By Judi Iranyi
April 9, 2013
State Senator Leland Yee has introduced Senate Bill 664 which, if passed, would remove a number of burdensome requirements in Laura’s Law, an assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) program passed by the California Legislature in 1999 and recently extended to December 31, 2017.
An AOT program allows court-ordered, intensive outpatient treatment for people with severe mental illnesses who refuse medication because their illness impairs their ability to make rational decisions. Laura’s Law provides for a 180-day period of intensive treatment under the supervision of the court. While we as a society must safeguard the civil rights of the unfortunate, we also have an obligation to care for those who are unable to care for themselves. Laura’s Law provides safeguards to protect the civil rights of those being considered for the AOT program.
Currently AOT can only be used if a county’s board of supervisors enacts a resolution to implement and independently fund a discrete Laura’s Law program. SB 664 eliminates this requirement. SB 664 would give the county Department of Public Health complete discretion over whether or not to initiate an AOT program.
SB 664 also authorizes a county to limit the number of persons to whom it provides AOT. This would allow a county to provide AOT services only to the extent its resources permit.
Proposition 63 passed in 2004, established a one percent tax on personal income above $1 million to fund expanded health services for mentally ill children, adults, and seniors. SB 664 makes clear that Proposition 63 funds can be used to support a Laura’s Law program.
Only Nevada County has implemented Laura’s Law, while Los Angeles County chose to implement a small AOT pilot project. Perhaps with the passage of SB 664, the other 56 California counties will implement Laura’s Law.
I urge the passage of SB 664.
Judi Iranyi is a licensed clinical social worker, a Long Term Care Ombudsman, a former social services advocate for the Homeless Advocacy Project, and a former member of San Francisco’s Shelter Monitoring Committee.
April 14, 2013 at 6:12 am
Here is a list of known supporters of assisted outpatient treatment (http://mentalillnesspolicy.org/states/california/lauraslawsupporters.html)
April 13, 2013 at 5:30 am
There is a very good reason that “Laura’s Law” has only been implemented in one tiny rural community that got freaked out by a tragic murder case. It is a bad law that rips personal civil liberties to shreds, in deep contradiction to the rights and freedoms guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution.
Where is this law really coming from?
To answer that question I will simply repeat my previous comment:
Laura’s Law is a dangerous, cynical tool of the pharmaceutical industry to expand the sales of its products, which are already booming because of maneuvers it has undertaken such as the forcing of millions of young school children onto mind and life destroying drugs like Ritalin to supposedly cure “ADHD”.
The primary group lobbying for punitive police state laws like Laura’s law (which will indeed force innocent victims trapped in the criminal justice system, against their will, onto psychiatric pharmaceuticals) is an ‘organization’ called NAMI (the National Alliance on Mental Illness) which receives vast amounts of its funding, and other supports, from the pharmaceutical industry.
To see a report on this relationship of NAMI with the drug industry go to: http://pharmamkting.blogspot.com/2010/04/namis-pharma-funders-serial-off-label.html
To see a report on how the Big Pharma has similarly used faux ‘advocacy organization’ front groups like CHADD to trick tens of millions of people into taking destructive pharmaceuticals for the concocted disease “ADHD” go to: http://www.cchrint.org/psycho-pharmaceutical-front-groups/chadd/
And another good roundup on all of this vile, industry driven hooking of our nation on Big Pharma’s drugs is at: http://www.cchrint.org/psycho-pharmaceutical-front-groups/
Before you take a drug, or accept a new law, it’s a good idea to read the fine print on the label…
April 10, 2013 at 5:58 pm
Excellent. I hope Senator Yee will consider running for governor in the not too distant future.