480 likes | 624 Views
What are Mental Health Boards?. A statutorily-recognized forum to address and coordinate mental health needs in a particular jurisdiction. Doesn't there have to be money?. Some counties have mental health boards but do not have tax revenue. Why?The ballot issue has not passed or;The issue has n
E N D
1. Putting Kids FirstDeveloping Local Funding for Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services
Rita McElhany
Community Development Manager
Missouri Department of Mental Health
Bruce Sowatsky, M.S.W.
Executive Director
Community & Children’s Resource Board of
St. Charles County
2. What are Mental Health Boards?
A statutorily-recognized forum to address and coordinate mental health needs in a particular jurisdiction Mental Health Boards
Citizen Boards to address mental health needs are usually formed to build a statutorily-recognized forum to address and coordinate mental health needs within a certain designated jurisdiction or jurisdictions
AND to pass a sales tax or mill levy (property tax) to fund services to meet those needs.
The applicable statutes provide rules for board (or commission) formation, membership, ballot language, maximum tax or levy amount, guidance for collection, retention and disbursement of funds allowable services and expenses, and other guidance.
Mental Health Boards
Citizen Boards to address mental health needs are usually formed to build a statutorily-recognized forum to address and coordinate mental health needs within a certain designated jurisdiction or jurisdictions
AND to pass a sales tax or mill levy (property tax) to fund services to meet those needs.
The applicable statutes provide rules for board (or commission) formation, membership, ballot language, maximum tax or levy amount, guidance for collection, retention and disbursement of funds allowable services and expenses, and other guidance.
3. Doesn’t there have to be money? Some counties have mental health boards but do not have tax revenue. Why?
The ballot issue has not passed or;
The issue has not gone to ballot Some counties (or cities) have mental health boards that do not have a tax or levy attached
either because they have not chosen to go before the people in an election or they have been unsuccessful but continue to find benefit in bringing interested individuals and providers together to build a better understanding of the mental health needs of the jurisdiction. Some Boards have funding from a combination of public and private sources and some have no funding at all.
BUT THAT DOES NOT MEAN THAT THE BOARD IS WITHOUT A ROLE IN THE COMMUNITY!!!!
Some counties (or cities) have mental health boards that do not have a tax or levy attached
either because they have not chosen to go before the people in an election or they have been unsuccessful but continue to find benefit in bringing interested individuals and providers together to build a better understanding of the mental health needs of the jurisdiction. Some Boards have funding from a combination of public and private sources and some have no funding at all.
BUT THAT DOES NOT MEAN THAT THE BOARD IS WITHOUT A ROLE IN THE COMMUNITY!!!!
4. Then what do you need? Essential elements of a successful mental health board:
Shared vision and goals
A needs assessment
Strategic plan
Resources
Broad representation
Open and inclusive environment
Regular meetings with an agenda
Essential elements of a successful mental health board:
Shared vision and goals
Needs assessment doesn’t have to be fancy, expensive, or done by a consultant
Strategic plan….what do we want to do, what do we want to say to whom, and when? Also doesn’t need to be fancy
Resources - money, time, skills, talents (it helps to have organizational backing
Broad representation across community. Consumers and families, politicians, mental health providers, housing providers, criminal justice and youth services, court system, social service providers, health providers, the media.
Open and inclusive environment
Regular meetings with agendas
Essential elements of a successful mental health board:
Shared vision and goals
Needs assessment doesn’t have to be fancy, expensive, or done by a consultant
Strategic plan….what do we want to do, what do we want to say to whom, and when? Also doesn’t need to be fancy
Resources - money, time, skills, talents (it helps to have organizational backing
Broad representation across community. Consumers and families, politicians, mental health providers, housing providers, criminal justice and youth services, court system, social service providers, health providers, the media.
Open and inclusive environment
Regular meetings with agendas
5. What can your board accomplish? Board can increase the voices for mental health in the community
Increase public awareness of the impact of mental illness and substance abuse on the community
Public statements
Press releases
Co-sponsor events
Advise local officials on policy
Board can increase the voices for mental health in the community
Increase public awareness of the impact of mental illness and substance abuse on the community
Public statements
Press releases
Co-sponsor events
Advise local officials on policy
6. For Kids Applicable Missouri Statutes:
Children’s Services Tax (Sales) 210.861 (allowable services) or;
Children’s Services Tax (Mill) RSMo 210.860
Proposition guidance RSMo 67.1775
Children’s Services Tax (Sales) 210.861 (allowable services)
Proposition guidance RSMo 67.1775
A minimum of 9 members appointed by county commission
Covers services from birth to age 19 for the following:
Temporary Shelter Services
Respite Care Services
Services to Teenage Parents
Outpatient Psychiatric Services
Outpatient Substance Abuse Treatment
Crisis Intervention
Transitional Living Services
School Based Prevention Programs
Home-based and Community-based Family Intervention Services
Individual, Family, and Group Counseling
Children’s Services Tax (Sales) 210.861 (allowable services)
Proposition guidance RSMo 67.1775
A minimum of 9 members appointed by county commission
Covers services from birth to age 19 for the following:
Temporary Shelter Services
Respite Care Services
Services to Teenage Parents
Outpatient Psychiatric Services
Outpatient Substance Abuse Treatment
Crisis Intervention
Transitional Living Services
School Based Prevention Programs
Home-based and Community-based Family Intervention Services
Individual, Family, and Group Counseling
7. Kids through Adults The original:
County Mental Health Tax (property) RSMo 210.975
(There is also a version for St. Louis City for adults only) County Mental Health tax (property) RSMo 210.975
Member County Commission appointed board forms prior to passage
Covers mental health services across the lifespan
Specific membership outlined:
1/3 represent public or private providers
1/3 concumers or consumer’s family members
1 physician
Number of providers may not exceed ˝ of board membership
No member receiving funds may be represented (no conflict of interest)
Provides structure for multi county boards
Comprehensive Mental Health Services
Inpatient Services
Outpatient Services
Daycare and other Partial Hospitalization Services
Emergency Services
Diagnostic and Treatment Services
Liaison and Follow-up Services
Consultation and Education Services
Rehabilitation Services
Prevention Service
Screening Services
Follow-up Care Services
Transitional Living Services
Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse Prevention and Treatment Services
Drug Addiction and Drug Abuse Prevention and Treatment Services
County Mental Health tax (property) RSMo 210.975
Member County Commission appointed board forms prior to passage
Covers mental health services across the lifespan
Specific membership outlined:
1/3 represent public or private providers
1/3 concumers or consumer’s family members
1 physician
Number of providers may not exceed ˝ of board membership
No member receiving funds may be represented (no conflict of interest)
Provides structure for multi county boards
Comprehensive Mental Health Services
Inpatient Services
Outpatient Services
Daycare and other Partial Hospitalization Services
Emergency Services
Diagnostic and Treatment Services
Liaison and Follow-up Services
Consultation and Education Services
Rehabilitation Services
Prevention Service
Screening Services
Follow-up Care Services
Transitional Living Services
Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse Prevention and Treatment Services
Drug Addiction and Drug Abuse Prevention and Treatment Services
8. A Designer Statute
Senior Services and Youth Program (sales) RSMo 67.997
Senior Services and Youth Program (sales) RSMo 67.997
Perry County specific
Group went to their legislator and asked for a statue to fund particular organizations/needs
7 member Commission appointed by county commission
Funds are equally divided between seniors and youth
Services for seniors and youth
Senior Services and Youth Program (sales) RSMo 67.997
Perry County specific
Group went to their legislator and asked for a statue to fund particular organizations/needs
7 member Commission appointed by county commission
Funds are equally divided between seniors and youth
Services for seniors and youth
9. Decisions, decisions There is no perfect statute to meet the political and service needs of every county
Lotta work!
Need help from people who have made it happen……..
10. Proposition 1Putting Kids First After 2 unsuccessful tries in 2000 and 2002, St. Charles County passed an 1/8 cent sales tax for children’s mental health services in November 2004.
In the same election, Jefferson County passed an 1/8 cent sales tax and the City of St. Louis passed a property tax for the same purpose.
11. Additional Successes
2005—Lafayette County passes
a sales tax
2006---Lincoln County passes a
Ľ cent sales tax
2008---Perry County passes a
1/8 cent sales tax for
children and seniors
2008---St. Louis County and
Franklin County pass
Ľ cent sales taxes
(Estimated $38 million
annually)
In total, about $55 million raised annually for children’s mental health services!
12. OutcomesWhat we have accomplished Child Abuse
Substantiated child abuse/neglect cases
2004 2008
266 205
22.9% decrease in substantiated child abuse in 4 years
15 new respite beds
Drop occurring even as population grows by 23%
Consistently ranked as the best county in reducing child abuse/neglect (Missouri Kids Count)
Source: Missouri KidsCount 2008
13. Outcomes Continued Teenage Pregnancy
Births to Teens 2003 2007
262 249
Ranked 5th best county in the state
4.9% drop in teenage pregnancies
Less than half the state average
Infant mortality went from 118 to 148 and low birth weight went up from 1,255 to 1,612, but not attributable to teen mothers
Over the last 3 years:
94% of births were over 5.5 lbs
89% remained in school
0% had a second pregnancy
Source: Missouri KidsCount 2008
14. Outcomes Continued Teenage Runaways
2004 2008
Number of Runaways 562 423
A 24.7% decrease!
Drop occurring even with population increase
Early intervention and counseling with at-risk youth has dropped demand
Source: Missouri State Department of Highway Patrol
15. Outcomes Continued
Children w/ Serious Emotional Disorders
Children w/SED receiving MH 986
services in 2003
Children w/SED receiving MH 1,176
services in2005
85% remained in their own home
98% remained free of critical incidents leading to hospitalizations
88% remained free from further or new juvenile justice involvement
92% remained free from out of school suspensions
Source: Missouri KidsCount 2008 and Crider Health Center
16. Outcomes Continued
Juvenile Justice
2004 2008
Delinquency Offenses 2,507 1,913
Status Offenses 902 758
A 23.7% decrease in delinquency offenses
A 16.0% decrease in status offences
Occurring while the population has grown 23%
Source: 11th Circuit Family Court
17. Outcomes Continued
Graduation Rates
An average increase of 2.5%!
18. How to Pass This Measure in Your County
Step 1—Creating An Oversight Board
Step 2—Needs Assessment
Step 3—Polling
Step 4—Getting On The Ballot
Step 5—Building Your Campaign Team
Step 6—Building A Campaign Matrix
19. Step 1--Setting Up A Local Oversight Board Working with local governmental officials
Local ordinance needs to include:
-Name of the governing board
-Set the purpose
-Authority to determine who gets funding (Independence)
-Size of the board
-How members are appointed
-Terms and re-appointments
-Frequency of meetings
-Qualifications
-Conflict of interest clause
-Ability to solicit other funding
20. Setting Up A Local Oversight Board Setting qualifications of applying agencies:
501c3 non-profits or governmental agency
Audited according to statutory guidelines
Some require certification or accreditation
Establishing expectations for applicant agencies:
-Complying with reporting guidelines
-Non-compliance consequences
21. The Community and Children’s Resource Board Mission
Maximizing Community Resources to Build and Sustain a Comprehensive System of Services for Children and Families in Need
Values
Collaboration
Family Voice
Accountability
Strength Based
22. Our Vision St. Charles County will be a community in which all adults share responsibility for our children and teenagers;
where youth can achieve their full potential in a safe and supportive environment;
where personal responsibility and respect for others are taught and practiced;
where we have the tools and support necessary to nurture and guide our children;
and where the needs of young people are our highest priority.
23. Vision Continued Demonstrate through our words and actions the importance of personal responsibility and respect for people, places and things.
Help children and youth develop self-esteem, discipline and a sense of connection that will enable them to respond to the challenges and become productive members of the community in the future.
24. The CCRB 9 member volunteer board
Geographic diversity
Ethnic diversity
Gender balance
Experience from diverse fields
Consumer voice
Dedicated
Independent
25. Step 2– Needs Assessment
Creates a statistical story
Justifies your case to the local government
Justifies your case to the community at large
Launches your media efforts
Provides the basis for polling
Is a snapshot in time
26. Needs Assessments Use the state statute to determine categories for your evaluation.
We have 10 services listed so evaluate:
Temporary shelter services for runaways
Respite care services
O/P psychiatric services
O/P substance abuse services
Services to teen mothers
Transitional living services
Crisis interventions
School based prevention services
Home and community based services
Counseling
27. Needs Assessments Defining current capacity of your system to provide services (bed space, staff, etc.)
Demand for services (requests for services, waitlists)
Use of outside resources of data to determine if need is greater than demand
Strengths or assets
Reputation
Accessibility
Staff
Relationships/partnerships
Outcomes
28. Needs Assessments Service gaps (difference between the need and the capacity of the system
Cost of filling the gap
# of children/youth
Average length of stay
Cost per unit
Creating a summary chart
# of children in need
Cost to fill the gap
Additional family members affected
29. Needs Assessments Use of local data vs. state/federal data
Tracking trends
Conduct every two years
Share with the media
Share with the community
Cost of Conducting a Needs Assessment
30. Step 3—Polling
Locate a local agency, university or individual qualified to conduct polling
Needs assessment data is used to create questions
Need to survey 400 people to gain statistical confidence of 5% (800 creates a 2.5 plus or minus)
May need more surveys depending on size of area
31. Polling What Polling Answers
Is there enough support?
What demographics support the issue (gender, geography, age, political affiliation, religion)
When to go to ballot
Messages that will resonate with the voters
Arguments you will have to counter
How to target soft yes, soft no and undecideds
Useful tool for campaign consultant
32. Polling
Ask the ballot question
Ask questions based on data from needs assessment
Ask questions regarding arguments for the passage
Ask questions regarding arguments against passage
Re-ask the ballot question
Demographic questions
33. Other Polling Tips
Work with:
Someone who has previous experience
Someone who is familiar with your area
Someone who will work with you on the front end in writing poll questions
Someone who will provide you with useable results
Consider:
Cost of Polls
Re-polling
34. Step 4—Getting On The Ballot Share Needs Assessment and Polling Results with local government leaders
Willingness to let the voters decide
If they can’t support it, can they not come out against it?
Petitions
35. Petitions Advantages
Larger voter pool
Educates the public
Opportunity to pass out literature
Likelihood of voting in your favor
Disadvantages
Time consuming
Energy draining
Cost
36. Petitions Alert local politicians before starting
Meet with the Election Authority or County Clerk
Consult an attorney for language
Develop a pool of volunteers
Volunteers vs. paid petitioners
Cost
Knowledge about issue
Rudeness
37. Petitions Tips for Succeeding
Use prior voting days
Develop large pool of volunteers
Set small goals
Incentives
Locate places with high traffic
Circles of Influence
Carry it with you
Cost of getting petitions signed
38. Step 5– Building A Campaign Team Agency representatives
Campaign consultant
Honorary chairs
Media consultant
39. Agency Representatives Responsibilities
Organizing your staff’s contributions (petitions, dispersing materials, yard signs, polling locations)
Leadership in campaign matrix
Speaker’s Bureau
Financial
Endorsements
Agency commitment contracts
40. Campaign Consultant Responsibilities
Analyzes polling results
Sets campaign strategy
Determines message
Approves materials
Focuses on undecideds
Provides objective, research based methods for message delivery
Knows political arena
Cost of hiring a consultant
41. Honorary Chairs Responsibilities
Provides outside credibility and support
Solicit campaign funds
Pull in other leaders
Having an oversight board in place will allow the public to see who will be in charge of the money
The Board can also prioritize categorically how it would spend the money.
42. Step 6--Building a Campaign Matrix Based on geography and support demographics
Brainstorm key leaders
Determine a captain and co-captain for each area
Develop strategies for dispersing materials and disseminating your message
Weekly meetings with brainstorming and progress reports
43. Campaign Matrix Target Areas
Churches
Schools
Service Clubs
Businesses/Chambers
Unions
Seniors
Health Care
Criminal Justice
Veterans
Women’s Organizations
Colleges
Daycare Facilities
44. Campaign Matrix School Example
Getting School Board endorsement
School newsletters
Getting materials to principals, teachers and school counselors
Getting a list of PTA meetings and PTA Presidents
45. Campaign Costs Best Guess Estimate
Includes:
Needs Assessment
Polling
Petitions
Consultants
Voter IDs
Printed Materials
Mailing
Signage
Take 2/3 of County Population
46. Questions?
47. Contact Information Rita McElhany
Community Development Manager
Missouri Department of Mental Health
573-751-3220
Rita.mcelhany@dmh.mo.gov
48. Contact Information Bruce Sowatsky
The Community & Children’s Resource Board of St. Charles County
2440 Executive Dr., Suite 214
St. Charles, MO 63303
636-939-6200
bsowatsky@sbcglobal.net
www.stcharlescountykids.org