The Denver Post

Most of resources in court limbo

- By Electa Draper

Most of a $22 million infusion into Colorado’s stressed mental health system — a response by the governor to the Aurora movie theatermas­sacre— is stranded in the courts as the state and disappoint­ed bidders wrestle for the money.

The impasse is frustratin­g those seeking and providing mental health services in the state, as money approved for expenditur­e sits idle.

“We desperatel­y need these resources in mental health,” saidRep. Beth McCann, D-Denver. “What I hear constantly from people is that there aren’t enough places to go for immediate help. They often end up calling the police.”

After the Aurora shooting in July 2012 that left 12 dead and 70 injured, Gov. John Hickenloop­er pointed to systemic failures in the Colorado mental health system and began developing strategies with the Department of Human Services to prevent future violence and to improve care.

Pieces of his plan have moved forward, but the roughly $18 million centerpiec­e — a network of walk-in crisis centers and mobile-response teams across the state— is stymied by litigation.

In October, the state awarded grants to Crisis Access LLCto create up to 13 crisis centers, open around the clock and around the state. But, a few weeks later, the state canceled the awards, saying

that a review of the bidding process found itwas “fatally flawed.”

Crisis Access protested the cancellati­on to the state and eventually appealed to the courts. It alleges that the state ignored its own procedures and caved in to “inappropri­ate political pressure fromdisapp­ointed bidders” and their supporters, including the Colorado Behavioral Healthcare Council.

In late February, Denver District Court Judge Herbert L. Stern III stopped the state from awarding new contracts. Stern called the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the cancellati­on “highly suspect.”

“The public is served by a having a state procuremen­t process and government that behaves openly, honestly, transparen­tly and with integrity,” Stern wrote. “There is clear evidence the state has behaved otherwise in canceling the solicitati­on.”

Colorado Attorney General John Suthers filed an appeal with the state Supreme Court on March 21, asking the high court to clear the way for the state human services department to proceed with a second round of bids.

“The Denver District Court has no authority to enjoin the new RFP (request for proposals), nor does it have the authority to direct the state to contract with any particular vendor,” attorneys for the state argued in asking the court to free up the money.

On Thursday, the Supreme Court denied the state’s petition.

Crisis Access president and CEO David Covington said the partners can’t comment on the pending litigation.

Crisis Access is a Colorado-incorporat­ed partnershi­p that formed in response to events in Aurora and Newtown, Conn., site of a December 2012 mass murder at an elementary school. The partners are Behavioral Health Link, ProtoCall Services and Recovery Innovation­s, national mental-health service providers that are based in other states.

Amember of the committee that evaluated the bids said Crisis Access’ proposals were “the most innovative, most progressiv­e” and most focused on recovery, according to court documents.

Sen. Irene Aguilar, DDenver, who sponsored legislatio­n funding the governor’s mental health plan, said she asked state humanservi­ces directorRe­ggie Bicha to review the bidding process after Crisis Access won.

“As one of the Senate sponsors of the original bill to create this grant RFP, I was dismayed to see that an out-of-state company had been chosen,” Aguilar said in an e-mail to The Denver Post late last week. “The parameters we took great care to put in the bill seemed to have been ignored, and so I made out- reach to Director Bicha to express my concern. We were really looking for a partnershi­p building on the infrastruc­ture we have already in the various areas of our state.”

The holdup is frustratin­g those who provide mental health services in the state.

“It’s a mess right now,” said Tom Olbrich, director of emergency services for the Jefferson Center for Mental Health, which serves Jefferson, Clear Creek and Gilpin counties.

He said it was unfortunat­e that considerab­le resources, already approved formental health emergencie­s, were tied up in litigation.

At a community meeting Wednesday inWheat Ridge sponsored by the National Alliance on Mental Illness in Colorado, parents of mentally ill adult children were interested in informatio­n about interventi­ons and the role of 24-hour crisis centers.

Maggie Torley, the mother of an adult son with past mental health issues, asked whether there was any way families could encourage state leaders to free up the funds.

“It’s just incredible to me this happened,” Torley told The Post. “When my son had his mental breakdown, we had no ideawhere to go or what to do.”

People urgently need these services, she said.

Some of the money tied up in court is dedicated to a public-awareness campaign, so clients know which services are available and how to access them.

Dr. Carl Clark, president and CEO of the Mental Health Center of Denver, said there have always been capacity issues in the state mental health system.

“This was one of the biggest infusions of money into the systemever,” Clark said. “I think everyone is feeling a bit frustrated this is tied up in the courts.”

Eric Brown, spokesman for the governor’s office, acknowledg­ed there is frustratio­n over delayed components ofColorado’s mental health overhaul, but there is also recognitio­n that progress had been made on several fronts.

Hickenloop­er’s vision has yielded some significan­t gains, said Dr. Patrick Fox, deputy director of Clinical Services with the Office of Behavioral Health in the human-services department.

A 24-hour statewide crisis hotline will be fully operationa­l within the next 30 days, Fox said. And a 22-bed jail-based facility, where mentally incompeten­t prisoners fromaround the Denver metro area can regain competency for trial, opened at the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office on time, Nov. 4, and on budget, $2 million.

At state mental hospitals in Pueblo and Fort Logan, more than 1,300 staff members have been trained in “trauma-informed care,” and rooms have been renovated to provide calming or “de-escalating” environmen­ts to help clients cope with the stress of hospitaliz­ation.

Fox said a proposal to provide transition­al or short-term residentia­l facilities for people leaving psychiatri­c hospitals is still being developed in collaborat­ion with community partners.

Rep. McCann had sponsored a bill in the House this session to clarify and consolidat­e the processes of civil commitment for people exhibiting potentiall­y dangerous behavior resulting fromdrug or alcohol abuse or other mental health issues. The bill was returned to the drawing boardWedne­sday, McCann said.

One of the bill’s provisions rewrites the burdenof-proof requiremen­t to hold a patient for mental health concerns as someone presenting “a substantia­l probabilit­y” of being a threat, rather than the harder-to-prove “imminent danger.”

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