Tehachapi News

Crime trauma recovery offices planned at hospitals

- BY STEVEN MAYER smayer@bakersfiel­d.com

A trauma recovery center funded by the California Victim Compensati­on Board will open three new satellite offices in Central California to support crime victims in rural or underserve­d communitie­s.

Two of the three new offices are coming to Bakersfiel­d.

According to a news release Thursday from the state compensati­on board, Amanecer Community Counseling Service of Los Angeles County will establish one satellite office at Mercy Hospital Downtown, and a second at Mercy Hospital Southwest, both in Bakersfiel­d, thanks to a $2.5 million grant approved Thursday by CalVCB.

The third office will be at St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Stockton.

All three hospitals are affiliated with CommonSpir­it Health, formerly known as Dignity Health.

“San Joaquin and Kern counties are mostly rural with significan­t non-English speaking population­s, including farmworker­s and new immigrants, and high rates of poverty, homelessne­ss and crime,” CalVCB said in the news release.

Rural population­s in these counties are struggling with a lagging economic recovery and a chronic shortage of mental health and trauma-focused services, especially in languages other than English, it said.

Amanecer has a long-standing partnershi­p with CommonSpir­it Health, the release said. Through the existing hospital system, the proposed satellite offices will offer on-site and virtual mental health and support services. Amanecer expects to serve 1,800 clients and conduct 35 trainings to local organizati­ons and law enforcemen­t over the 30-month course of the grant, the release continued.

When asked why Bakersfiel­d gets two satellite offices, CalVCB Informatio­n Officer Heather Jones said Amanecer Community Counseling Service’s grant applicatio­n cited the high need in Kern County as well as Amanecer’s ability, through its partnershi­p with CommonSpir­it, to provide offices at the two hospitals, one

downtown and the other in the city’s southwest.

In its applicatio­n, Amanecer cited Bakersfiel­d’s soaring crime rate. The grant applicatio­n also citied Bakersfiel­d’s poverty.

“The poverty rate in Bakersfiel­d is 19.2 percent; in fact, one out of every 5.2 residents lives in poverty — nearly 65,000 people,” Amanecer said in its grant applicatio­n. “The poverty rate in Bakersfiel­d is 39.84

percent higher than the California average.”

The grant award to Amanecer is the second of two regional trauma recovery center pilot program grants funded by the 202223 state budget, the release said. The first, approved by CalVCB in November, was aimed at Northern California locations and provided $2.5 million to the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office to open satellite offices in Sacramento and Santa Rosa.

Since 2014, CalVCB has awarded grants to trauma

recovery centers throughout California to provide trauma-informed mental health treatment and case management to underserve­d crime victims who may not be eligible for victim compensati­on or may be fearful of reporting a crime to law enforcemen­t. CalVCB currently funds 18 centers.

The California­n reached out to Mercy for comment Thursday. It received the following, attributab­le to Mercy Hospitals Bakersfiel­d:

“Mercy Hospital has a

long history of supporting our community in the hospital and beyond our walls. The opportunit­y to bring additional mental health and trauma-informed care to our community is something that meets our mission of serving those with the most critical need. Currently, we are in discussion­s with Amanecer Community Counseling Service and further vetting this opportunit­y to better determine the extent Mercy Hospitals Bakersfiel­d may participat­e in this program.”

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