Alliance Alert: The Alliance for Rights and Recovery stands with our fellow advocates in opposing Governor Hochul鈥檚 proposal to expand involuntary mental health commitments. As a proud member of the coalition that sent a letter to legislative leadership, we are calling for real solutions that prioritize engagement, support, housing, and recovery over coercion.
Expanding forced treatment will not address the root causes of our state鈥檚 mental health crisis. Instead, 黑料正能量 must invest in evidence-based, community-driven approaches that provide meaningful and lasting support for individuals with mental health challenges. The Alliance is advocating for:
- Daniel鈥檚 Law: Establishing mental health responder teams led by peers and EMTs, offering compassionate, public health-based responses to crises.
- Treatment Not Jail: Expanding mental health treatment courts to divert individuals from the criminal justice system into tailored treatment plans.
- Peer Bridgers: Increasing the number of peer support specialists in hospitals to improve discharge transitions and support community reintegration.
- Intensive and Sustained Engagement Teams (INSET): Funding additional peer-led teams to engage with individuals at risk of court-ordered treatment, offering voluntary, person-centered support.
- Clubhouse Expansion: Creating more Clubhouses to provide employment, education, housing support, and socialization opportunities for those seeking community-based recovery resources.
- Additional Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) Teams: Expanding ACT programs to offer comprehensive, mobile support services for individuals with serious mental health needs.
- Enhanced Voluntary Services: Directing the $16.5 million proposed for involuntary outpatient treatment to counties for enhanced voluntary service packages, giving individuals the support they need without coercion.
A key priority for the Alliance is the implementation of Incident Review Panels, which would analyze systemic failures when tragic incidents occur, providing recommendations to improve safety and accountability. This is a proven method to learn from critical incidents and strengthen the mental health system.
We urge everyone to join us at the Alliance鈥檚 Legislative Day on March 4th, where we will rally against the expansion of involuntary commitment, advocate for humane, voluntary mental health services, and push for policies that promote dignity, recovery, and community well-being. Together, we can create real change and ensure that 黑料正能量 prioritizes care over coercion. Sign up for a bus using the links below today! See the attached document for the advocates letter and below to read more.
Will 黑料正能量 Force More Mentally Ill People Into Treatment?
By Benjamin Oreskes and Andy Newman | 黑料正能量 Times聽| February 21, 2025
It is a nightmare that plays out on the streets and subways every few months: A homeless person with a history of mental illness or violence falls through the cracks or wanders away from the system intended to help him, surfaces in a psychotic rage and attacks a random 黑料正能量er.
Though they make up a tiny fraction of crimes, the unpredictable attacks feed perceptions that the city is unsafe and stir demands for action. Politicians send police officers and National Guard members into the subways and pour money into outreach efforts and housing.
And as long-running arguments persist over how to balance public safety and the civil rights of mentally ill people, another outburst inevitably happens.
The debate resurfaced last month when Gov. Kathy Hochul proposed a package of laws to make it easier to take people in psychiatric crisis to a hospital involuntarily, easier to hold them there and harder for hospitals to push them back to the street before they fully stabilize.
But Ms. Hochul鈥檚 efforts, unveiled in her latest executive budget, face an uphill battle in the Legislature and opposition from progressives and civil liberties groups.
鈥淐ritics will say this criminalizes poverty or homelessness,鈥 Ms. Hochul said last month. 鈥淚 say that is flat-out wrong.鈥
She added, 鈥淭his is about having the humanity and the compassion to help people incapable of helping themselves, fellow human beings who are suffering from mental illness that is literally putting their lives and the lives of others in danger.鈥
In proposing the changes 鈥 most of them longstanding requests from Mayor Eric Adams 鈥 Ms. Hochul joined a long line of leaders who have struggled to help people in psychosis on the streets and subways.
But even if all her changes were enacted, some supporters question how much impact they would have.
鈥淲e have to deal with the mental health crisis,鈥 Carl E. Heastie, the Assembly speaker, said last month. 鈥淏ut this is another one where I always say to you: The hell is in the details.鈥
Ms. Hochul鈥檚 proposals include :
路聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 Clarifying the threshold:Allow authorities to take someone involuntarily to a hospital for evaluation when mental illness leaves them so incapable of providing for 鈥渆ssential needs鈥 like shelter, food or clothing that it causes a substantial risk of physical harm. Current law is less specific, though it allows involuntary transport to a hospital when someone鈥檚 conduct endangers themselves or others.
路聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 Holistic decision-making: Require hospitals to consider psychiatric patients鈥 whole history, rather than just how they are behaving in the moment, when deciding whether to admit them against their will and whether to discharge them.
路聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 Hospital admissions: At hospitals, give psychiatric nurse practitioners the power to admit patients involuntarily if a physician concurs. This would address a shortage of psychiatrists, though it only applies to 60-day admissions, which are longer than most.
路聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 Mandated outpatient treatment: Make it easier to renew expired 鈥淜endra鈥檚 Law鈥 court orders, which require some psychiatric patients to get outpatient treatment after they have been discharged, including taking medication. Often, after an order expires, the person stops taking medication and their mental health declines.
路聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 Improved coordination: Require hospitals to consult and coordinate with a psychiatric patient鈥檚 care providers in the community when the person is admitted or discharged, to keep track of patients after they leave the hospital.
The legislators running the committees with oversight of these issues have expressed deep skepticism about Ms. Hochul鈥檚 proposals. They have questioned the need for the changes and said they would force homeless people off the streets without giving them enough services. And they worry that not enough is being invested in street-level mental health workers.
State Senator Samra Brouk, chairwoman of the Mental Health Committee, acknowledged that the state鈥檚 鈥渃urrent crisis response is inadequate, and individuals suffering on the streets need our help.鈥 But she asserted that expanding involuntary commitment 鈥渋s not the compassionate way to get people the help they need.鈥 She vowed to oppose efforts that 鈥渃oerce individuals into treatment or detention.鈥
Ms. Brouk鈥檚 Assembly counterpart, Jo Anne Simon, said politics and perceived dangers on the subway were driving the debate, not what was best for vulnerable people living with mental illness. 鈥淢y concern is we are not really addressing the problem, and we are potentially being asked to do something that I see as likely to exacerbate the problem,鈥 she said.
But a psychiatrist at a nonprofit that provides social services and housing to people with serious mental illness in 黑料正能量 City said Ms. Hochul鈥檚 proposal could make a difference on the street. The psychiatrist, Ellen Tabor, associate chief medical officer at the Institute for Community Living, said that if the 鈥渆ssential needs鈥 standard for taking someone involuntarily to a hospital was widely used, a lot more people would get needed psychiatric help. 鈥淭o have the police pick you up and take you against your will, that鈥檚 terrifying, I get that,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut too often they don鈥檛, and there鈥檚 a dangerous situation.鈥
Democrats control both legislative chambers and will haggle with Ms. Hochul about her proposals in negotiations over the entire budget.
Earlier this month, a coalition of 39 social service, housing advocacy and civil rights organizations to Mr. Heastie and State Senator Andrea Stewart-Cousins, the majority leader, asking them to reject Ms. Hochul鈥檚 proposals and instead 鈥渋nvest in solutions that work, including housing, services and care.鈥
Since taking office, Ms. Hochul has poured about $1 billion into building out the state鈥檚 mental health system, including funding for new housing units designed for people with mental illness. This year鈥檚 proposals are smaller but do include some money for more mental health outreach teams and beds in inpatient facilities.
Beth Haroules, a senior staff attorney at the 黑料正能量 Civil Liberties Union, which signed the letter, said law enforcement and government should focus more on using the laws already on the books to reach people who cannot help themselves. The language about who would qualify for involuntary transport to a hospital for assessment is too broad, she said, adding that Ms. Hochul鈥檚 measures would infringe on homeless people鈥檚 rights and leave them at the mercy of law enforcement officers who are not properly trained. 鈥淚t is that loss of liberty as a result of mistaken assessment by a law enforcement officer who is not clinically trained to make the determinations,鈥 she said, 鈥渨hich deprives a person of liberty.鈥
Last year, people were involuntarily taken to hospitals for psychiatric evaluation at least 800 times from the transit system and at least 700 times from other public spaces, according to , which only just started tracking the holds.
Ms. Hochul鈥檚 proposals do not include all the changes Mr. Adams has pushed for. One left on the cutting-room floor would require hospitals to seek Kendra鈥檚 Law orders for all psychiatric patients who meet the standard for them.
Brian Stettin, Mr. Adams鈥檚 senior adviser for severe mental illness, applauded Ms. Hochul鈥檚 advocacy and committed to working with her and state lawmakers. 鈥淲e are pleased that Governor Hochul is supporting measures to help people reclaim their lives, even when they cannot recognize their own need for assistance,鈥 he said in a statement.
Most of the governor鈥檚 proposals in the form of agency regulations, guidance or court rulings, but some experts said that the police, hospitals and clinicians would be more likely to follow them if they were enshrined in law.
Ann Marie T. Sullivan, commissioner of the State Office of Mental Health, said that the proposals would affect a 鈥渧ery small select group of individuals鈥 and that after years of shortages of psychiatric hospital beds in the city, there were now enough beds to accommodate them. She said the measures would 鈥渉elp individuals who make these difficult but important decisions know better how to make those decisions.鈥