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Paul Wellman (file)

Mysterious Ways: Ann Detrick provided no concrete plan to prevent homelessness when she presented her cuts to the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday.


Mental Health Budget Slashed After All

Arms Twisted, Programs Cut


Thursday, July 17, 2008
By Caitlin Crandell (Contact)
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Santa Barbara mental health nonprofits thought they were in the clear for funding in this coming fiscal year and that the threat of drastic cuts was history when on June 13 the Board of Supervisors allocated $4.15 million to Alcohol, Drug, and Mental Health Services (ADMHS). They were mistaken.

Despite the relatively large slice of the budgetary pie, Ann Detrick, ADMHS’s recently appointed director, afterward met individually with the heads of community-based organizations (CBOs) and gave them a list of cuts they would have to make. J.T. Turner, executive director of Phoenix of Santa Barbara, said he received a hand-delivered letter from Detrick's office stating that if he did not sign her contract within five working days, ADMHS would take control of his organization and begin shutting it down. He signed, agreeing to a $300,000 cut, which is 24 percent of Phoenix’s budget, and spells the end of its outpatient program. On July 15, Detrick presented a budget to the Board of Supervisors that distributed the $4.15 million over two years.

For most service providers, the most surprising part of these changes is that cuts were due not to a lack of funding, which was the concern prior to the June 13 budget hearing, but to the fact that one third of this fiscal year’s allotted money is being saved for next year.

Mike Foley, director of Casa Esperanza Homeless Shelter, also expressed confusion and frustration over the lack of information about the decisions being made at ADMHS. “I haven’t heard one public statement about what will happen to the people who lose their services,” said Foley.

The Independent tried to contact Ann Detrick numerous times over several days to answer some of these questions, but never received a reply; a receptionist said all calls from media were to be redirected to William Boyer, communications director for the County of Santa Barbara, who was short on answers. When asked why the decision was made to save a third of ADMHS’s 2008-09 funds for the next fiscal year, Boyer replied, “You lost me on that. I don’t know.” On Monday, July 14, he said he would try to find the answers, but as of press time had not supplied them.

“If we displace any of our clients, where are those clients going to go?” — 5th District Supervisor Joe Centeno

Mental health service providers, consumers, and their friends and family members presented testimony at the July 15 meeting in an effort to convince supervisors to reconsider Detrick’s proposed contracts. Turner came into the meeting hoping that the supervisors would allow a few months of provisional contracts, so that ADMHS could negotiate more reasonable and desirable contracts with the individual CBOs. Even when 5th District Supervisor Joe Centeno expressed his concerns about the fate of consumers, asking Detrick, “If we displace any of our clients, where are those clients going to go?” no concrete answer was provided. “It is our commitment to keep people in housing,” Detrick responded.

Turner said that according to his surveys, 11 programs will be eliminated countywide, ranging from a crisis support and information line, to 34 beds at licensed board-and-care homes (including Casa de Mural, Assessment Center Project, Lyons, Casa Juana Maria, and two beds at Sanctuary House), homeless services, socialization services, and work adjustment and horticultural programs. More than 250 people will lose their current services, Turner said.

He said his understanding is that the amount of housing for mentally ill clients is to remain the same even though some residential facilities will close: Some beds are to be replaced by less expensive housing that may provide a less intense level of support. He predicted that some clients will become symptomatic, hospitalized, homeless, or suicidal.

Second District Supervisor Janet Wolf also expressed her concern, saying, “I’m hoping we can come back on a quarterly basis to assess. … I want to know and the board wants to know how we are doing on this very complex problem.” Ultimately, the supervisors voted unanimously to approve the proposed contracts and agreed upon quarterly progress updates from ADMHS.

This story has been amended from the original posting for the safe of clarification and accuracy.

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Discussion Guidelines

Unconscionable. Unbelievable. Indefensible. Outrageous! They ought to be ashamed. Just ashamed.

gleetagal (anonymous profile)
July 17, 2008 at 9:12 a.m. (Suggest removal)

The Board of Supervisors gave the department a budget and said "live with it."

Dr. D. is doing as instructed and being forward looking in a stale economy.

If it is unacceptable speak to the folks with the wallet.

taz (anonymous profile)
July 17, 2008 at 10:42 a.m. (Suggest removal)

So while the County cuts the mental health budget due to the need for budget cuts, the City seems to have plenty of money to throw away addressing symptoms instead of causes by buying housing for the mentally ill. Once again the City shoots at the wrong target with your money - much like shooting at "at-risk" youth instead of parolees and active gang members. Maybe the City would do better to write a check to the county so it could provide mental health instead of ignoring one of the causes and funding more and more housing for a sure to increase mental health issue.

Look at:

Federal Homeless Official Tours Santa Barbara Housing

http://www.independent.com/news/2008/jul...

RForsyth (anonymous profile)
July 17, 2008 at 4:19 p.m. (Suggest removal)

The not so funny thing is that providing a bigger mental health budget would save more money down the road addressing the increased homelessness, decreased revenue as it affects the tourism and retail industry, increased crime and vagrancy, and now providing housing. Is this not obvious? The best solution I can think of at this point I think would be to support the Rescue Mission. We can do that without the City or County's "help".

RForsyth (anonymous profile)
July 17, 2008 at 4:25 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Alright!
It's about time the County of Santa Barbara, CUT that budget down!
I always saw Santa Barbara County as the Homeless Capital of the Nation.
Thank you County Board!
Now all those dirty, mentally ill people from the Washington DC Metro Area will leave and show up in Santa Barbara County.
Living on the streets, urinating in the doorways of local business's and demanding FREE money from those tourists that the City relys on.
I'm going out today and start posting signs in the area with a map showing where to go and how easy it is to presure such a bleeding heart County into giving away the peoples tax money to placate a problem.
Again! Thank you, Santa Barbara County Health Board, thank you.......

Dou4now

dou4now (anonymous profile)
July 17, 2008 at 10:35 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Imagine taking a wrecking ball to a historic part of a city, and then demolishing it and replacing it with a big gray-slab buildiing. This is what the plan for mental health is in Santa Barbara.

salamanda (anonymous profile)
July 18, 2008 at 7:08 a.m. (Suggest removal)

That budget includes more than just money for the homeless. Why aren't people asking about all the money shelled out for drug-addicted, alcoholic socialites that the system 'rehabilitates', sends to college for a psychology degree and then hires. They've got their own patients working for them. Now THAT'S crazy.

jessica_jones (anonymous profile)
July 20, 2008 at 6:28 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I don't know of any socialites in the system but if a drug-addicted alcoholic cleans themself up, attends college , stays clean and gets a good job helping others that is a success of the system.

taz (anonymous profile)
July 20, 2008 at 8:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)

In this crazy world, maybe it can be broken down to the "givers and the takers." (And I think we are all a bit of both!) But if we find ourselves lucky enough to be one of the givers (even if it's not by choice, perhaps by paying taxes to support others), then we need to say a big thank you to the universe for letting us be fortunate enough to give.

Who knows what the perceived less fortunate contribute to this world. We don't know everything.

Ryansbca (anonymous profile)
July 23, 2008 at 7:18 p.m. (Suggest removal)

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