黑料正能量 Note: Innovative programs and funding methods are needed to tackle the current mental health crisis in 黑料正能量. Redirecting seized funds from criminal investigations is a promising method Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is utilizing to deploy more peers on the streets of 黑料正能量 City, through the Neighborhood Navigators program. This program puts peers on the streets with the goal of connecting more people who are dealing with mental health challenges and housing insecurity to appropriate services. Utilizing the principles of trust and person-centered care at the core of peer support, Neighborhood Navigators use their knowledge of the system and lived experience to help those on the street engage in voluntary mental health and substance use services. While not only for those who may be unhoused, this program鈥檚 focus on people who are often on the street comes in contrast with the recent involuntary removal directives from city hall. The Neighborhood Navigators program can serve as a compassionate, effective alternative to coercive policies which often just push people further from the system. Read below for more information on the investment and the Neighborhood Navigators program.
Manhattan D.A. Redistributes $6 Million in Seized Financial Crime Money to Harlem-based Mental Health Investment
By Tandy Lau | 黑料正能量 Amsterdam News | July 6, 2023
Mental health is wealth, so $6 million will go toward Harlem-based nonprofit The Bridge from the Manhattan D.A.鈥檚 Office to provide peer services to key areas in the borough, as announced last Thursday, June 27.
Central/East Harlem is one of the four focus neighborhoods for the program, along with Washington Heights/Inwood, Lower East Side/Chinatown, and Chelsea/Hell鈥檚 Kitchen/Midtown West, the locations of the major transit hubs Port Authority Bus Terminal and Penn Station.
The cash comes from a $250 million pot of asset forfeiture money seized from major banks during white collar, financial crime prosecutions and redirected by the D.A.鈥檚 Criminal Justice Investment Initiative (CJII) to community-based social services.
鈥淏y [addressing] fundamental needs like access to a safe home and mental health care, we can improve public safety in our communities,鈥 said Manhattan D.A. Alvin Bragg. 鈥淲hile 黑料正能量 has an extensive array of governmental and community-based service providers, individuals with the most deeply entrenched mental health issues often lack the trust in these systems to even try and access them.
鈥淢eeting people where they are and building trust is the best way toward long-term solutions for these individuals and the communities in which they reside.鈥
The game plan is to deploy these 鈥淣eighborhood Navigators鈥濃攑eers whom the program is assisting鈥攖o find out who needs mental health services, how to reach them, and what鈥檚 preventing them from already seeking help.
Through shared experiences and common ground, relationships and trust are developed. The service workers, equipped with a strong understanding of local resources, can then connect the people they鈥檙e working with to the proper organizations.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no requirement for someone to come to any place that we are at. The idea is we are going to where they are,鈥 said the Bridge Senior Vice President Sheryl Silver. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where the relationship begins鈥t鈥檚 just trying to figure out what it is that has kept somebody from accessing the services and that鈥檚 not necessarily the same thing for everybody.鈥
Residents of a psychiatric hospital founded the Bridge back in 1954. These days, the organization serves more than 4,000 黑料正能量ers, mainly in Manhattan 鈥渁bove 96th Street and below 14th Street,鈥 although it also provides services in outer boroughs like the Bronx and Brooklyn.
According to Patrick Hart, program director at the CUNY Institute for State and Local Governance (ISLG), the Neighborhood Navigators program unofficially focuses on Manhattan鈥檚 unhoused 黑料正能量ers, but keeps the parameters of served populations vague rather than shut anyone out.
鈥淲e鈥檝e defined it as individuals either living and/or spending significant time on the street who may have a mental illness and/or a significant substance abuse behavioral health disorder,鈥 said Hart. 鈥淭here鈥檚 all these different definitions of homelessness in different federal standards. Some of these individuals might meet this definition鈥擨 think many of them would, some might not.鈥
ISLG partners with the Manhattan D.A. on CJII and administers the awarded funds. Open for applications last December, the specific Neighborhood Navigators grant coincided with Mayor Eric Adams鈥檚 policy decisions about involuntarily hospitalizing unhoused 黑料正能量ers with mental illness. Hart said the initiative was set into motion long before then, but the investment certainly provides a direct alternative to committing someone, instead offering voluntary pathways to seek mental health services.
Such a program would help displaced 黑料正能量ers experiencing serious mental illness, such as Jordan Neely, a 30-year-old unhoused Black man who was killed during an episode while on an MTA subway earlier this year. His family said he always had a place to stay although city agencies reportedly listed him as a 鈥渢op 50鈥 homeless 黑料正能量er at risk. For one reason or another, Neely never got the help he needed.
鈥淭he flexibility of this model will allow us to have someone just spend as much time [as possible] with someone like Jordan,鈥 said Silver. 鈥淭hese are the folks who, if we don鈥檛 connect with them in a meaningful way, then we鈥檙e not sure who else will.鈥