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Photo Credit Above Denver Post

CO's Jail wait Case

fear & Loathing in Colorado
The Special Master's Report

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The Special Master's report

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Sometimes   our   problems   can   seem   so   overwhelming.     Getting   trustworthy   data   &   making   a   plan   to   solve   the   problem   can   really   calm   things   down.   The   Hickenlooper   Administration's   FEAR  of   that   ---   turned   this   problem   into   a   BLAZING   FIRE.     We   hope   the   Polis   Administration   has   the   COURAGE   the   HICKENLOOPER   ADMINISTRATION   never   had.
Independent Monitor: State's Plan to deal with "mentally ill" in jail is "scattershot." Colorado Public Radio


Jail Wait Case -- Dec. 2017  

State Proposal
  • Expansion of beds at the state mental hospital at Fort Logan $11.8 million.
  • Additional 62 competency evaluation and restoration beds in jails, $7.4 million.
  • ​State Partnership with Private Hospitals, 3 new state employees & 10 new beds -- $3.4 million
  • Proposed change in State Law:  "The human services department is working with lawmakers and the court system to draft legislation that would require courts to order restoration in the most appropriate setting, based on the accused person’s symptoms and criminal charge."​





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Denver Post

People with mental illness who are accused of crimes in Colorado are waiting up to four times as long as legally allowed for evaluations and treatment because the system is so overwhelmed, their attorneys say.

Colorado is bound by a 2012 lawsuit settlement to conduct mental competency evaluations or begin treatment for people found incompetent to stand trial within 28 days of a judge’s order. But for the second time in six months, the state has revealed it is failing to meet the requirements of the federal settlement.

Court orders for mental competency evaluations are outpacing capacity at an “unabating rate,” clogging the system and forcing people to languish longer in lock-up, according to a legal letter written by the Colorado Department of Human Services.

In June 2016, the system received 146 competency evaluation orders and 54 orders for “restoration,” which is mental health treatment to restore people found incompetent so that they can then face charges. A year later, in June, the system received 215 competency orders and 93 restoration orders — increases of 47 percent and 72 percent, respectively. The numbers have remained high in the months since.

While Colorado now has plans to spend upward of $20 million to address the backlog, partly by adding dozens more mental health beds in jail and at the state mental hospital in Pueblo, others say the state failed to act even though the increase was foreseeable.

“It has been a decade of false promises by the Department of Human Services,” said attorney Iris Eytan, who represents accused criminals with mental illness in the lawsuit brought by Disability Law Colorado. “These human beings are locked up, sometimes in solitary confinement, because the jails cannot treat them or forcibly medicate them, and they are far away from their communities, jobs, services and families.

“People are suffering greatly.”


Federal law requires states to provide mental health treatment to people in jail who are mentally ill and cannot understand the criminal proceedings they face. Their cases cannot proceed until they are mentally “restored,” if possible. Many are “deteriorating in jails that are not equipped to care for them” for up to four or five months, Eytan said.

“This never should have happened. It’s the worst it’s been in 10 years,” she said, vowing to return to court to enforce the agreement and “help these victims of a wayward system.”



State officials would not say how long people are waiting for evaluations or restoration, only that wait times fluctuate depending on bed availability and that some have waited longer than the settlement requires.

Disability Law Colorado on Friday accused the state of breaching the terms of the settlement. State officials sent notice that they were invoking “special circumstances” in the settlement because of “circumstances beyond the control of the department.”

The department “cannot single-handedly curb the inflow of court orders,” the notice said. It described a plan — based on creating more beds and a change in state law — that “will ultimately allow it to keep pace” with court orders.

Among the solutions is a plan to allow the state Office of Behavioral Health to partner with private hospitals for mental restoration for people found incompetent to face charges.

When beds are full, the state can ask a hospital to provide a bed and mental health treatment. Since hospitals don’t have restoration programs, the state will send a facilitator to the hospital to educate the accused person about court, trials, witnesses and evidence, and help determine whether the person understands the proceedings, said Patrick Fox, state human services’ chief medical officer.


State officials believe the arrangement is unique nationally, Fox said. It will begin in July, pending legislative approval.

Gov. John Hickenlooper’s budget for 2018-19 includes $3.4 million for the state’s partnership with private hospitals, enough for three new state employees and 10 hospital beds.

It also includes $7.4 million to create an additional 62 competency evaluation and restoration beds in jails and $11.8 million to expand beds at the state mental hospital at Fort Logan. The expansion will bring the total jail-based beds — so far all in Arapahoe County — to 114.

In Pueblo, at the state mental hospital, there are 72 beds designated for competency evaluation. Yet the hospital recently held 177 people for evaluation or restoration, housing them in other areas of the hospital. “It almost becomes a meaningless point,” Fox said.

In March, the Pueblo hospital will have 20 additional beds for competency and restoration when a new space for adolescents is expected to open.

Keeping up with the “new normal” in competency evaluations and restoration orders will require “collective input” from numerous policymakers and advocates, Fox said. He noted that while plans and budget requests are in the works, it will take at least until spring before Colorado can begin catching up with the slog of court orders.

“Systems or services can’t be brought up instantaneously,” he said.


The rise in competency orders has been attributed by experts to a greater awareness among judges about the impact of mental health on defendants, as well as laws that critics say criminalize mental illness. Defendants awaiting competency or needing restoration have been charged with anything from misdemeanor trespassing to capital murder.

When a person is found incompetent to stand trial and not subject to release from custody, the severity of the person’s mental health symptoms has not been considered by Colorado courts — meaning people are sent to the state hospital system whether their symptoms are mild or acute. That means beds are taken by those who might need only day-treatment at a community clinic, Fox said.

The human services department is working with lawmakers and the court system to draft legislation that would require courts to order restoration in the most appropriate setting, based on the accused person’s symptoms and criminal charge.

The state was required in 2016 to hire an independent consultant to track how quickly it completes mental competency evaluations. Documents filed in the case last year revealed a 2015 memo directing department staff to admit only one person per day at the Colorado Mental Health Institute in Pueblo. That order led to a backlog of an estimated 100 inmates, Disability Law said.

The department’s request for relief from the settlement requirements is not related to staffing issues at the Pueblo mental hospital, state officials said. The 449-bed hospital was placed on a “termination track” last summer by federal authorities critical of nursing staff levels but is now in compliance.


https://www.denverpost.com/2017/12/28/colorado-mentally-ill-crimes-competency-evaluations/
​

Denver Post

Troubled Colorado state mental hospital can’t keep up with inmate competency evaluations  --
Court-ordered competency evaluations are nearly double what they were last year.

The state mental hospital cannot keep up with an unexpected surge in court-ordered competency evaluations for accused criminals, the Colorado Department of Human Services said Thursday in asking for relief from a long-standing lawsuit.

The department filed to invoke “special circumstances” in a case lodged against the state by Disability Law Colorado. State officials informed the advocacy group in a letter . . .  that the mental hospital cannot hold up its end of the settlement agreement, which requires jail inmates to receive mental health evaluations or treatment within 28 days of receiving paperwork from a judge.

The action means inmates whose mental competency is in question could sit longer behind bars as they await evaluation.  .  .
The “safety-valve provision” in the settlement temporarily suspends the time-frame requirements until December [2017].

 http://www.denverpost.com/2017/06/22/colorado-mental-health-institute-at-pueblo-inmate-competency-evaluations/ ​

​

Disability Law Colorado, Super Lawyer Iris Eytan, & the Colorado Lawyers' Committee Bring Some Justice to an Unjust System

The Colorado Independent
http://www.coloradoindependent.com/160513/colorado-to-hire-consultant-agrees-to-independent-oversight-for-mental-health-system-in-lawsuit
Colorado has agreed to hire an independent consultant to ensure that its mental health system doesn’t violate inmates’ rights to a speedy trial.

The agreement was reached Tuesday in the settlement of a lawsuit brought against the state in December 2015 by the Disability Law Center. The suit re-opened a 2012 case in which the Center challenged what it called the state’s chronic delays in court-ordered competency evaluations for inmates awaiting trial. The Center said inmates were waiting weeks, even months, for evaluations and treatment.

​The suit also alleged that the Colorado Department of Human Services had fabricated monthly data to make it appear as though detainees were receiving timely services. The agreement orders the department to hire an independent consultant to oversee continuing operations of the state’s mental health system for the remaining duration of a 10-year agreement made in 2012. The consultant is to ensure compliance and data reporting, and is to meet with DLC and the state on a quarterly basis to provide updates.
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​Congratulations to the 2017 Colorado Lawyers Committee Team of the Year

​

 Jail Wait Litigation Team
​

o     Caleb Durling (Rollin Braswell Fisher LLC)
o     Iris Eytan (Eytan Nielsen LLC)
o     Mark Ivandick (Disability Law Colorado)
o     Kelsey Lesco (Disability Law Colorado)
o     Ellie Lockwood (Snell & Wilmer)
o     Jason M. Lynch (Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP)

o     Jennifer Purrington (Disability Law Colorado)



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Crisis Services in Colorado, the US & Around the World

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  • Home
    • About Orchid >
      • Why Orchid?
      • ORCHID'S SYSTEMIC FOCUS & "ROOT CAUSE" ANALYSIS APPROACH TO PROBLEM SOLVING WITH A COMMITMENT TO CREATIVITY & INNOVATION
      • Disclaimers, Limitations and An Invitation
      • Orchid Board
      • Orchid Book Club
      • Conjecture, Science & Translational Research & Medicine
      • Orchid Themes & Symbols
      • The Tipping Point
      • Orchid's Website Advertising Policy
      • Statement for Potential Website Contributors
      • Contact
  • Blogs
    • Val's Blog
    • Val's Blog 2
    • ​TRANSLATIONAL/ ​TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE MONDAY
    • NEURO-DIVERSITY Wednesday
    • Olmstead Law & Order Thursday
    • Translational Medicine Friday
    • Translational Love, Relationships & Neuro-Diversity Saturday
  • Orchid's A-Z Index
    • Crisis Services in CO, the US & Around the World
    • Assertive Community Treatment & Flexible ACT Index
    • Housing & Homelessness Index
    • Criminal Justice
    • Innovation Index
    • For More: See the Main Orchid Index Page
  • US Federal
    • THE IMD RULE & ADMIN. ENFORCEMENT OF DISABILITY CIVIL RIGHTS LAWS
    • Medicaid & Supportive Housing & Housing-Related Services
    • CMS' FAILURE TO COVER HOUSING FOR LTC & THE IMD RULE: WHAT THEY HAVE IN COMMON IS DISCRIMINATION
    • National Take
  • Research & Translational Medicine
    • Immunology & Mental Health >
      • Alcoholism & the Immune System & Mental Health
      • Brain Injury, the Immune System & Mental Health
      • Celiac Disease & Sensitivities, the Immune System & Mental Illness
      • Mental Illness & The Immune System
      • Racial Discrimination & the Immune System & Mental Health
      • Trauma & the Immune System & Mental Health
      • ***Physical Health Issues, the Immune System & Mental Health Index
    • University of Chicago: Institute of Translational Medicine
  • Hot Topics
    • What We Want --- SAMHSA Grant Opportunities Due Jan. 22, 2019
    • Anti-Social Personality Disorder >
      • DECONSTRUCTING ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY DISORDER AND PSYCHOPATHY: A GUIDELINES-BASED APPROACH TO PREJUDICIAL PSYCHIATRIC LABELS [Hofstra Law Review 2013]
      • Personality Disorders -- Unscientific & Vague -- Must Be Reformed
    • Executive Functioning & "Prison Brain" >
      • Job Accommodation Network on Executive Functioning Deficits
    • Medicaid & Medicare Network Adequacy >
      • OIG: STATE STANDARDS FOR ACCESS TO CARE IN MEDICAID MANAGED CARE (Sept. 2014)
      • OIG: ACCESS TO CARE: PROVIDER AVAILABILITY IN MEDICAID MANAGED CARE (Dec. 2014)
      • GAO 15-710: MEDICARE ADVANTAGE: Actions Needed to Enhance CMS Oversight of Provider Network Adequacy (Aug. 2015)
      • CMS: Promoting Access in Medicaid and CHIP Managed Care: A Toolkit for Ensuring Provider Network Adequacy and Service Availability (April 2017)
    • Medicaid Mental Health & Substance Use Disorder Parity >
      • CMS Parity Compliance Toolkit Applying Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Parity Requirements to Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Programs [Jan. 17, 2017]
      • Frequently Asked Questions: Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Parity Final Rule for Medicaid and CHIP [CMS October 11, 2017]
    • Olmstead Disability Rights >
      • Statement of the Department of Justice on Enforcement of the Integration Mandate of Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act and Olmstead v. L.C. (2011)
      • Comprehensive Olmstead Planning
      • the Logical Long Term Consequences of our failure to provide Intensive Community MH Treatment
      • Olmstead Nation ---State Pages: How Far to Comply with Olmstead?
  • Take A Walk Around Orchid's Resource Block
  • Colorado Abuse & Neglect Scandals Involving People with Disabilities
  • Mental Health By The Numbers
  • New Science Is Amazing AND It Has HUGE Moral Implications for Our Society: NOW
  • Olmstead & Homelessness
  • Double V
  • " 'Defund the Police" Means 'Invest in the Resources Our Communities Need' " or Don't Cost Shift to the Police
  • VAGUE OLMSTEAD PLANS, EXPENSIVE LITIGATION
  • Updating & Reforming our Understanding & Treatment of "Anti-Social Personality Disorder" Blog
  • Reform of " Anti-Social Personality Disorder" in Criminal Justice
  • CO HB22-1278
  • New Understandings Matter
  • Mental Health, Ethics & Law
  • CO Olmstead Disability Homeless Law & Policy Project
  • Inflammation, the Immune System, Neuro-Developmental Disorders, Psychiatric Disorders, Substance Use Issues & Chronic Disease
  • Microglia and the Brain's Immune System
  • Substance Issues & the Immune System