March 17, 2022

NBC News: New bill seeks to ensure upcoming mental health crisis hotline serves the most vulnerable

Lawmakers want to secure funding for the new mental health crisis hotline, 988, which will serve as an alternative to 911 and aim to avoid unnecessary police confrontations.

Jonathan Murillo, 23, was shot and killed by Los Angeles police last month moments before the arrival of mental health specialists who had been sent to respond to reports of a possible assault at the location.

A family member at the home had told police Murillo was armed with a knife and "possibly under the influence of narcotics," according to police.

The type of fatal interaction Murillo had with the police is what lawmakers and advocates hope to avoid with the creation of a new national three-digit mental health crisis hotline. The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, which uses the 10-digit number 800-273-TALK (8255), will soon be referred to as 988. The goal is to reduce violent and deadly interactions between law enforcement and those experiencing mental illness.

The 988 hotline is supposed to be expanded by July, but Rep. Tony Cárdenas, D-Calif., realized after Murillo's death near his district that many cities in almost every state lack adequate resources to effectively implement it by then.

In order to address that challenge, Cárdenas introduced new bipartisan legislation Thursday to help states with additional federal funding and guidance on how to create a crisis response system that relies on trained mental health specialists, instead of armed officers.

"What we're going to have with 988 is the same thing as 911 but for mental health, for people with drug addictions and people who are contemplating suicide," Cárdenas told NBC News. "The perfect situation is that states will start implementing the resources, the funding, to keep it going every day, every week, every month, every year, just like local states and communities do that now with 911."

"At the same time, 988 will be there to make sure that we have a mental health professional to be there, to take that call, to respond and to make sure that somebody comes out there," he added. "And then, when they need help long term, that there's some place to go for them to get that help."

More than 1 in 5 people fatally shot by police have mental illnesses, according to a Washington Post database of fatal U.S. shootings by on-duty police officers. Since 2015, police have fatally shot at least 1,569 people with mental illnesses.

Then-President Donald Trump signed into law a bipartisan bill before leaving office in 2020 to replace the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline with a 911-like mental health emergency line.

Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass., first introduced the bill that helped make the 988 mental health crisis hotline a reality, a move he said "was a critical step toward destigmatizing mental health and making care more accessible."

Now, he is co-sponsoring Cárdenas' bill to improve the hotline's implementation.

“The United States is facing a mental health crisis — made worse by two years of pandemic-induced trauma,” Moulton said in a statement. "We’re long overdue to provide this service to Americans looking for a reliable, free place to turn during mental health emergencies.”

The 988 line comes at a time when suicide rates have increased by 33 percent in the last two decades, particularly among young people during the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Cárdenas' office.


By:  Nicole Acevedo
Source: NBC News