Advertise Here
Deliver your message to thousands of readers every day.
Our readers are influential opinion makers - politicians, journalists and activists.
Our latest headlines
- Republican Leader Rejects Concept of California Budget Compromise
- They're Not Covering the Same Convention
- Recycling Bill Bottled Up in Closing Hours of California Legislative Session
- Cavala: Editorial Opinion Masquerading as ‘News’ in the ‘Bee’
- Stand-Off On California Budget Continues--No Agreement Close—Floor Sessions Today
- A Young California Delegate Reports from the Floor of the Democratic Convention: Hillary Clinton Tamed PUMA’s and Won Wavering Democrats for Obama
- The California Budget Gets a Tardy and an Incomplete Grade: The Governor and Legislative Republicans Undercut Education
About Us
The California Progress Report is published by Frank D. Russo, a longtime observer of and participant in California politics.
About Frank Russo.
About California Progress Report.
Got a news tip? Want to write a guest column? Contact Frank here.
Sponsors
Keep Program for Homeless with Serious Mental Illness in the California Budget

By Patricia Ryan
Executive Director
California Mental Health Directors Association
Nearly 5,000 Californians with a serious mental illness may wind up back on the streets—homeless—if Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proposal to eliminate funds for the nationally recognized AB 2034 program is included in the final 2007-08 budget act.
Established first as a pilot program to serve homeless adults with serious mental illness, the outcomes on the individual and program levels were so impressive that the Legislature passed AB 2034 (Steinberg) to expand the program in 34 counties throughout the state. Approximately $55 million is allocated each year to California counties to serve individuals in their community with a serious mental illness who have a history or are “at risk” of homelessness, hospitalization, or incarceration. Considered a “best practice,” the program was recently cited as a model program for other communities to emulate in the President’s New Freedom Commission Report.
AB 2034 has helped improve the lives of thousands of homeless mentally ill adults at a significant cost savings to the state. Since the inception of AB 2034, there has been a 42 percent decrease in costly hospitalizations, a 58 percent decrease in incarcerations, a 73 percent reduction in homelessness and a 34 percent increase in part-time or full-time employment.
A key aspect to AB 2034’s success is its flexible funding, which can be used for a wide range of “real life” necessities such as food, clothing, transportation, motel vouchers, rent subsidies, and vocational expenses. AB 2034 strives to meet the person's basic needs first, so staff can then develop a relationship with the client and help him/her acquire affordable, permanent housing, seek employment, and access mental health treatment.
Clients set their own treatment goals, and services are individually tailored to meet the needs of each person. By adopting a “whatever it takes” approach, AB 2034 has helped people move from the streets, bridges, jails, prisons and hospitals to being self sufficient and productive members of their communities.
There is no dollar figure you can place on the lives that have been restored by the AB 2034 program. Eliminating AB 2034 funds would be devastating to the people currently being served – leaving many without housing, food, jobs and lifesaving recovery-oriented mental health treatment.
AB 2034 works. It changes lives. It changes the face of the community.
If you wish to support the continued funding of this vital program, please write to the governor and your legislators. You may go to http://www.housingca.org/action/send/ to download a sample letter.
Patricia Ryan is the Executive Director of the California Mental Health Directors Association and oversees their government relations and advocacy activities, including ongoing policy issue identification, analysis and advocacy. Her father was the late Congressman Leo J. Ryan, whom many of you may remember as the Congressman who was killed over 25 years ago in Jonestown, Guyana.
Comments
THE FACT IS THAT THE BUDGET IS ABOUT WINNING TO THE REBULICIANS NOT PEOPLE
Posted by: ELIZABETH CERVENKA at August 16, 2007 07:00 PM
If one really wants to know what happened to the mental hospitals in California and the USA, this presidential "Letter to Congress" is the beginning.
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=9546
Posted by: C. Norris at February 14, 2008 05:22 PM
Post a comment
Get Email Updates
Want the California Progress Report by email? Once a week, we'll send you the latest and greatest headlines.
© 2008 California Progress Report Our copyright and fair use policy.
Powered by Mandate Media. Logo design by Jane Norling.
RSS 