California Gov. Newsom announces $4.7 billion 'master plan' for kids' mental health

Authored by abc7.com and submitted by flyfrog

'You come to the schools and work as a counselor - $20,000 of any of your loans or student debt will be forgiven.'

Governor Gavin Newsom has announced what he calls a 'master plan' to address the mental health crisis among California youth.

FRESNO, Calif. -- If you or someone you know is in emotional distress or considering suicide, call the National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

Newsom made the announcement during a visit with First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom to McLane High School in Fresno on Thursday.

The governor and the first partner spent a little over an hour at the school, and heard from a student who says when she was a little girl, school staff failed her when she needed help most.

McLane High senior Aliyah Barajas told her story about self-harm that began when she was 10 years old.

"My parents weren't contacted, I wasn't referred to a counselor, the way that I was told I would be, and there was no follow-up... I know I am not the first, the last, or the only 10-year-old girl who had to go through that," said Barajas.

Newsom said Barajas' experience is an example of why he is spending $4.7 billion on mental health for those up to 25 years old.

The plan includes training for 40,000 behavioral health professionals, creating an online platform for mental health assessment and intervention, a suicide prevention program, and doubling the number of school counselors in schools, by helping to pay for their education.

"We will provide 20,000 scholarships for two years of your service. You come to the schools and work as a counselor. $20,000 of any of your loans or student debt will be forgiven," Newsom said.

The governor pointed to statistics among California youth.

There are more than 284,000 coping with major depression and 66% of kids with depression don't get treatment.

The First Partner introduced online resources to help kids and adults and talked about the concerns she feels as a mother of four.

"If we don't change things now, how can we be surprised when we have the violence that we have, the bigotry that we have, the hate and the racism we have, online and in person?" she said.

While at McClane High School, Newsom also signed into law AB2508.

The bill defines more specifically the role of school counselors, highlighting the importance of access to mental health.

MJS8 on August 19th, 2022 at 22:51 UTC »

As an CA Administrator for a MH plan and former therapist, I’m really hoping we can use this as a stepping stone to also take care of the existing clinicians.

The burnout rate is huge. Experimenting with a 4 day work week and improving the employee experience is vital. Absolutely vital.

Its always an issue of “we don’t have enough providers” that leads to massive caseloads and over worked clinicians.

Edit: I also want to people to understand that the acuity of the cases Children’s MH Clinicians are getting are significantly more severe over the past decade. This results in more cases that need intensive services that have children/family seeing a provider 3x weekly to produce needed results.

WestCoastBestCoast01 on August 19th, 2022 at 19:54 UTC »

The plan includes training for 40,000 behavioral health professionals, creating an online platform for mental health assessment and intervention, a suicide prevention program, and doubling the number of school counselors in schools, by helping to pay for their education. "We will provide 20,000 scholarships for two years of your service. You come to the schools and work as a counselor. $20,000 of any of your loans or student debt will be forgiven," Newsom said.

That's actually awesome. We need more mental health professionals in general, attracting them to work in schools by helping pay for their education is a great idea. It would be interesting to study how greater access to counselors in schools impacts homelessness in the state 20+ years in the future. So many of the people who fall into homelessness as adults need care starting in adolescence.

Cricketcaser on August 19th, 2022 at 19:30 UTC »

The difference in priorities between certain states sure is interesting.