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The growth of specialty
courts: It's a good solution for Alabama
The
More than 150 mental health
courts in more than 25 states are providing offenders with needed services and
supports under close court supervision. Significant cost savings could be
generated in
In 2008, the Los Angeles County
Jail was essentially the nation's largest mental institution, housing
approximately 1,400 seriously mentally ill inmates. Mental health professionals,
consumers and advocates would say that this is not a surprising revelation given
the fact that so many mentally ill people end up in the criminal justice system.
The deinstitutionalization
movement that began in the 1970s was appropriately focused on moving individuals
with mental health disorders out of large institutions and into less restrictive
community-based programs. But, the movement that began with the best intentions
nearly four decades ago has failed the very mental health consumers it was
supposed to serve.
Due in large part to more
politically expedient priorities, money that was previously directed to large,
state-operated psychiatric hospitals was never really dedicated to local mental
health centers for treating individuals with mental health needs living in the
community. The result is that community mental health programs are almost always
chronically underfunded, understaffed and unable to respond in a timely manner
to the public demand for mental health services.
It is easy to see how prisons
and jails across the
Incarcerated adult offenders
with mental health disorders are far more likely to commit suicide or to be
victimized by other inmates. Inadequate medical care for mental health disorders
often makes these conditions much more difficult and expensive to treat over
time.
Correctional officers are not
mental health professionals and are poorly equipped to serve inmates with
serious mental health needs. Correctional facilities are not therapeutic
environments. Nationally, the problem of inmates with mental health needs has
reached a crisis stage and is magnifying in both size and scope.
In
To that end, a coalition of
parent advocates, juvenile justice officials and mental health and substance
abuse treatment professionals in Montgomery County has recently completed a
12-month collaborative strategic planning initiative funded by the U.S.
Department of Justice and has produced a blueprint for addressing the mental
health needs of local juvenile offenders.
The key element of the
strategic plan is the development and implementation of a "co-occurring"
juvenile mental health court — the first of its kind in
As one of Alabama's greatest
federal jurists, Judge Frank M. Johnson, noted in his landmark 1972 Wyatt v.
Stickney decision, committing mentally ill individuals to psychiatric
institutions without providing treatment is little more than "human
warehousing."
The growing overrepresentation
of mental illness and addiction disorders among incarcerated populations is a
troubling indication that, as a society, we have merely exchanged one type of
human warehouse for another. This is both an inappropriate use of limited
resources and an affront to human dignity. Expansion of the specialty court
model through collaborative mental health policymaking is the best possible
solution to a problem that is not going away anytime soon. |
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