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ACT NOW TO PREVENT THE INCARCERATION OF PEOPLE WITH MENTAL ILLNESS...Or Should We?

ACT NOW TO PREVENT THE INCARCERATION OF PEOPLE WITH MENTAL ILLNESS...Or Should We?

agnes levine · Monday, June 15th 2009 at 10:19PM · 575 views
Well, when I first read this and thought about it, my gut response was not to support this effort by contacting officials.

My reAson was (and is) that we simply cannot have criminals loose in society and that includes people with mental ilnesses. I do understand that people who do not seek mental healthcare treatment are ususally the ones who commit crimes or those who stop taking necessary medications. In any event, this situation makes it harder for people like me who cope and manage a mental condition successfully without criminal behavior because of the stigmas. How do you feel about this?

Unfortunately, I also know the ugly dark side of having little or no mental healthcare inside of the criminal justice center. Is this fair for people with a mental condition who commit minor offenses such as bad check writing? Did you now that if you do not take necessary medications due to a mental condition, you may not even remember commiting a crime?

So, should we punish people for going off medications and who commit crimes by throwing them into a system that offers not competent mental healthcare? What about people who hae NO health insurance and cannot afford prescriptions?

Are they entitled to rehabilitation? Let's think about this some more and very closely...

So, then I decided to read the Senate Judicial reports more closely and I believe that it is fair and appropriate for providing mental heathcare to persons rather than throwing them into jail. What do you think? Should we draw a line somewhere, too?

Let the Senate hear YOUR honest feelings and thoughts about this important legislation and share with us, too.

The criminalization of people with mental illness is a growing problem that devastates many members of our community. A study released this month in the journal Psychiatric Services shows that the prevalence of people with serious mental illness in jails is increasing. The study, which was presented June 1st at a Senate briefing featuring NAMI National board member Fred Frese, found that overall, 16% of jail inmates have a serious mental illness. Even more alarming, 31% of female jail inmates have a serious mental illness. These numbers suggest that up to 2 million jail bookings every year involve an individual with serious mental illness.

In light of this study, it is more important now than ever before to support programs that help people stay out of jail. This week, the House Appropriations committee approved the FY 2010 budget for Commerce, Justice and Science programs, which includes $12 million for the Mentally Ill Offender Treatment and Crime Reduction Act (MIOTCRA). MIOTCRA grants support communities working on crisis intervention teams (CIT), mental health courts, and similar programs that are proven to help break the cycle of incarceration. The bill also includes $100 million in funding for the Second Chance Act, which supports re-entry programs to help people get the services and support they need to successfully reintegrate into society. The full House is expected to vote on the bill the week of June 15.

Act Now!

Let your Representatives in the House know that people with mental illness should not be in jail. Write a letter today telling them to support funding for MIOTCRA and the Second Chance Act as part of the 2010 Commerce, Justice and Science Appropriations Bill. Click here or cut and paste into your browser: http://capwiz.com/nami/issues/alert/?alert...

Learn More

Visit the Criminal Justice/Mental Health Consensus Project Web site to learn more about the study. Click here or cut and paste into your browser:
http://consensusproject.org/updates/featur...

Visit the House Appropriations Committee Web site to read a summary of the Commerce, Justice and Science Appropriations Bill. Click here or cut and paste:
http://appropriations.house.gov/pdf/CJS_FY...

Read more about the briefing on the prevalence study hosted by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Click or paste: http://consensusproject.org/downloads/prev...

Agnes B. Levine is the Founder/President, Levine-Oliver Publisher
www.levineoliverpublisher.com and Author of: "Cooling Well Water: A Collection of Work By An African-American Bipolar Woman" ISBN 13 978-0-9754612-0-4
Available NOW at Amazon.com


About the Author

agnes levine Atlanta, GA

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Comments (2)

Hardest Working Woman in Credit Tuesday, June 16th 2009 at 9:26PM

I am a strong supporter. I worked as a probation officer for the state of florida and 75% of the youth had mental health issues. The sad part is there are not enough juvenile programs for the youth. They keep committing crime after crime etc and when they turn 18, off they go to prison.. My brother is an example of this type of case. Instead of helping him when he was under 18, they continued to lock him up etc. He is now in prison for life for the something stupid. His story is one of many... Let me know if I can do anything to support you. I have a group call innocent victims on my site..

My book Innocent Victims is totally different. Stop by my site www.creditadviseforyou.ning.com and show your support

Emmanuel Brown Thursday, July 23rd 2009 at 9:51PM

I think that prevention is much more effective than incarceration, but that both are necessary. I am glad that you touched on this subject because it is something that society is scared to face.

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