Mental Health Association in New York State, Inc.
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Home >> Publications >> Friday Fax Archives >> December 17, 2004

Friday Fax from Albany

Date: December 17, 2004

To: Board Members, Affiliate Executive Directors, Interested Parties
From: Glenn D. Liebman, CEO
Phone: (518) 434-0439 ext. 20
Fax#: (518) 427-8676
E-Mail Address: gliebman@mhanys.org

 

SAVE THE DATE

March 7, 2005
MHANYS’ Legislative Conference and Lobby Day
711-A Legislative Office Building, Albany

They’re Back!!!…. With announcement earlier today of the NYS Senate’s return to Albany on December 22nd, we urge you to contact your Senator to once again remind them to of the issues of importance to the mental health community that remain outstanding – issues like Timothy’s Law and restoration of the $7.7M in Local Assistance funding.

Please call your Senator and tell them not to leave Albany for
Christmas without passing Timothy’s Law and
restoring Local Assistance funding for mental health.

Your call really does make a difference!
Call 518-455-2800 – Ask for your Senator

If you’re unsure of who your Senator is, go to http://map01.elections.state.ny.us/boe/main.asp.

Rest assured, MHANYS will be present at the Capitol doing our part.


Text of NYS Senate Press Release: Bruno announces Senate will be back on Dec. 22 to 'act on budget reform ... The time for talk is over.'

STATEMENT BY SENATE MAJORITY LEADER JOSEPH L. BRUNO
Senate To Return Next Week To Act On Budget Reform
The Senate will convene in session next Wednesday, December 22nd to act on budget reform. Thursday's Court of Appeals decision gives us all the more reason to return, as it could be a recipe for disaster that dooms New York to a never ending string of late budgets. This issue is too important to lose an opportunity to fix the broken process that has resulted in 20 years of late budgets.

Members of our conference will also be in Albany on Tuesday to continue discussions on governmental reforms that we will propose to make changes in the legislative process and other needed reforms to improve State government.

For the last six weeks we have engaged in intensive negotiations with the Assembly and the Governor on a bill that could implement budget reforms next year in a way that addresses the concerns that have been raised by the Executive and the Legislature. I believe we could conclude those discussions and enact a bill that puts an end to late budgets once and for all. The Senate will consider this legislation, as well as legislation the Governor vetoed, when it returns on Wednesday.

The Senate has fought for budget reform for more than a decade. It has been a tremendous priority, not only for us, but for the millions of New Yorkers that are sick and tired of late State budgets.

The goal is simple, change the dysfunctional budget process to ensure that a new budget is in place on-time, every year. After ten years of work, achieving that goal is within our grasp. We must not lose this opportunity. The time for talk is over. The time to act is now.


 

In the News:

How the Justice System Criminalizes Mental Illness. Editorial by Brent Staples
New York Times, December 13, 2004

Jesse McCann was a baby-faced teenager of 17 the day he hanged himself in a New York State prison. The letters he had written to family and friends in the final weeks of his young life were not at all what one would expect of a person about to take his own life. In a letter dated March 16, 2001 - the final day of his life - he wrote passionately about wanting to pursue a degree in paralegal studies while in prison so that he could make a difference for young people in trouble. He asked his Uncle Dennis for a shipment of coffee - and talked about Twizzlers, one of his favorite candies. He signed the letter, "Love you, Jesse," and added a smiley face to the salutation.

This optimistic tone probably came from the medication he was taking. It seemed to ease his panic attacks and the depression and rages for which he had been treated often. The mood on display in this last letter, however, was not destined to last. According to official accounts, Jesse was being escorted to the mental health unit for his medication when he lost control - as inmates with mental problems often do - and began shouting obscenities. Predictably, a corrections officer tried to quiet him. Just as predictably, Jesse exploded. He struck the officer and was placed in the disciplinary housing unit, where unruly prisoners can be shut up for 23 hours each day.

Isolation, a hardship for even healthy inmates, is often catastrophic for those with mental problems. Their symptoms get worse and they often end up trying to harm themselves. Studies show, for example, that mentally ill inmates who are placed in isolation are far more likely to attempt suicide. The prospect of being isolated as a result of the latest outburst was apparently too much for Jesse. Shortly after being placed in the cell, he tied one end of a sheet to the window, the other to his neck and hanged himself.

This story has become familiar in New York, which has been widely criticized for using isolation too freely, especially with the mentally ill. Studies of suicide in the state prison system, underscored with stories like Jesse McCann's, have led the New York State Legislature to consider passing a law that would give psychiatric workers more latitude in the handling of inmates with serious mental illnesses. The proposed statute aims to expand access to psychiatric treatment and prevent disturbed inmates from trying to hurt themselves.

The prison mental health crisis, which has gotten so much attention lately in New York, is actually national in scope. Simply put, most of the mental institutions that would have once housed and cared for mentally ill people have been closed down - in most cases deservedly so, because they did their jobs poorly. But the community-based mental health system that was supposed to replace the mental hospitals never materialized. As a result, prisons have been become de facto mental hospitals, but without the treatment that would allow mentally ill patients to control their symptoms and organize their lives.

The debate surrounding this problem goes well beyond the admittedly serious matter of suicide. Also at issue is the fact that mentally ill people often serve substantially longer sentences than other prisoners convicted of similar crimes. No one has yet accounted for the difference. But it seems clear that mentally ill people often enter the criminal justice system for offenses and aberrant behaviors related to their illnesses. They end up doing longer sentences - and harder, more punitive time - for acting out in prison. To put it another way, people who hear voices - or who can't control themselves or follow even the most basic instructions - become automatic candidates for punitive sanctions like solitary confinement.

Jesse was not innocent when it came to breaking the law, but his case fits this category, too. He was arrested and confined to a county jail for a nonviolent offense. While there, he succumbed to hysteria and was charged with assaulting a corrections officer, which is a felony. The offense seems to have drawn him special attention from corrections officers, who make it their business to keep close tabs on inmates charged with assaulting one of their own. Isolated and under more pressure than ever, Jesse McCann ended his life.

The federal government began to focus on the mental health problem when it became clear that mentally ill inmates were driving up the prison population and contributing to recidivism. Congress made a promising start when it passed a law that encouraged states to integrate community mental health services more closely into the corrections system. What the country needs to do, however, is decriminalize mental illness. That means taking mental problems into account in the first instance - at least with nonviolent crimes - so that as many offenders as possible can go into treatment instead of into prison.

 

Revisit crime laws regarding mentally ill. Letter to the Editor
Albany Times Union, December 13, 2004

There are many of us who agree with defense attorney E. Stewart Jones' assessment that the 20-year sentence imposed on Jon Romano was offensive and barbaric. Columnist Fred LeBrun is correct when he notes that this case represents one of those moments when our community's moral compass goes dreadfully awry.

Apart from these reflections, however, this case and others like it in this region and elsewhere, suggest that it may be time for our state legislators to revisit our criminal procedure laws which govern standards for determining competency to stand trial, as well as those laws which govern the use of the so-called insanity plea.

Briefly stated, the law's standards on competency are set far too low, and the law's requirements for invoking the insanity defense are set far too high. Existing statutes, therefore, allow virtually all persons whose serious mental illness is clearly a factor in their criminal behavior to be treated solely as criminals and punished accordingly.

Five years ago, New York Times journalist Fox Butterfield wrote that the last bastion of discrimination in this country is reserved for persons with a mental illness who get caught up in the criminal justice system. Perhaps it is time to institute fundamental reforms to the laws that send thousands of persons with a serious mental illness to jail or prison every year, rather than to a hospital where desperately needed treatment can be provided and persons can achieve some level of recovery.

ROBERT K. CORLISS
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill
New York State Chapter
Albany

 

Until next time, we remain,
Working to ensure available and accessible
mental health services for all New Yorkers