BY: Alex Samuels | The Texas Tribune

Houston Police Department Chief Art Acevedo said Saturday that the Legislature should increase funding for mental health for police officers, adding this is likely to be a tough issue to tackle ahead of a tight-fisted legislative session.

โ€œItโ€™s something that Iโ€™m starting the conversation for,โ€ Acevedo said. โ€œDoing this is not about being punitive. Itโ€™s about saving careers, saving marriages and saving lives. Itโ€™s the right thing to do.โ€

Acevedoโ€™s remarks came at a Texas Tribune symposium for race and public policy where panelists discussed the intersection of race and policing. In response to an audience member who asked what works and doesnโ€™t in terms of providing adequate mental health support for police officers, the newly hired Houston police chief said officers typically get screened for mental health disorders before getting hired, but never get tested again unless โ€œwe have a fitness-for-duty process.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m a proponent, but Iโ€™m not a policymaker. This Legislature [should] provide funding and a requirement that every three to five years an officer should be [re-screened],โ€ Acevedo said. โ€œDonโ€™t wait until itโ€™s too late. We owe it to those officers and their families and their communities.โ€

He added that in โ€œpolice cultureโ€ mental health issues can be stigmatized, so officers often donโ€™t ask for help.

โ€œIt is a very stressful profession,โ€ Acevedo said of being a police officer. โ€œYou see a lot of ugly things. You see a lot of tragedy and whether you realize it or not, it starts to pile on. We shouldnโ€™t wait until an officer starts calling in sick because theyโ€™ve developed a substance abuse problem. โ€ฆ I want to destigmatize mental health โ€” especially for cops.โ€

One week before the 2017 legislative session, a House committee outlined challenges and opportunities for the state in tacking its troubled mental health system. In its 109-page report, the committee said the state appropriated $6.7 billion toward behavioral and mental health services for 2016-17, with half of that funding going to Medicaid. While funding for mental health has increased in the past two legislative session, the committee warned that โ€œfunds, whether federal, state or local, are limited.โ€

โ€œThe opportunity to improve our mental health system this year is real and itโ€™s important,โ€ House Speaker Joe Straus said in a news release. โ€œA smarter approach to mental health will improve treatment and care while saving taxpayers money.โ€

Acevedo told the Tribune after his panel that heโ€™s looking to community activists in Texas to push lawmakers to pass reforms, particularly the Austin Justice Coalition, a grassroots, activist-led organization which addresses criminal, economic and social justice at the local level.

โ€œWe have a mental health policy team that is building out their platform for mental health,โ€ Sukyi McMahon, director of operations for Austin Justice Coalition, said. โ€œWeโ€™re looking at how calls are dispatched out and the language that the dispatchers are using. Weโ€™re also looking at alternatives to calling 911 in a mental health crisis.โ€

Acevedo acknowledged, however, that he didnโ€™t know if the state was ready to pass such measures, adding that he anticipated it would probably take the Legislature at least three sessions to pass mental health reform for officers.

โ€œThis is something thatโ€™s achievable and the right thing to do for cops and the community,โ€ said Acevedo.

Read more: texastribune.org. 

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