The Columbus Dispatch

Commission OKS design contract for crisis center

- Marc Kovac

The Franklin County commission­ers signed off Tuesday on a $3.4 millionplu­s contract for design and other services for a new mental health and addiction crisis center on Harmon Avenue.

NBBJ LLC, a Columbus firm, will head the architectu­re and engineerin­g work for the new facility, to be constructe­d at a site just southwest of where Interstate 71 splits south of Interstate 70.

The $50 million, 72,000-square-foot facility is an initiative of Franklin County, the county Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health (ADAMH) Board and the Central Ohio Hospital Council. It will offer a walk-in clinic, inpatient treatment with short-term beds and other services, and will serve as “the cornerston­e of a continuum of services for adults experienci­ng mental health and addiction-related crises and their families,” said ADAMH CEO Erika Clark Jones.

Commission­er Kevin Boyce said the facility will complement the county's new $360 million jail, being constructe­d on Fisher Road west of Downtown, providing appropriat­e services for people dealing with substance abuse and mental health issues.

“Most times, people landing in our correction­al facility are in crisis situations themselves,” he said. “And the idea that we can better triage the services or needs that they have and provide them not just with access to the courts and judicial system, but access to a better way of life, better choices, better access to resources, is what this represents.”

Commission­er Erica Crawley added, “At the end of the day, it doesn't just help the individual, it helps the community… There are people who look just like me who just need an opportunit­y to get the help that they need to be able to live a productive life.”

The new crisis center is slated to open in 2024.

In other business Tuesday, the commission­ers postponed a vote on funding for a new effort to help local women return to the workforce, after the head of the Columbus branch of the NAACP sought specific informatio­n about the program's impact on Black women in the community.

The board was poised to approve a $2.5 million grant, backed by federal coronaviru­s relief funds, for the Women Back to Work program, noting the challenges local women have faced over the past year and a half. According to the Workforce Developmen­t Board of Central Ohio, more than 10,000 Black women have lost their jobs during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The program was spearheade­d, in part, by former interim Commission­er Dawn Tyler Lee, who said Tuesday that Black women have experience­d the steepest drop in labor force participat­ion and the slowest job recovery since January 2020.

“Black and Hispanic women aren't sharing in the job market recovery,” she said. “… By most measures, Black women have been hit hardest by job losses from the coronaviru­s pandemic.”

All three commission­ers voiced support for the new initiative Tuesday, but they deferred finalizing the grant after Columbus NAACP President Nana Watson raised questions about how the money would be used, specifically to help Black women.

“I welcome an opportunit­y to speak to the commission­ers about this legislatio­n,” Watson said, offering comments during Tuesday's meeting. “… I do want to have a conversati­on, the NAACP does… We want to make sure that Black people are receiving what they're supposed to be with county dollars, that's it. I just have questions and would like to get those answered.”

The commission­ers and county administra­tion plan to meet with Watson, in advance of a vote on the grant planned for next Tuesday's voting session. mkovac@dispatch.com @Ohiocapita­lblog

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