Legislature(2021 - 2022)ADAMS 519

04/22/2022 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= HB 172 MENTAL HEALTH FACILITIES & MEDS TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public Testimony --
+ SB 10 FREE/REDUCED TUITION FOR ESSENTIAL WORKER TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
HOUSE BILL NO. 172                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     "An Act  relating to  admission to  and detention  at a                                                                    
     subacute   mental  health   facility;  establishing   a                                                                    
     definition  for  'subacute   mental  health  facility';                                                                    
     establishing  a  definition   for  'crisis  residential                                                                    
     center';  relating  to   the  definitions  for  'crisis                                                                    
     stabilization center';  relating to  the administration                                                                    
     of  psychotropic  medication  in  a  crisis  situation;                                                                    
     relating to  licensed facilities; and providing  for an                                                                    
     effective date."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:35:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Merrick indicated that the bill was first heard in                                                                     
committee on April 13, 2022.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
HEATHER CARPENTER, HEALTH CARE POLICY ADVISOR, OFFICE OF                                                                        
THE COMMISSIONER, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL SERVICES,                                                                     
relayed she was available for questions.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:36:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Merrick OPENED public testimony.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:37:02 PM                                                                                                                    
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     1:37:15 PM                                                                                                               
     RECONVENED                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     ED   MERCER,   CHIEF   OF   JUNEAU   POLICE,   JUNEAU   (via                                                               
     teleconference),     supported    the     legislation.    He                                                               
     characterized  the   current  mental  health  system   as  a                                                               
      revolving door  where people in  a mental health crisis did                                                               
     not receive  proper help  and were  returned to  the street.                                                               
     Therefore, police  officers spent  a lot of  time responding                                                               
     to mental health  crises. He related that if a  call did not                                                               
     involve criminal  activity the only option  was to transport                                                               
     the individual to  a hospital. If the  situation did involve                                                               
     criminal activity,  the only  option for  an officer  was to                                                               
     put  a  mentally  ill  person  in  jail.  An  officer  often                                                               
     encountered  the same  people suffering  from mental  health                                                               
     issues back out on the  street and were forced to deescalate                                                               
     situations. He indicated that the  bill would allow officers                                                               
     to  transport  the  mentally  ill  individual  to  a  crisis                                                               
     stabilization  center as  an alternative  to  an arrest.  He                                                               
     believed  that   the  bill  would  save   officers  time  by                                                               
     establishing  a faster  handoff to  mental health  officials                                                               
     who would  be better equipped  to help the  individuals. The                                                               
     legislation  would  stop  the  revolving  door  approach  by                                                               
     granting  people  a 23  hour  and  59 minutes   cooling  off                                                               
     period  and gave  them access to providers  trained to help.                                                               
     He  strongly supported  the bill  and believed  it would  be                                                               
     good for  the state  and the  Juneau community  when dealing                                                               
     with citizens suffering from mental illness.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     1:40:36 PM                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     FAITH  MYERS,   MENTAL  HEALTH  ADVOCATES,   ANCHORAGE  (via                                                               
     teleconference),  spoke  in  support  of  the  bill  on  the                                                               
     condition that  Representative Rasmussen added  an amendment                                                               
     to  the bill  requiring statistics  on the  mentally ill  be                                                               
     kept  and  shared  with  the  legislature  and  the  general                                                               
     public. She  provided a  brief history  of mental  health in                                                               
     Alaska. She shared  that between 1904 and  1968, many Alaska                                                               
     Natives were sent  to a mental health facility  out of state                                                               
     called  Morningside  in  Oregon and no records  were kept or                                                               
     shared  with  the  state.   She  indicated  that  currently,                                                               
     private psychiatric  facilities write the  patient grievance                                                               
     procedures  and   the  appeal   process  according   to  AS.                                                               
     47.30.847. In addition, the patient  advocate worked for the                                                               
     hospital. She  communicated that the way  the state provided                                                               
     psychiatric  care needed  much revision.  She supported  the                                                               
     keeping and sharing of  psychiatric statistics for patients'                                                               
treatment,   care,    injuries,   traumatic    events,   and                                                                    
complaints.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:43:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LISA  GENTEMANN,  SELF,  EAGLE RIVER  (via  teleconference),                                                                    
testified  against the  bill.  She  believed the  provisions                                                                    
were   open   to  abuse   of   power   and  the   bill   was                                                                    
unconstitutional. She provided an  example pertaining to her                                                                    
daughter and son  in law living in Fort  Benning regarding a                                                                    
Captain who  was admitted to  a mental hospital.  She opined                                                                    
that when a person was pulled  out of their daily routine it                                                                    
was  destabilizing. She  stated  that the  bill would  allow                                                                    
Alaskans  to be  detained against  their will  indefinitely.                                                                    
She added  that the  bill would allow  patients to  be given                                                                    
psychotropic  medications   against  their  will   and  once                                                                    
admitted the  patient lost all their  constitutional rights.                                                                    
She  spoke  to  the   numerous  problems  in  mental  health                                                                    
facilities.  She  favored  amending   the  bill  to  include                                                                    
patient consent. She stated  that counseling and medications                                                                    
should not be  forced on people. She asked  the committee to                                                                    
vote against the legislation.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:45:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BRENDA   MCFARLAND,  CITY   OF  FAIRBANKS,   FAIRBANKS  (via                                                                    
teleconference),  spoke in  favor of  the bill.  She relayed                                                                    
that she  was speaking on  behalf of the City  of Fairbanks.                                                                    
She stressed  that the bill  was critical to the  success of                                                                    
the  Crisis  Now  rollout taking  place  in  Fairbanks.  She                                                                    
shared  that  she  was  a coordinator  for  the  Crisis  Now                                                                    
program  and  the mobile  crisis  teams  had been  operating                                                                    
since  October  2021.  She  reported  that  the  teams  were                                                                    
dispatched   through  an   emergency  dispatch   center  and                                                                    
responded to  people in crisis  alongside or  independent of                                                                    
law  enforcement  and  resolved  80  percent  of  the  calls                                                                    
onsite.  The  team also  offered  next  day appointments  at                                                                    
Alaska Behavioral  Health or  Tanana Chiefs  Conference. She                                                                    
indicated that presently, people  in crisis were calling and                                                                    
asking for the Mobil Response  Team. She emphasized that the                                                                    
person in  crisis still needed  a place  to go to  calm down                                                                    
and  seek  help.  The  Crisis  Stabilization  Center  was  a                                                                    
necessary  part   of  crisis  response.  She   offered  that                                                                    
currently, the  first responders  were required to  take the                                                                    
person in  crisis to the  hospital Emergency Room  (ER). She                                                                    
shared  that  when the  option  was  presented as  the  only                                                                    
option it further escalated the  situation. The bill ensured                                                                    
     people  received  appropriate healthcare  quickly,  provided                                                               
     the patient a  choice, kept patients out  of costly hospital                                                               
     stays, and minimized the impacts on first responders.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Co-Chair  Merrick   indicated  that   Representative  Edgmon                                                               
     joined the meeting.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     1:48:15 PM                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     ARTHUR  DELAUNE,   SELF,  FAIRBANKS   (via  teleconference),                                                               
     shared  that he  was the  father of  a Native  man diagnosed                                                               
     with  fetal  alcohol   spectrum  disorder  and  co-occurring                                                               
     mental  health disorders  including anxiety  and depression.                                                               
     His son had  given him permission to  testify. The testifier                                                               
     wanted to  personalize the issue  and illuminate  how mental                                                               
     health  patients were  currently treated  in facilities.  He                                                               
     shared the  story of the  way his  son had been  treated. He                                                               
     detailed that  his son  had tried to  commit suicide  in the                                                               
     past and  was taken to  the ER and  placed in a  padded cell                                                               
     for many  hours. His son  was agitated and begged  to leave.                                                               
     His  father agreed  on the  condition  his son  went to  the                                                               
     Crisis Counselor  at the  Fairbanks Mental  Health Facility.                                                               
     When  they arrived  at  the facility,  they  were told  they                                                               
     could only place  his son on a waiting list.  There had been                                                               
     a cumbersome paperwork process. There  was a 14-day wait for                                                               
     an intake  and he experienced  another intake 7  days later.                                                               
     His  son ultimately  had  to  wait 34  days  to  speak to  a                                                               
     therapist.  On day  35  his  son had  called  and stated  he                                                               
     wanted  to  kill  himself.  He  had  been  admitted  to  the                                                               
     Fairbanks Memorial  Hospital and  5 hours later  admitted to                                                               
     the behavioral health  ward and did not see a  doctor for 22                                                               
     hours after check  in. He provided further  detail about the                                                               
     story.  He was  referred  back and  forth between  Fairbanks                                                               
     Community Mental Health and Tanana  Chiefs Conference and by                                                               
     day 41 he had not  received services. He emphasized that his                                                               
     son had been caught  between two mental health organizations                                                               
     and a  very broken  mental health  system. He  stressed that                                                               
     the services  were  absolutely  needed and  people in crisis                                                               
     needed  immediate help.  He implored  the committee  to pass                                                               
     the bill.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Representative Thompson thanked Mr.  Delaune for sharing his                                                               
     personal story.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     1:53:27 PM                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MIKE  CARSON, CHAIR,  MATSU OPIOID  TASK FORCE,  MAT-SU (via                                                                    
teleconference),  testified  in  support  of  the  bill.  He                                                                    
shared a  true story  about a woman  named Kelsey  Green. He                                                                    
had permission  to share the  story. The woman  was addicted                                                                    
to heroin and at one  point arrested, taken to the Anchorage                                                                    
Jail, and  began to experience  withdraw symptoms.  She died                                                                    
within 5  days in  jail without receiving  any stabilization                                                                    
care or help.  He believed that if Kelsey had  been taken to                                                                    
a  crisis stabilization  center,  she would  still be  alive                                                                    
today.  He spoke  to the  endless  possibilities that  could                                                                    
have  taken  place in  her  life  if  Kelsey had  lived.  He                                                                    
supported  stabilization centers.  He thanked  the committee                                                                    
for hearing his testimony.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Merrick CLOSED public testimony.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:56:00 PM                                                                                                                    
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:56:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Merrick asked for a review of the fiscal notes.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SAMANTHA  CHEROT, PUBLIC  DEFENDER,  ALASKA PUBLIC  DEFENDER                                                                    
AGENCY (via  teleconference), reviewed the  published fiscal                                                                    
impact  fiscal  note  (FN  9 (ADM)  for  the  Department  of                                                                    
Administration (DOA), Public  Defender Agency. She explained                                                                    
that  individuals  who were  held  past  48 hours  before  a                                                                    
petition  was filed  for up  to seven  days had  a right  to                                                                    
council and  a hearing. The  fiscal note addressed  the need                                                                    
for one attorney  in Anchorage, one paralegal  in Palmer and                                                                    
one paralegal  in in Anchorage,  and a law  office assistant                                                                    
in Fairbanks.  She indicated that the  narrative analysis on                                                                    
the fiscal note described the basis for the need.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:57:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Merrick moved to the next fiscal note.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Carpenter  reviewed the  published fiscal  impact fiscal                                                                    
note (FN 11  (DHS) from the Department of  Health and Social                                                                    
Services  (DHSS), Designated  Evaluation and  Treatment. She                                                                    
pointed  to the  Interagency Receipts  (IA) fund  source and                                                                    
noted that the receipts  were accepted via receipt authority                                                                    
from  Medicaid funding  as  designated  on the  departments                                                                     
     other  fiscal  note. She  elaborated  that  the funding  was                                                               
     matched  by a  General  Fund (GF)  Mental  Health (MH)  fund                                                               
     source. The  fiscal note increased  in the  outyears because                                                               
     DHSS anticipated that more facilities  were expected to open                                                               
     in the future. She furthered  that GF would increase because                                                               
     not   all    of   the    facilities   were    eligible   for                                                               
     Disproportionate Share  Hospital (DSH) funds, which  was how                                                               
     the  department  currently  matched funding  for  Designated                                                               
     Evaluation and  Treatment (DET) Centers. She  indicated that                                                               
     DSH  funds  were  only  available  for  hospitals  and  non-                                                               
     tribally  operated  hospitals.   She  reiterated  that  DHSS                                                               
     anticipated  the growth  of both  the Designated  Evaluation                                                               
     and  Stabilization  (DES)   and  Designated  Evaluation  and                                                               
     Treatment  (DET)  Centers  to  expand into  each  of  the  9                                                               
     behavioral  health regions  but  only  facilities that  were                                                               
     hospitals could  receive DSH funds.  The state  was required                                                               
     to pay  for involuntary  commitment. She listed  the current                                                               
     DET   hospitals:  Fairbanks   Memorial  Hospital,   Bartlett                                                               
     Regional Hospital, and  Mat-Susitna Regional Medical Center.                                                               
     She  added that  the fiscal  note included  additional costs                                                               
     associated  with  implementing  HB  172  for  one  full-time                                                               
     employee in Anchorage and  a Reimbursable Services Agreement                                                               
     (RSA) to the Department of Law (DOL).                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     2:00:34 PM                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Ms.  Carpenter  continued  to review  the  published  fiscal                                                               
     impact Department of Health and  Social Services fiscal note                                                               
     (FN 6  (DHS) for Medicaid  Services. She indicated  that the                                                               
     fiscal  note accompanied  the prior  fiscal note  and showed                                                               
     the Medicaid  Federal Receipts fund source  and included the                                                               
     Medicaid funding  for the facilities that  qualified for the                                                               
     DSH funding.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     NANCY  MEADE,  GENERAL  COUNSEL, ALASKA  COURT  SYSTEM  (via                                                               
     teleconference),  reviewed   the  published   fiscal  impact                                                               
     fiscal note  (FN 10 (CRT)  for Judiciary, Trial  Courts. She                                                               
     communicated that  the fiscal note  covered the cost  of two                                                               
     Range 12 clerks  for the added tasks  of notifying guardians                                                               
     during a crisis center admission  as well as for involuntary                                                               
     commitment   proceedings.   A   good   percentage   of   the                                                               
     respondents had been previously  appointed guardians to help                                                               
     administer  their  affairs.  In addition,  the  majority  of                                                               
     mental commitment  proceedings, and  most likely  a majority                                                               
     of the  crisis center admissions  were filed with  the court                                                               
     system  during non-traditional  work hours  on weekends  and                                                               
     nights.  She noted  that the  court system  had a  full-time                                                               
magistrate  to cover  the  off  hours but  the  new task  of                                                                    
researching the  respondents' status as a  protected person,                                                                    
and  notifying  the guardian  of  the  next hearing,  cannot                                                                    
reasonably be performed  by that magistrate in  light of his                                                                    
or her many  other obligations so the help  was a necessity.                                                                    
She determined  that the court  system could  accomplish the                                                                    
work during the daytime without additional help.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Josephson  perceived  that  the  magistrates                                                                    
would see  an increased workload  due to the bill.  He asked                                                                    
if  there was  concern over  the matter.  Ms. Meade  was not                                                                    
concerned   about  the   issue.  She   explained  that   the                                                                    
individuals  in crisis  typically ended  up in  court either                                                                    
for a  criminal arraignment or  for an ex parte  hearing for                                                                    
an involuntary  mental commitment. The bill  would result in                                                                    
nearly the same  number of hearings, but  the hearings would                                                                    
be slightly different.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:05:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Merrick moved to the last fiscal note.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
KELLY  HOWELL,   SPECIAL  ASSISTANT  TO   THE  COMMISSIONER,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT OF  PUBLIC SAFETY (via  teleconference), reviewed                                                                    
the  published  zero  fiscal  note  (FN  4  (DPS)  from  the                                                                    
Department   of   Public   Safety,  Alaska   State   Trooper                                                                    
Detachments.  She  commented  that  the  bill  added  a  new                                                                    
subsection to AS 47.30.705 that  required a peace officer to                                                                    
prioritize  transporting  a  mentally ill  individual  to  a                                                                    
crisis   stabilization  center   if  one   existed  in   the                                                                    
community. She  did not anticipate  an increase in  cost and                                                                    
believed  that the  department  could  implement and  comply                                                                    
with the changes with minimal fiscal impact.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Edgmon  remarked that  fiscal notes  were one                                                                    
dimensional  and  did  not  reflect  potential  savings.  He                                                                    
thought  the bill  was one  of the  most critical  pieces of                                                                    
legislation  during the  current session.  He noted  that it                                                                    
would save dollars and lives in the future.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
HB  172  was  HEARD  and   HELD  in  committee  for  further                                                                    
consideration.