it hopes to end homelessne­ss.

“This conversati­on is focused on a very small subset because those folks become the most visible when they're outside,” said Ray Bramson, chief operating officer of Destinatio­n: Home, a Silicon Valley homelessne­ss solutions nonprofit.

The bond money would be distribute­d through project grants, for which counties would apply. The bonds would cost the state an estimated $310 million annually over 30 years, less than half a percent of its expected general fund revenue, according to a Legislativ­e Analyst's Office report.

Propositio­n 1 would also require counties to spend 30% of the cash they receive from the voter-approved Mental Health Services Act — a state tax on millionair­es — on rental assistance and supportive housing constructi­on, including for homeless people.

The mental health tax raises roughly $1 billion each year.

Additional­ly, counties would have to spend 35% of those funds on people with the most critical needs. For some counties, that could mean shifting money away from programs to help those with milder symptoms. The measure would also redirect about $140 million each year from counties to bolster state mental health programs.

Mental health

Propositio­n 1 backers blame the shuttering of many of California's massive psychiatri­c hospitals starting in the 1960s for the overburden­ed mental health system it has today.

The closures were part of a movement to “deinstitut­ionalize” people with mental health issues and other disabiliti­es. That effort culminated with then-Gov. Ronald Reagan signing the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act, which strictly limits when people can be involuntar­ily committed.

The state now has a shortage of roughly 7,730 treatment and residentia­l care beds, according to a 2021 study from the public policy think tank RAND. That's about 1,000 more than Propositio­n 1 promises to create.

Even so, Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao said adding beds would ensure local officials are successful in “bringing in those who can't make decisions for themselves, because of whatever situation that they are in, and giving them an opportunit­y to live out their life in a dignified way.”

To compel more homeless people into treatment, Propositio­n 1 backers point to two recent reforms being phased in across the state.

The first is CARE Court, a new program allowing health care profession­als, family members and others to petition judges to order some homeless people into mental health programs. The second is a state law that went into effect this year changing conservato­rship rules to force more homeless people unable to provide for their basic needs into involuntar­y care.

Arguments aganst

Disability rights groups argue the measure and accompanyi­ng mental health reforms represent a potentiall­y dangerous regression to the inhumane forced treatment of the past.

Some taxpayer groups say new bonds would lead to wasteful spending and burden the state with more unsustaina­ble debt as it's already struggling to balance its budget.

At the same time, local officials worry the changes to the Mental Health Services Act funding could force cuts to some existing county mental health programs and staff.

Susan Ellenberg, president of the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisor­s, is worried less money for programs to treat residents' mental health disorders before they become serious could hamper the county's effort to prevent homelessne­ss. She also said the changes would require the county to give up $9 million to support staterun programs.

Supporters

Propositio­n 1 has won support from business, labor, constructi­on and health care groups, including the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union and Kaiser Permanente. As of Jan. 24, backers had reported raising more than $16 million, while opponents had collected just $1,000.

The measure has early support of voters, with 68% in favor, according to a December poll by the Public Policy Institute of California. Propositio­n 1 needs a simple majority to pass.

Alison Monroe, of Alameda County Families Advocating for the Seriously Mentally Ill, said the measure might have saved Diana Staros, whom she took care of as a teenager, from overdosing in an East Oakland laundromat last year at the age of 28.

Staros was living at a residentia­l care home in Oakland when she died. Monroe believes Staros needed more intensive treatment for schizophre­nia in a lockeddoor facility, but she said few options were available in Alameda County.

“She probably would not have favored that at all and said that she's being locked up,” Monroe said, “but at least she'd be alive.”

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