The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act is the first major gun legislation in 30 years. It was passed in the hope of reducing the threat of violence in the United States.
It contains some measures to curb gun violence, but left under-discussed in the popular media are the larger efforts affecting our customers and our colleagues supporting providers of mental health services found in Title I of the bill. News coverage of the legislation has tended to address the gun control measures listed in Title II:
These somewhat subdued gun control measures have been the main takeaway from the new law. We’ve heard far less about measures listed in Title I of the bill, a section that devotes $13 billion to supporting mental health.
With $8 billion of the total funding, efforts to expand the Medicaid Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics (CCBHC) program make up the majority of the bill’s effects. The goal of the CCBHC program is to provide 24-hour crisis care for mental health and substance use issues, whether or not an individual has insurance, which will surely have a great effect on the mental health and substance use fields.
Because of our investment in the health, safety, and mental well-being of children, we also care deeply about some other under-reported aspects of the new laws: There are significant funds earmarked for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Department of Education (DOE).
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) is the leading HHS agency for our national strategy on mental and substance use disorders. SAMHSA programs seek to deepen the access young people have to mental health care. One way to expand this access is through Behavioral Health Integrated Care, in which primary pediatric care and mental health providers work collaboratively toward the goal of whole-person treatment.
There are several programs earmarked for creation or expansion through Title I of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act through SAMHSA:
Over $2 billion will also be funneled to the Department of Education, primarily to bolster the numbers of trained staff available across the country to support children in need of mental health care:
The $13 billion in funding equates to about $310 for each of the 42 million adolescents in the United States, ages 10–19. But, it will take more money, more effort, and more empathy to find a long standing solution. While this funding alone is far from a panacea for the crisis of mental health among our youth, we trust that many will put Title I grants to good use. As more details are made available regarding these funds, we will keep our customers and colleagues updated.