File #: 21-1232    Name:
Type: Written Report Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 6/24/2021 In control: City Council Public Hearing
On agenda: 7/6/2021 Final action:
Title: Public Hearing on the Consideration of the Release of $789,909 from FY 2022 Contingent Reserves for Mental Health Resources, Teen Wellness, and Behavior Health Support for School Age Children.
Attachments: 1. 21-1232_Presentation

City of Alexandria, Virginia

________________

 

MEMORANDUM

 

 

DATE:                     JUNE 30, 2021

 

TO:                                          THE HONORABLE MAYOR AND MEMBERS OF CITY COUNCIL

 

FROM:                     MARK B. JINKS, CITY MANAGER /s/

 

DOCKET TITLE:                     

TITLE

Public Hearing on the Consideration of the Release of $789,909 from FY 2022 Contingent Reserves for Mental Health Resources, Teen Wellness, and Behavior Health Support for School Age Children.

BODY

_________________________________________________________________

ISSUE:  Consideration of the release of $789,909 from FY 2022 Contingent Reserves for Mental Health Resources, Teen Wellness, and Behavioral Health Support for School Aged Children.

 

RECOMMENDATION:  That City Council:

1.                     Hold a public hearing, the public testimony into account, and after the public hearing,

2.                     Allocate $789,909 held in FY 2022 General Fund contingent reserves to enable the distribution of funding to department budgets for the Court Service Unit ($101,000), Department of Community and Human Services (DCHS) ($566,909), and Alexandria Health Department ($122,000).

 

BACKGROUND:  During the FY 2022 budget’s final Add/Delete work session, City Council reallocated $789,909 from the Police Department budget for School Resource Officers (SROs) to contingent reserves. City Council directed staff to present a proposal, with input from ACPS, to City Council for use of the funding for mental health resources for school aged children, the Teen Wellness Center, an additional Behavioral Health Specialist for the Alexandria Crisis Intervention and Co-responding Program (ACORP) pilot program, or other similar needs identified by staff.

 

City staff held a series of discussions and consulted with ACPS staff, to identify the greatest areas of need for school aged children across the City. City staff presented a staffing proposal to City Council during the June 22nd Legislative Meeting to alleviate current capacity limitations, reduce the number of ACPS students on waitlists for mental health services, and to anticipate increased student support needs as students return to in-person learning. During the June 22nd Legislative Meeting, City Council requested that the proposed use of these funds be further discussed with ACPS and the School Board during the June 28th City Council School Board Sub-Committee. City Council also instructed staff to defer decision on this item until the July 6th Legislative Meeting and to docket the item for Public Hearing.

 

During the June 28th City Council School Board Sub-Committee, City staff provided a presentation on the proposed use of these funds to provide support services to ACPS students. ACPS staff and representatives of the ACPS School Board indicated that they were receptive to the positions and student services proposed by the City and would likely be able to provide on-site accommodations to the staff in these positions. School Board representatives stated that they would like more time over the summer and fall to review these proposals with the School Board and ACPS leadership and instructional staff to ensure that the proposals address student needs in the school system. In addition, the Schools have indicated that they are working on costing and identification of security related operational and physical changes to the high school building which they feel they need to make, and which will have an unbudgeted cost.

 

DISCUSSION:  The following City Departments interact the most with ACPS’ school-aged children. The mental health, teen wellness, and behavioral health support services provided by these departments are listed below as well as their current waitlist and capacity limits.

 

DCHS’ Child and Family Behavioral Health Services (CFBHS): Prior to the pandemic (2019 to 2020) DCHS’ CFBHS Division was staffed with 4.40 FTEs who were allocated as follows:

                     Alexandria City High School Main Campus: Two Senior Therapists (1 English Speaking, 1 Spanish Speaking) providing 80 hours total per week at school (approximately 40 client caseload).

                     Alexandria City High School - Minnie Howard Campus: One Senior Therapist (English speaking) providing a total of 16 hours for service (approximately 10 client caseload);

                     Hammond Middle School: Two Senior Therapists (1 English Speaking, 1 Spanish Speaking) providing a total of 64 hours of service at the school (approximately 30 client caseload); and

                     George Washington Middle School: One Senior Therapist (English speaking) providing 16 hours of service at the school (approximately 10 client caseload).

 

DCHS’ CFBHS has a current wait list of eleven (11) school age youth, the majority with Spanish speaking parents who are recommended to have a bilingual therapist. Over the course of a year, wait list times vary due to prioritization and triage of severity of symptoms as well as vacancies within CFBHS.  Historically, the school-based waitlists are as follows (by January/March of the school year):

                     Alexandria City High School Main Campus: 25 to 30 students on the English-speaking waitlist, 20 to 25 students on the Spanish speaking waitlist;

                     Alexandria City High School Minnie Howard campus: 5 to 10 students on a waitlist;

                     Hammond Middle School: 5 to 10 students on the English-speaking waitlist and 5 to 10 students on the Spanish speaking waitlist; and

                     GW Middle School: Little to no waitlist due to a variety of factors, including less exclusive need for school-based services and language limitations.

Each year ACPS Student Support Services requests that CFBHS provides more clinicians in schools than DCHS has capacity to provide. If CFBHS had more capacity, this program would provide considerably more outreach, group therapy, and consultation. Furthermore, City staff anticipates from all studies showing an increase in mental health symptoms within school age youth that there will be a three-fold (3x) increase the number of referrals historically received during the school year, particularly as students adjust to in-person learning. 

 

Court Service Unit: The CSU has on staff two Senior Therapists who receive referrals from judges, intake and probation officers and provide therapy to youth and families, biopsychosocial evaluations, juvenile sex offender evaluation and treatment, custody evaluation/home studies, and parenting classes for those in custody disputes. The program communicates with the Court to maintain an appropriate number of cases and, in so doing, does not maintain a wait list. Therapists staff each referral and determine an appropriate service provider based on insurance and capacity. If services cannot be provided in-house and the client is eligible for services with DCHS, then referrals are made. When Senior Therapist caseloads are full, a memo is sent to the judges, who then avoid making referrals for services not available outside the CSU (i.e., custody evaluations/home studies, until therapists have the capacity).

 

The CSU currently funds two Counselors through the Intervention Prevention and Education (IPE) program who provide Therapeutic Case Management for youth who are at risk of gang involvement; including family reunification, acculturation, and community resources. Some youth are gang involved while many exhibit risk factors such as, substance abuse, crime, teen pregnancy, and poor school performance. The waitlist for the program during the current fiscal year is not representative of the average waiting time and waitlist since the IPE program has shifted service delivery due to the COVID-19 pandemic. During previous years, an average wait time for a case to be assigned was as follows:

                     In 2019 there were 17 students on the waiting lists at a given time with an average waiting time of 38 days; and

                     In 2020 there were 30 students on the waiting lists at a given time with an average waiting time of 31 days.

 

Alexandria Health Department: AHD staffs and operates the Teen Wellness Center (TWC) within Alexandria City High School. The Teen Wellness Center is a medical clinic that provides health services to any teen living in the City of Alexandria. The clinic is open year-round and provides a variety of health and confidential services to teens between the ages of twelve and nineteen. There are no TWC providers based at the Minnie Howard campus. All youth needing services are referred to DCHS mental health staff.

 

ProposalThe recommendations for reallocating the $789,909 are listed below. The proposals selected by staff where those that would best alleviate current capacity limitations and reduce the number of ACPS students on waitlists for mental health services as well as anticipate increased student support needs as students return to in-person learning. 

 

 

                     Court Services Unit

o                     Alexandria Mentoring Partnership Coordinator (+1.0 FTE) to ensure that every child has caring adult role models. This proposal is in alignment with the Children and Youth Master Plan and would support evidence-based practices among mentoring programs, support development of new mentor programs, and establishment of a Mentoring Institute, whereby caring adults in Alexandria will be trained in mental health first aid, building assets, youth development, drug and alcohol and child abuse prevention. (+$101,000)

 

                     Alexandria Health Department

o                     Public Health Nurse II (+1.0 FTE) will be located at the Minnie Howard Campus, provide a limited number of health services there, and act as a bridge to mental health practitioners and the full range of TWC services. The nurse will primarily focus on following up with students on recommendations made by AHD and DCHS healthcare providers. This type of follow up is key to enacting change in sleep patterns, diet, exercise, self-care, and high-risk behaviors that affect both mental and physical health. (+$122,000)

 

                     DCHS

o                     Therapist Supervisor (+1.0 FTE) to support staffing/supervisory needs in CFBHS, coordination opportunities, and dedicated system support for ACPS.  This therapist supervisor would develop a coordinated effort with the Youth Development program to provide services through the continuum of care (Prevention, Early Intervention, Treatment, and Crisis response), meeting increasing school community demands. (+$122,422)

 

o                     Senior Therapist (Licensed Mental Health Professionals) (+2.0 FTE) will provide individual, family, and group therapy for school-based youth, consultation, and crisis response. (+$117,199 x 2.0 FTE).  

 

o                     Human Services Specialist II (Qualified Mental Health Professionals) (+1.0 FTE) would provide support for family outreach and engagement and prevention/early intervention activities. There will be a focus on building on/collaborating with ACPS restorative justice and equity efforts, closing the disparity gap, and meeting global youth needs within the school setting. (+$98,654)

 

o                     Licensed Senior Therapist (+1.0 FTE) who serves as an Emergency Services (ES) generalist who would focus on mobile crisis and outreach and engagement work. This would include the schools when needed and in other settings. Depending on the type of situation the therapist is called to, some calls would get responded to with a Police Officer, others would not.  This ES therapist would be scheduled during the day to respond to any potential increase in school referrals. (+$111,435)

It should be noted that an additional ACORP position was not recommended because the primary intent of this allocation was to focus on directly serving school aged youth.

 

FISCAL IMPACT:  The $789,909 is currently held in FY 2022 general fund contingent reserve for this purpose and therefore there will be no additional impact to the City’s operating budget. Authorization by City Council will increase Department General Fund budgets by the amounts and FTEs listed in the table below.

 

DCHS

1.0 School Services Therapist Supervisor 2.0 Senior Therapists  1.0 Human Services Specialist II 1.0 Licensed Senior Therapist Emergency Services

$566,909

Health

1.0 Public Health Nurse II

$122,000

Court Services

1.0 Alexandria Mentoring Partnership Coordinator

$101,000

Total

$789,909

 

 

ATTACHMENT:  Presentation

 

STAFF:

Debra Collins, Deputy City Manager

Mike Mackey, Director, Court Service Unit

Kate Garvey, Director, Department of Community and Human Services

Dr. Anne Gaddy, MD, MPH, Acting Director, Alexandria Health Department

Morgan Routt, Director, Management and Budget

Meghan McGrane, Budget Analyst, Office of Management and Budget