W.Va. Justice Diversion Plan Balances Outpatient Treatment, Public Safety 

The state’s developing plan to divert the mentally disabled from jails and state hospitals faces organizational and funding challenges.

The state’s developing plan to divert the mentally disabled from jails and state hospitals faces organizational and funding challenges.

Senate Bill 232, passed in the 2023 Regular Session, called for creating a multi-disciplinary study group to make recommendations regarding the diversion of persons with mental illness, developmental disabilities, cognitive disabilities, substance abuse problems, and other disabilities from the criminal justice system.

In an initial report the study group leaders presented on Tuesday to the interim Joint Standing Committee on the Judiciary, the key challenges were funding and expanding community treatment programs while balancing concerns for public safety. The study group chair, Dr. David Clayman, said the shock was “how deep and wide forensic services go into everything.” 

“Child custody, abuse, neglect, adolescents are now being put in the criminal justice system because we have no place else to put them, the seriously mentally ill and the IDD group – intellectual and developmental disabilities – cognitive disabilities. So we have a pretty large mission,” Clayman said.

Study group leader Dr. Colleen Lillard, the statewide forensic clinical director, listed communication as one of many impediments to successful diversion.

“There is little program evaluation,” Lillard said. “We may have programs, and say, ‘Okay, we’re going to implement a program.’ Once the grant funding is gone, we often don’t have a path to sustainability. We also often don’t evaluate whether this program is actually working here in West Virginia. Another issue is that there’s very little to no data sharing between agencies.”

The independent group proposed creating a council of forensic mental health services to coordinate all the state services now operating without levels of sustainability. Lillard said one of the biggest issues is the lack of a continuum of care. 

“We have inpatient hospitals,” Lillard said. “But we don’t have less restrictive environments at all levels of care. We have that issue with adult mental health. We have that issue with cognitive impairments, intellectual disabilities, traumatic brain injuries, and we have that problem with substance use disorders. We need to expand our continuum of care, including step downs, transitional living, crisis stabilization, and group homes.”

Clayman said a starting point for progress might be establishing statewide crisis stabilization centers, where law enforcement making an initial arrest would have alternatives to incarceration in jail or a state hospital.  

“We can have somebody there that would not be admitted to the hospital,” Clayman said. “In 72 hours, we could have a treatment plan with our coordinated services and get them out and get them taken care of, and then track them.“

Committee member Sen. Mike Stuart, R-Kanawha, referred to a recent Wall Street Journal article noting that “it’s time to bring back asylums.”

“What happens to the significantly mentally impaired or mentally troubled person that goes back on the streets to potentially kill members of our community?” Stuart asked. “Where is there a public safety component here that you can assure us of?” 

Lillard answered that the public safety component comes through the expansion of local forensic services. 

“Forensic services become a path of least resistance, because we get them out of the criminal justice system,” she said. “We hold them in state hospitals and group homes and transitional facilities. What’s happening is they’re staying in our state psychiatric hospitals when they’re stable enough to be released to less restrictive environments, if we have the proper support and supervision in place.”

Clayman expounded on answering Stuart’s question by saying the group was not being “Pollyannaish” on protecting the public.

“We know that there’s a certain part of the population that cannot live in the community ever again,” Clayman said. “And we know that where we should have them housed is another question because of the cost of having somebody in the hospital. Asylums assume just a kind of warehousing. And there are several forces in the world like federal law and other things that force us to be doing other kinds of things. What we’re hoping to do to address your concern is to tell you by next year what we think can be done to meet your question of what to do with them.”

Study group member and Statewide Forensic Coordinator John Snyder told the committee real solutions will take time and funding.  

“We have no idea right now how much money that’s going to take,” Snyder said. “But it does have to get back to the community because the police officers are frustrated.”

The group report noted in speaking about the acutely mentally ill in the jails, that the jails have a formulary and there’s only certain medications they are allowed to prescribe. Lillard said that is a huge hindrance for people with severe mental illness. 

“For one thing, they don’t prescribe long acting injectables,” Hilliard said. “Medications that can be given by shot once a month to manage somebody’s mental illness.”

Clayman said the study group will keep working on finalizing a strategic diversion plan throughout 2024. 

“We need to have these issues addressed,” Clayman said. “We have raised them, believe it or not, as part of our dilemma. We don’t want to come back here in a year and say guess what, here’s another chart. We may come back and say we’ve done the best we can, we don’t know what else to do.”

Completed Legislation Includes Treatment Bed Limits, Possible School District Consolidation And Retirees Back To Work 

A bill that limits the number of substance use treatment beds per West Virginia county is now headed to the governor for his signature. 

A bill that limits the number of substance use treatment beds per West Virginia county is now headed to the governor for his signature. 

House Bill 3337 passed the House after returning from the Senate amended. It limits the number of substance use disorder 28-day treatment beds to 250.  

At 288, Wood County has 26 percent of the state’s treatment beds. Thirty-nine counties have zero. Del. Vernon Criss, R-Wood, said the limit is needed to counter an overwhelming influx of out-of-state patients who he says abuse a system meant for West Virginians.

“We are recruiting people from Idaho, Montana and Colorado. They’re coming to West Virginia, they are coming to Parkersburg. They’re coming to take those beds,” Criss said. “If they took their treatments, and did what they said they were going to do to get better, that’s all fine and well, and they become productive citizens again. But they didn’t do that. They got into the program, they quit the program and became problems for the city of Parkersburg and for the county of Wood.”

Del. Mike Pushkin, D-Kanawha, was one of several who opposed the bill. Pushkin said treatment bed numbers should be based on a county’s need – not an artificial number.

“At some point that might be more than 250 in some counties, but a lot of counties, that won’t be 250. But when you cap it, once again, you’re increasing the value of the license and those licenses will be sold,” Pushkin said. “I think that there are a lot of issues the state’s facing – whether it’s homelessness, petty crime. I personally think that, that will go on if you have less treatment options.”

The bill passed 76 to 19 and is effective from passage; it goes to the governor’s desk for a signature.

The House also passed Senate Bill 99, which establishes procedures for potential consolidation of school districts. Legislators raised concerns about the possible loss of employment, and severance pay with potential consolidation. Neither issue was addressed in the bill.

And they passed House Bill 2917, which allows retired state employees who meet the minimum qualifications necessary to go back to work for the Department of Health and Human Resources. The department faces continued employee recruitment challenges and several state departments are working to bring back retirees. 

Help for Drug-Ravaged W.Va. in Bill Passed by House

The number of beds available at state-run substance abuse treatment facilities would increase in drug-ravaged West Virginia under a bill passed Wednesday…

The number of beds available at state-run substance abuse treatment facilities would increase in drug-ravaged West Virginia under a bill passed Wednesday by the House.

The bill passed on a 99-0 vote. It now moves to the state Senate.

West Virginia currently has more than 1,100 treatment beds, but struggles to meet demand. The state has the nation’s highest drug overdose death rate by far, with 41.5 deaths per 100,000 people, compared to a national average of 16.3.

The measure would allow the Department of Health and Human Resources to build a new facility or enter into an agreement with a private entity.

Funding would come from settlements of multiple lawsuits that accused wholesale drug distributors of flooding the state with prescription pain pills. In one lawsuit, AmerisourceBergen and Cardinal Health agreed in January to pay the state a combined $36 million.

The bill also allows for other funding sources.

A Charleston Gazette-Mail investigation found drug wholesalers shipped 780 million hydrocodone and oxycodone pills to West Virginia in six years, a period when 1,728 people statewide fatally overdosed.

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