The bill, Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act (H.R. 3717), introduced by Rep. Tim Murphy of Pennsylvania, would cut funding for the Protection & Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness (PAIMI grant) by 85% and restrict DLAC from engaging in systemic or public policy advocacy.
The bill, in part, is a reaction to testimony at a Congressional hearing in which scant anecdotal information presented in a totally one sided manner portrayed the PAIMI program as part of the problem instead of, as we know it to be, part of the solution. The implication was that PAIMI programs were using their resources and authority to keep people with mental illness from getting necessary treatment. We know the opposite to be true – PAIMI programs have been at the forefront of advocating for people with mental illness to receive appropriate treatment ever since President Ronald Reagan signed the PAIMI Act into law in 1986. Unfortunately, Rep. Murphy, who ironically is a proponent of evidenced based policy making, is ignoring the well documented evidence of 27 years of successful advocacy by PAIMI advocates on behalf of people with mental illness.
Among the many changes contained in its 135 pages, the bill would defund mental health consumer networks, a model in which people with psychiatric disabilities have opportunities to develop independence and personal growth in supportive environments with their peers; deny mental health block grant funding to any state that has not adopted a forced treatment regime (“Assisted Outpatient Treatment,” a euphemism for Involuntary Outpatient Commitment); and amend HIPAA law to make it easier to access the records of people with a mental health diagnosis. This legislation would essentially move the clock back on decades of progress in mental health, promote discrimination and stigma, use coercion and drugs as the blunt instruments of care, silence the advocates and keep people away from seeking the treatment they need.
We are convinced that the only way Rep. Murphy’s misguided bill can succeed is if the people who know the truth about the PAIMI program remain silent. We need people who have benefitted from the PAIMI program, our allies, and members of DLAC’s Board and advisory councils which have guided our PAIMI program to speak up – to share what they know to be true - that DLAC and the PAIMI programs throughout America have been dedicated and effective advocates for people with mental illness.
ACTION NEEDED:
We need you to contact the members of Tennessee’s Congressional Delegation (contact information below) and communicate to them the negative impact this legislation would have and urge them not to co-sponsor this legislation. All you have to do is leave that message with the person that answers the phone. If you want to get into more detail feel free to use the talking points and background information in this email, but the key message is to ask your legislator not to co-sponsor H.R. 3717.
Talking Points
• Representative Murphy’s legislation (H.R. 3717) will reduce funding for the Protection and Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness (PAIMI) program by about 85% leaving individuals with mental illness no independent advocates to help address the myriad of issues they face every day.
• Representative Murphy’s legislation (H.R. 3717) will make it easier to discriminate against people with mental illness in housing, employment, and education, and lead to fewer individuals receiving the treatment they need.
• Representative Murphy’s legislation (H.R. 3717) would remove the ability for our agency to fully serve individuals with mental illness. In its 27 year history, the PAIMI program has been highly successful assisting people with mental illness and should continue to have the broadest authority possible to ensure people with disabilities are free from abuse and neglect and receive the services and supports they need. Contrary to the implication in Rep. Murphy’s bill our PAIMI program, Disability Law & Advocacy Center of Tennessee, has been instrumental in securing appropriate treatment for and ensuring the safety of:
o Youth with severe mental health issues
o People with mental illness in jails and prisons
o People with mental illness residing in the community (board & care homes)
The links are to provide you background information should you want it.
Tennessee House Representatives
Rep. David Roe (TN-1)
Rep. John Duncan, Jr. (TN-2)
Rep. Chuck Fleischmann (TN-3)
Rep. Scott DesJarlais (TN-4)
Rep. Jim Cooper (TN-5)
Rep. Diane Black (TN-6)
Rep. Marsha Blackburn (TN-7)
Rep. Stephen Fincher (TN-8)
Rep. Steve Cohen (TN-9)
Thanks for reading. If you have any questions, please let us know. Please also feel free to share this email with others in your network.
Francisca Guzman
Media & Development Advisor
Disability Law & Advocacy Center of Tennessee
1 Comment
DJ Jaffe link
1/11/2014 03:39:37 am
It seems that this blog is doing what Murphy is appropriately trying to prevent: ie, DBSCA is using federal funds to lobby, rather than to help people with serious mental illness. See http://mentalillnesspolicy.org/myths/mental-health-bar.pdf
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