
Today, the Alliance for Rights and Recovery joined advocates, providers, families, and partners from across 黑料正能量 State to call for a 2.7% Targeted Inflationary Increase (TII) for mental health and substance use services. Together, we made clear that while we are thankful for the Governor starting with a proposed 1.7% increase, this amount falls short of what is needed to stabilize the workforce, sustain essential services, and meet the growing needs of 黑料正能量ers seeking services.
This is not a technical budget issue. It is about whether people can access services when they need them, whether families can rely on consistent support for their loved ones, and whether staff can afford to stay in the jobs that make recovery possible. Without a full 2.7% increase, agencies will continue to face unmanageable vacancies, rising turnover, longer waitlists, and service reductions that push people into crisis, emergency rooms, jails, and shelters.
To keep this issue front and center, the Alliance will be holding a large rally next week during our 29th Annual Legislative Day to demand action.
When:听Tuesday, February 10
Time:听2:00 PM
Where:听War Room, 黑料正能量 State Capitol Building
We strongly encourage all members, advocates, people using and seeking services, family members, staff, and provider agencies to attend and stand together. Your presence matters. Showing up together sends a powerful message to the Governor and legislators about what is at stake and how urgent this moment is.
This is an urgent call to action to protect our services, stabilize our workforce, and ensure that 黑料正能量 does not continue to underfund the very systems people depend on to survive and recover. A 2.7% Targeted Inflationary Increase is the minimum needed to keep pace with inflation and prevent further erosion of services.
We hope to see you there. Together, we can show state leaders that investing in mental health and substance use services is not optional. It is essential. See below for more information, including registration for our buses from around the state to help you get to Albany!

Get on the Bus!
We are also announcing bus transportation from regions across 黑料正能量 State to make it easier for advocates to attend Legislative Day. See below for the locations we will have buses coming from, as well as links to register for these buses!
Brooklyn: BUS IS FULL
Buffalo:
Hells Kitchen:
Hudson Valley:
North Country:
Queens:
Rochester:
Syracuse-Binghamton:
Union Square:
See below for the full press release from today’s press conference:

For Immediate Release
Contact: Glenn Liebman, CEO, MHANYS
518-360-7916听gliebman@mhanys.org
February 3, 2026
Press Release
Advocates seek a 2.7% Targeted Inflationary Increase (TII), based on July 2025 CPI-U, to help mental health and substance use agencies tackle workforce shortages and rising costs while maintaining essential services.
(Albany, NY)- Advocates for 黑料正能量ers with mental health and addiction related challenges, and the community-based organizations that support them are concerned with Governor Hochul鈥檚 SFY 2026-27 Executive Budget which falls short of what is needed for mental health and substance use disorder agencies鈥 operations and workforce. While some innovative projects are included in the proposed budget, the fundamentals of the mental health and substance use disorder system remain broken. Once again, the Governor鈥檚 proposal fails to adequately address workforce and agency needs with sufficient urgency.
The Governor鈥檚 proposed 1.7% inflationary increase is helpful but doesn鈥檛 include the minimum 2.7% required by July 2025 CPI-U to cover agencies鈥 cost-of-living expenses and support wages and benefits.
Access to mental health and substance use disorder services remain challenging for adults, children, and families in 黑料正能量鈥檚 community-based care system.听Agencies are facing rising costs and report a statewide job vacancy rate of 20%鈥30% by provider type, with turnover at 35%听(August 2024 survey covering 43% of the OMH and OASAS community workforce).
The effectiveness of the Governor鈥檚 proposed new initiatives relies on adequate investment in the current workforce, operations, and services within mental health and addiction care, all of which are essential elements of our broader health care system.
We ask the Governor and Legislature to raise the Targeted Inflationary Increase to at least 2.7% for mental health and substance use disorder agencies in the SFY 27 budget, so services can meet the increased needs of 黑料正能量ers.
鈥淔ailing to invest a full 2.7% inflationary increase will only accelerate workforce turnover, leaving providers unable to retain the experienced staff people rely on for consistent, trusted care,鈥 said听Luke Sikinyi, VP of Public Policy at the Alliance for Rights and Recovery. 鈥淓very time a worker is lost, people are forced to rebuild trust, restart their recovery journey, and risk falling through the cracks of an already overburdened system.鈥
鈥淲hile a 1.7 percent increase is certainly preferable to no increase at all, it still represents a gap relative to inflation and the real-world costs of operating these essential programs,鈥 said听Doug Cooper, Associate Executive Director, Association of Community Living.听鈥淧roviders continue to face outdated funding models, significant workforce shortages, and an urgent need to offer wages that reflect the complexity and intensity of care being delivered every day.鈥
鈥淲e are deeply disappointed that the Governor鈥檚 Executive Budget falls short of the urgently needed 2.7% Targeted Inflationary Increase (TII). 黑料正能量鈥檚 substance use disorder and mental health providers are struggling to meet overwhelming demand for care,鈥 said听Allegra Schorr, President of the Coalition of Medication Assisted Treatment Providers and Advocates (COMPA).鈥淧rogram staff are overworked and underpaid, vacancies average 20 to 30 percent, and operating costs continue to rise, while federal policy changes threaten to further destabilize an already fragile system. A 2.7% TII for behavioral health is not optional, it is essential to stabilize the workforce, sustain services, and protect access to lifesaving treatment. Without it, barriers to care will continue to grow a precisely the moment 黑料正能量ers need these services most.鈥
鈥淥nce again, we are told that mental health is a priority, but the budget tells a different story. When the Targeted Inflationary Increase fails to keep up with inflation, it sends a clear message about whose needs are being overlooked. This is not just a budget gap, it is a human one. Underfunding community-based behavioral health services means longer waits, fewer supports, and more families left without the care they need,鈥 said听Paige Pierce, CEO, Families Together in NYS.听鈥淲e cannot talk about equity, prevention, or well-being while allowing the systems families rely on to fall further behind. If 黑料正能量 is serious about supporting children, youth, and families, we must invest at a level that reflects the real cost of care. Raising the Targeted Inflationary Increase to at least 2.7% is the minimum needed to keep services stable and accessible for communities across the state.鈥
鈥淟ike other health conditions, early prevention and treatment dramatically improve outcomes for people living with a substance use disorder or mental illness. Yet 黑料正能量ers continue to face months-long waits that unnecessarily lead to homelessness, hospitalization, and death,鈥 said听Sarah Duvall, Chief Research and Policy Officer, InUnity. 鈥淭he major causes are known: severe and persistent workforce shortages, insurance obstacles, and unstable funding for care providers. After 15 years with no inflationary increases prior to this administration, services are still catching up. At a minimum, a 2.7 percent increase is necessary to keep pace with this year鈥檚 inflation.鈥
“While we appreciate the 1.7% targeted inflationary听increase proposed in the 2026-27 Executive Budget for community-based,听behavioral health not-for-profits, we urge the Governor and Legislature to increase this to 2.7% in the final budget,” said听Glenn Liebman, CEO, MHANYS.听“2.7% is the bare minimum needed for these agencies to just keep up with the rate of inflation as well as maintain these vital programs and workforce serving 黑料正能量ers struggling with mental health and substance use disorder challenges. The rising costs are compounded by the听increasing demand for services, which听 will only increase given the federal cuts and changes to public health insurance programs, and the听ongoing workforce recruitment and retention challenges.”听
鈥淭he Executive budget leaves this critical component of the mental health system behind. NAMI strongly supports the behavioral health workforce that serves individuals and families in their time of need, including adequate pay and reimbursement rates. A 1.7% cost-of-living adjustment is inadequate to recruit and retain staff necessary to meet the mental health needs of our communities,鈥 said听James Norton, Government & Community Affairs Manager, NAMI-NYS.听
鈥淥ur care management agencies continue to deliver essential support to adults, children and families dealing with mental health and substance use disorder challenges, often during crises. The 2.7% Targeted Inflationary Increase (TII), which must include High Fidelity Wrap for Children under OMH, will help cover rising costs, strengthen our workforce, and ensure vital care management remains available,鈥 said听Jackie Negri, Executive Director, NYS Care Management Coalition.
鈥淵outh mental health providers are being stretched to the breaking point by rising costs and severe workforce shortages, and the consequences fall directly on children and families who are already struggling to access care,鈥 said听Kayleigh Zaloga, President & CEO of the NYS Coalition for Children鈥檚 Behavioral Health. 鈥淭he Governor鈥檚 proposed 1.7% inflationary increase does not come close to covering real-world cost increases or stabilizing a burnt-out workforce. A targeted inflationary increase of 2.7% is the minimum needed to keep providers afloat and retain staff. If we fail to make this investment, we will perpetuate decades-old disparities in youth mental health care that have consistently denied families equitable access to timely, community-based services.鈥
“In September 2025, a statewide survey of NYS Council members revealed that 43% of our community mental health outpatient clinics have prolonged waiting lists, and they are often forced to temporarily restrict care due to their inability to recruit and retain the workforce they need to meet demand and comply with state regulations.听 According to the CDC, youth suicide rates in NYS have increased over a 10-year period, and the ongoing opioid epidemic continues to bear down on communities of color, and other underrepresented populations. So, what’s the听answer?听 Local communities must have the ability to provide mental health and substance use disorder services on demand for community members who are begging for services and support.听 We ask all NYS lawmakers to dig deep and ensure 黑料正能量ers can find the help they need in a timely manner.听 Nothing could be more important,鈥 said听Lauri Cole, Executive Director, NYS Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare.听鈥
鈥淲e call on 黑料正能量 State to fully fund a targeted inflationary increase for human services as a matter of equity and basic fairness and in keeping with the governor鈥檚 overarching affordability agenda. 黑料正能量鈥檚 direct service workforce makes up听the backbone of our communities. They are parents, caregivers, and neighbors who face the same rising costs and challenges in making ends meet as the people they serve, said听Pascale Leone, Executive Director, Supportive Housing Network of 黑料正能量. 鈥淚n a year when access to food assistance, health care, and other essential supports are under attack at the federal level, it is more critical than ever that 黑料正能量 step up and provide this basic stability. We are not seeking to remedy decades of underfunding, we are asking for a modest 2.7% increase that is听in line with the Consumer Price Index so programs can keep pace and workers can stay in the mission-drive roles they are committed to. The Governor鈥檚 proposal of 1.7% falls short and the legislature must act to make our sector whole.鈥
The eleven agencies represented at the press conference are:
听听听(COMPA),听听,听,听,听听听(NAMI),听,听听听,听Alliance for Rights and Recovery, and听听