California mental health care cuts: a cynical attack on the poor
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/sep2007/ment-s15.shtml

Thought people might find this article on cuts to the mental health
system useful; as it is full of facts and stats.

The working class is always under attack, and like the article hints -
voting democratic instead of republican, labour instead of
tory,etc,etc, makes no difference - all these political parties work
for the benefits of business and the rich - giving the occasional sop
to the working class - as we provide most of their votes - and
supposedly give them a mandate - though the elections in the u.s.a.
were said to be `stolen',etc, and even when the evil Thatcher was in
charge - don't think the majority of people voted for her either.

At the moment there seems to be to be no-one to vote for; even the
most `ethical' of polytrickians (surpassing such a creature exists)
only seek to reform capitalism, and make it somehow kinder and more
fair - when the inherent class bias in inbuilt into the system - this
is an impossible job.

I am not affiliated with any group,etc, though have worked with
different ones and on projects,etc, so I have no answer as in `such
and such will fix it' - being , if I have to `box myself' an
anarcho-socialist or class struggle anarchist or lib-commie, I am very
wary of solutions advocating leaders or vanguards, yet it is so hard
to get the majority of our class to realise their true
class-consciousness, I believe this is only way possible - a broad
mass movement.

All the infighting and `I'm more left than your group' etc. just
destroys and divides us.

(p.s. listening bear, did try to reply to you about - prison..poor,
but left it late, and posted on forum instead of here, but left it too
late I think, will try again but fear too late, if so, will try send
it personal if that is possible on here.
Sorry was not being ignorant mate, v busy last week J
California mental health care cuts: a cynical attack on the poor
By Marc Wells and Rafael Azul 
15 September 2007
Use this version to print | Send this link by email | Email the author
The recently approved California budget is a blatant bipartisan effort
to erode past social gains and greatly diminish the quality of life
for millions of Californians. Out of a staggering $700 million cut,
the largest portion of the social sacrifice is represented by $527
million slashed from the Health and Human Services Department, the
state agency in charge of welfare programs.
The Democrats in Sacramento are fully complicit in this and every
other provision contained in the budget recently approved by both
parties. They are playing the same role as they have in Washington on
the question of the war in Iraq—posing initially as opponents of a
reactionary agenda and right-wing policies, ultimately aiding in their
implementation.
The cuts suffered by the Health and Human Services Department
accommodate Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's request to slash $55
million from the state budget currently utilized to finance a program
called "Integrated Services for Homeless Adults with Serious Mental
Illness."
The Integrated Services cut is a ruthless attack on the most
vulnerable layer of society, the mentally ill and the homeless, as
well as thousands of families that are faced daily with the
consequences of serious mental illnesses and often consequent drug
abuse and street life.
The Integrated Services fund was originally provided through
California State Assembly Bills 34 and 2034 in 1999 and 2000,
respectively. An initial $10 million was allocated to finance 34 local
programs to provide housing and intensive support services to homeless
adults with serious mental illness or at risk of incarceration. Such
services include outreach, supportive housing and employment, reducing
and eliminating substance abuse, and mental and physical healthcare,
including medications.
Throughout the 1990s the state of California saw its income increase
from higher corporate tax and employee stock option revenues as a
result of the stock market bubble that affected the high-tech
industry. However, under the terms of Bill 34, no future funding for
the Integrated Services program would have been provided unless the
project could demonstrate positive client and system outcomes,
including cost effectiveness, within its first year.
The programs showed encouraging results in a brief span of time,
reducing the number days spent by individuals enrolled in the programs
being homeless, incarcerated or in psychiatric hospitals. Hundreds of
documented cases prove the urgent need and relative efficacy of the
initial measure. As a result, funding was increased in 2000 to $54.9
million to support 34 local programs. In the eight years since it was
instituted the programs have been held up as a national model.
However, with a homeless population in California of at least
300,000—of which, according to conservative estimates, 50,000 are
mentally ill—less than 5,000 have access to the program, making it
grossly inadequate from inception. Now even this very modest
concession is being withdrawn.
Mental health advocates, patients and their families have threatened
to sue the administration, claiming that the cut would be in violation
of Proposition 63, which prohibits the state from slashing mental
health funds below its commitment at the time the measure passed. The
Schwarzenegger administration has claimed it is not in violation by
including an unrelated item in its funding calculation.
Proposition 63 was approved by California voters in November of 2004.
It imposed a 1 percent tax on the state's richest residents (those
with taxable income in excess of $1 million). According to the
measure, the funds were to be targeted specifically to county mental
health services.
State officials claim that the new cuts would not be in violation of
Proposition 63 since the overall funds allocated for mental health
programs have not been reduced from 2004 levels. The state's claim is
based on a very narrow interpretation of the measure. The figures
would be lower were one not to include that the state was required by
federal authorities to increase funding for a children's mental health
program in response to a growing caseload.
In other words, the state gives itself the right to ignore demographic
and other changes, including increasing living costs. According to the
Schwarzenegger administration there is no connection between the rise
and intensification of psychiatric and psychological pathologies and
the mandate to satisfy these basic social needs. The governor
suggested that the program be funded out of Proposition 63 funds.
Ironically, Proposition 63 passed in 2004 riding on the wave of the
"success" reported by the Integrated Services for Homeless Adults with
Serious Mental Illness, the same program that may now be eliminated.
The tax levied amounts to an estimated total of $800 million for
2006-2007. This sum is inadequate to serve hundreds of thousands of
individuals with serious mental illness that had no access whatsoever
to needed services, according to an estimate by the California Mental
Health Planning Council.
In reality, independently of its inadequacy to fulfill its own
purported goal, the funds provided by Proposition 63 cannot fill the
void caused by the Integrated Services cut. Areas like Tehama County
or Marin County stand to lose more than 50 percent of their total
state funding. This will cause thousands to lose their homes, their
fragile mental balance and to return to a life of destitution, crime
and drug abuse. Moreover, people on parole that are excluded from the
assistance provided by Proposition 63 are eligible under the
Integrated Services program.
Prisons in California have become de facto psychiatric wards. Tens of
thousands of individuals are currently incarcerated and not afforded
the mental healthcare they need. Conditions of overpopulation and
inadequate psychological and psychiatric support only intensify their
illnesses, often causing the increase and development of substance
abuse and violent behavior.
The Integrated Services cut will directly affect the already small
slice of this population that has benefited from the program. In
addition, this will effectively counter any effort to decriminalize
mental illness.
The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) issued a comprehensive
report in 2006, the first one in 15 years, revealing the staggering
conditions and very low quality of mental healthcare that exist in the
US in general and in California in particular. Every US state has been
scored by the NAMI report on the basis of 39 specific and detailed
criteria and on responses from state mental health authorities,
resulting in an overall grade and four subcategory grades for each state.
Some of the criteria used were: "Prioritizing services to people with
severe and persistent mental illness," "Demonstrated innovation,"
"Supported employment," "Studies regarding causes of death,"
"Supported housing," "Insurance parity for mental illness" and
"Cultural competence assessment and plan."
The report gives the US an average grade of D. Five states are graded
in the B range. Eight states received Fs. None received As. California
received an overall C grade, although it scored a D in the "Services"
subcategory. The per capita mental health spending is only $109.34
against a per capita income of $38,956 as of 2006 and a total mental
health spending of almost $4 billion. However, according to the NAMI
report, the state's Proposition 63 stands as "one of the most dramatic
innovations in financing mental health services" and serves as a model
for other states.
An ever-increasing level of social polarization, together with
increasing poverty, the loss of secure jobs and the uninterrupted
attacks on living standards of working families have created a fertile
environment for the growth of mental illness, in California and
nationwide. Added to this are growing numbers of soldiers returning
from Iraq and Afghanistan suffering from war trauma, with at least one
in every five affected by a serious psychological disorder such as
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
The slashing of funds for mental health in California under these
conditions assumes a particularly cynical and cruel character, and
will inevitably result in a rise in homelessness, drug abuse and
crime. These and other cuts in the recently adopted state budget are
in line with the host of attacks on the social conditions of working
and poor people carried out under the Schwarzenegger administration.
See Also:
California budget deadlock broken as Democrats accede to right-wing
demands
[12 September 2007]
Workers, students speak out against closure of Los Angeles hospital
[22 August 2007]
Power grid fails in face of California heat wave
[26 July 2006]
Right-wing initiatives dominate California special election

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