Miami Herald

Thousands of Florida students struggling with mental health were committed under Baker Act

- BY RYAN DAILEY

Florida had 5,077 incidents of students being involuntar­ily committed under a mental-health law known as the Baker Act during the past school year, data presented Wednesday to a school-safety commission showed.

The Baker Act is a roughly 50-year-old state law that allows courts, lawenforce­ment officers and certain medical workers to order people who could be a harm to themselves or others to be taken to facilities for up to 72 hours.

People taken to facilities involuntar­ily under the law must receive initial examinatio­ns by physicians or clinical psychologi­sts, according to the Florida Department of Children and Families. They also can’t be released within the 72-hour period without documented approval from physicians or psychologi­sts.

School districts are required to report Baker Act data under a law approved last year by the Legislatur­e and Gov. Ron DeSantis.

REPORT PRESENTED TO MSD COMMISSION

The Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Commission, which was created after the 2018 Parkland high-school massacre, reviewed the Baker Act data Wednesday and discussed other schoolsafe­ty issues. The report marked the first schoolsspe­cific look at the number of Baker Act incidents statewide.

The data indicated 4,844 individual students were taken from campuses for involuntar­y psychiatri­c examinatio­ns under the Baker Act during the past school year.

“That means that there were 233 duplicates,” said Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, who is chairman of the commission. “But because the data is without personally identifiab­le informatio­n, we don’t know if one student was Baker acted 10 times or 233 students were Baker acted twice. But regardless, what it shows is the majority of the Baker acts are one-time events.”

The University of South Florida College of Behavioral and Community Sciences

has a Baker Act Reporting Center, which collects data on Baker Act incidents for the Department of Children and Families.

The center’s most-recent data said that during the 2019-2020 fiscal year, children ages 18 or younger accounted for 17.74% of Florida’s 128,193 people who were subject to the Baker Act involuntar­ily.

Because the reporting requiremen­t is new for school districts, schoolsafe­ty officials have not been able to analyze trends of involuntar­y examinatio­ns that start in schools.

“It’s probably going to take a couple years of data, and then looking at it, to provide any context,” Gualtieri said.

But Florida lawmakers in recent years have considered pieces of legislatio­n dealing with use of the Baker Act, with some characteri­zing it as being increasing­ly overused in schools and on younger children.

State Department of Education Senior Chancellor Jacob Oliva pointed to a separate new requiremen­t that schools designate mental-health coordinato­rs. That requiremen­t, included in legislatio­n this year, could help officials better understand the data going forward.

“When we’re having our convenings and meeting with folks regionally … is there a lack of resources, and we’re just Baker-acting kids because we don’t have anybody else to call?

Where do we start taking this data, then formulatin­g some strategic plans around that? Those conversati­ons are starting to happen at a much deeper level,” Oliva said.

Meanwhile, commission member Douglas Dodd called for more granular data reporting about the grade levels of students who are being taken for mental-health examinatio­ns.

“As a School Board member what concerns me greatly is when I see these younger children, these elementary-school children, being Baker-acted. And I would wonder if there is a way that we could identify elementary, middle, high school, what school it is. Because we have seen an increased number of younger students that are being Bakeracted,” said Dodd, who is a Citrus County School

Board member and a former school-resource officer.

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