SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — San Francisco Mayor London Breed has
introduced citywide legislation to implement a new conservatorship law
that helps house and treat homeless people suffering from mental health
and substance abuse issues.
Senate Bill 1045, authored by state Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San
Francisco, allows the counties of San Francisco, Los Angeles and San
Diego to set up a conservator in cases for people who can’t care for
themselves.
In conjunction with the city legislation, Breed announced that she
intends to add between 70 and 90 new beds for mental health patients to
the city’s navigation centers and hospitals over the next year.
“This is about getting people who are severely ill the help they
desperately need,” Breed said in a statement. “There is a small subset
of our homeless population that are clearly, visibly suffering on our
streets.”
She said, “They are frequently in and out of the hospital or criminal
justice system, but they never receive the comprehensive care they need
to stabilize and get back on their feet. It is simply inhumane for us
to allow them to continue to deteriorate without intervening.”
Breed has directed the city’s Department of Public Health to figure
out ways to increase the number of beds at the city’s navigations
centers and Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital.
At Tuesday’s Board of Supervisors meeting, Supervisor Rafael
Mandelman, along with Breed, introduced the legislation to support SB
1045.
“I believe it is imperative that we move the ball forward,” Mandelman
said. “Everyday that San Franciscans suffer in our streets and jails
for untreated mental illness is one day too many. We cannot continue to
allow our neighborhoods to serve as open mental institutions and
shelters as jails.”
He said, “SB 1045 is not a cure all. It does offer a new tool to help
people suffering from severe mental illness and addiction … We must
seize every opportunity to improve conditions of those suffering mental
illness.”
“I am thrilled that San Francisco is moving to implement my bill, SB
1045, which will help some of our most vulnerable residents get the help
they need,” Wiener said in a statement. “I am grateful to Mayor Breed
and Supervisor Mandelman for understanding that the faster we implement
this tool, the faster we can help those suffering on our streets.”
SB 1045, signed into law last month by Gov. Jerry Brown, is set to take effect on Jan. 1.
According to Breed’s office, the city’s health department has
estimated that the new conservatorship law will impact between 50 and
100 people in the city; individuals who are the most likely to need city
services. Last year, only about 12 percent of homeless people who used
city services accounted for 73 percent of the costs.
A coalition of several groups, including the Coalition on
Homelessness, have voiced opposition to SB 1045, arguing that
conservatorship takes away individuals’ civil liberties, affecting
decisions about their body, housing and medical care.
The Coalition on Homelessness is pushing for Proposition C on this
November’s city elections, which would use a business tax to provide
funds for housing and treating homeless people suffering from mental
health and substance abuse issues.
Breed and Wiener have both opposed Proposition C, arguing that the
conservatorship law is the way to ease the city’s homelessness crisis.
Full Article & Source:
San Francisco Mayor Seeks More Homeless Housing Through Conservatorship Law
2 comments:
Baloney. The law gets the homeless off the streets and strips them of their rights. It's a terrible thing to do to people.
Susan said...
I've been very concerned about the law Governor Brown signed. What I haven't heard is, who will be assigned the role of making the incapacity decision, and who will be overseeing all of this to ensure abuse does not occur. I don't trust any of it.
Susan San Francisco Bay Area
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