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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Mental
health services starved for funds Mental health
services in this region have always been strapped for cash. With a statewide
budget crunch, that situation is getting worse.
The Deschutes County Mental
Health Department receives only about $900,000 a year from property taxes
and other local sources, according to Director Gary Smith. The bulk of
its $14 million budget comes from the state and federal governments. That's
why the state revenue shortage hurts locally.
Smith explained that the funding
problem is aggravated by the fact that in modern times Deschutes County's
mental health operation has been underfunded by the state (see adjoining
story).
Smith says a year-long study
confirmed that the county was 27th in per capita funding among the state's
32 mental health programs and at the bottom for alcohol and drug treatment
money.
That means locally that "Sisters
doesn't get a whole lot of mental health coverage other than in the schools,"
Smith said.
"We don't have an office there.
We have one in Redmond, La Pine and Bend... Our primary onsite service
in Sisters is in the schools, where we have provided a minimum of six
hours a week. I don't know whether they will lose that."
The state budget crisis, worsened
by the defeat of State Measure 28 last month, is taking a bite out of
the county's mental health budget this fiscal year and promises to take
a bigger one in 2003-2004, which starts July 1.
Smith's office has gone to
a four-day work week, the staff effectively taking a 10 percent pay cut.
In a memo to the county commissioners
before the Measure 28 election the director estimated that if the measure
failed, three major outpatient services budgeted for a total of $566,l16
at the beginning of the year would be cut by $155,370, or 27 percent.
These include outpatient adult
mental health, child and adolescent mental health and community crisis
operations.
Reductions in mental health
services for Deschutes County residents who lack insurance or other means
to buy private service will grow worse with the beginning of the next
fiscal year. In the meantime, a related cut will come earlier: a March
1 cutoff of Oregon Health Plan support for mental health and alcohol and
drug treatment. That will affect an estimated 270 residents of Deschutes
County.
Smith says his department
is working hard to help the most severely ill retain access to needed
medication.
"We don't want folks not taking
their meds because that's the standard formula for getting sicker or going
into crisis and ending up in the hospital," he said.
There have been informal reports
of several suicides around the state among people who were notified by
letter of pending Oregon Health Plan cutoffs, but Smith says he knows
of no such incidents here.
In the meantime, Smith says
his department is trying to adjust to shrinking budgets by making changes
in the way it delivers service.
"I call it redesigning the
airplane at 40,000 feet," he noted wryly.
"To reduce the impact on client
services," he said, "we're moving to significantly more group treatment
as opposed to individual treatment... In order to move more people through
the system we're moving to the group model. There is some reason to believe
that it will be, if not more effective, at least more efficient. But it's
going to require adjustment on the part of the staff and of clients, who
are used to being treated individually."
The change is not universally
popular. Bob Marble of Bend, co-president of the local chapter of NAMI
(National Alliance for the Mentally Ill), likened the strategy to giving
group treatment to "a bunch of people with cancer."
There are many different types
of cancer, he noted, requiring different treatments.
Nonetheless, the mental health
department's budget problems are likely to get worse before they get better.
Smith's most immediate concern
is what will happen if the February 28 quarterly state revenue forecast
shows the need for even deeper cuts in the current state budget. The Salem
rumor mill is predicting an additional $90 million shortfall.
"The problem is we have four
months left in the biennium, four months to make up $90 million," Smith
said. "I don't know how we're going to do that. If they take it out of
mental health basically I don't think there's anything left except to
essentially close it down. There isn't enough left." East
side gets short shrift in funding Short funding is nothing new to Gary Smith. The 54-year-old Deschutes County Director of Mental Health Services says the east side has traditionally gotten short-shrift in funding for such services. He attributes it to several factors. First, "counties east of the mountains are generally ignored by Salem," he said. "We're ignored in a number of areas, not the least of which is human services." Second, the Legislature has traditionally given more money to areas closer to state hospitals to try to "get hospital costs down." A third factor has been the local population explosion. "We shot up to the seventh largest county all of a sudden and the funding didn't follow." Finally, Smith says, "there is no formula in Oregon that decides how the money will be allocated. It's all based on political whim and who's got the most juice..." He notes that the state has formulas for funding schools, community corrections, community colleges and many other local functions. "But you've got no formula for mental health, so it's a total crapshoot." Smith and others have been working to rectify the problem, or at least relieve it. In the last Legislature they pushed a bill to set up an "equity formula." It won support, but not enough to pass. They'll make a similar effort in this session, but legislators are likely to be preoccupied with the budget crisis. |
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