Jack Dailey Apr 16 2026 at 12:55AM on page 174
Warning message
The installed version of the browser you are using is outdated and no longer supported by Konveio. Please upgrade your browser to the latest release.Behavioral Health Services Act Integrated Plan
Commenting is closed for this document.
Jack Dailey Apr 16 2026 at 12:43AM on page 173
Jack Dailey Apr 16 2026 at 12:12AM on page 1
Jack Dailey Apr 15 2026 at 11:54PM on page 152
Jennifer Kennedy 1 Apr 15 2026 at 5:27PM on page 96
Jennifer Kennedy 1 Apr 15 2026 at 4:55PM on page 486
Jennifer Kennedy 1 Apr 15 2026 at 4:52PM on page 486
Jennifer Kennedy 1 Apr 15 2026 at 4:46PM on page 494
Jennifer Kennedy 1 Apr 15 2026 at 4:42PM on page 486
Jennifer Kennedy 1 Apr 15 2026 at 4:32PM on page 134
Jennifer Kennedy 1 Apr 15 2026 at 4:26PM on page 127
Jennifer Kennedy 1 Apr 15 2026 at 4:13PM on page 53
Stephanie Apr 15 2026 at 3:01PM on page 486
However, when excluding SUD residential and housing services – given that there are no SUD residential programs serving under 18 in San Diego and housing services predominantly serve TAY and adults —the adjusted funding more accurately reflecting services for children under age 18 is approximately $233,426,824 (17%) in Year 1 and $216,739,567 (16.7%) in Year 2.
This adjustment suggests that the proportion of funding directly supporting children may be lower than initially reflected in the total figures.
We would appreciate confirmation of this interpretation, including whether SUD residential and housing investments are appropriately attributed to the children and youth category in Table 1.
Stephanie Apr 15 2026 at 3:00PM on page 486
Can you provide clarification on the cause of this significant reduction? Specifically, which funding stream(s) account for this change, and which programs or services are anticipated to be reduced, eliminated, or otherwise impacted?
Stephanie Apr 15 2026 at 3:00PM on page 486
Can you clarify whether SUD residential providers in San Diego County currently have the capacity to serve children under age 18? If not, should this category be understood as primarily serving individuals age 18 and older?
Stephanie Apr 15 2026 at 2:59PM on page 486
In contrast, Table 7 on page 495, which outlines Behavioral Health Services and Supports (BHSS), indicates total Early Intervention funding for children and youth 0-25 totals $51.43 million .
Can it be assumed that the difference between these two figures is attributable to the broader age range reflected in Table 7? Specifically, does this imply that approximately $16.63 million of Early Intervention funding is allocated to transition-age youth (ages 22–25), with the remaining $34.8 million supporting children and youth under age 21?
We would appreciate clarification on how funding is distributed across age groups in these tables to ensure accurate interpretation.
Stephanie Apr 15 2026 at 2:57PM on page 486
However, Table 5 on page 493, which details BHSA Housing Interventions programs and services, projects that 740 youth and 17,989 adults will be served. As the latter table appears to represent a subset of the broader continuum outlined in Table 1, the significantly lower adult count in Table 1 is difficult to reconcile.
Additionally, the projection of 5,500 youth served within housing services in Table 1 is unexpected, as this figure appears substantially higher than typical utilization for youth within housing-focused programs.
We would appreciate clarification on the source of this discrepancy between the two tables, including how populations are being categorized and which specific programs are included in the estimate of 5,500 youth served within the housing services category.
Kathleen Derby 5 1 Apr 15 2026 at 10:09AM on page 1
Thank you for the outreach. It came late but appears to be improving. I hope clinical experts are listening and recognize that there is such a thing as lived expertise, which is not often listened to or heeded. The key is to address education with doctors, clinical and all staff. Recovery model Needs to start in med school. Actions like giving 67 year old drugs to people with disfiguring side effects, is inexcusable. And subscribing an antipsychotic like Haldol based on whether this is a person who gets agitated is inexcusable. Take a look at these medications. We have new ones for a reason. Make sure this gets to clinical staff.
In addition, pay close attention to when doctors are ordering emergent intramuscular medication. Often it is for extreme agitation but NOT meeting the definition of emergency. Look into why there is agitation to begin with. Healing places should be a place of calm and activities should be structures to allow choices in people to engage in soothing activities. Not happening.
Kathleen Derby 5 Apr 15 2026 at 9:58AM on page 1
Kathleen Derby 4 Apr 15 2026 at 7:24AM on page 1
Youth
Orgs with Outdoor activities - hiking sports nature walking etc
Art
Lots of art for both adults and youth - performing, dancing Vidal. Many opportunities to display and engage in art
Jerry Hall Apr 14 2026 at 10:17PM on page 1
Who knows, from my experience in the last decade, I can only surmise that leadership is convinced they are doing a great job, and will engage residents, consumers, and people who advocate for them as little as possible, while shouting as loudly as they can about what a great job they are doing.
Frustrated? You bet.
This was not a Community Planning Process.
This is not a reasonable document to provide comments and feedback on. It lacks context, form, and purpose. It's a filled-out form. A plan to spend $3.9 billion before stakeholders are required to be included in the process. I'm not holding my breath.
This is not a collaboration, it's a checked box, to assure the state that the community was meaningfully engaged.
Do we seriously have to legislate what the word meaningfully means? Do we have to legislate what 'engagement throughout the planning process' means?
The superficiality of engagement efforts I took part in, or now read about, is maddening. Most were presentations at existing meetings, with brief periods to collect comments. We can't see those comments, but, we can certainly see pages and pages of dates those comments were made. Seriously?
We also paid $400,000. for a CPP report from UCSD, but it is not included here. We cannot see the recommendations that professional community engagement experts provided us. Why didn't we have access to this report in January, February, or March when it was literally sitting on a shelf.
San Diegans deserve better. People experiencing serious mental illness, kids ideating suicide, our endless number of homeless neighbors, those overdosing on Fentanyl... all deserve a voice.
I guarantee you, with 100% certainty, that the priorities outlined throughout this plan, would not (necessarily) be the priorities county residents would agree to pursue.
The community is tired of being told what the plan is. They are tired of voicing their opinions, hearing an acknowledgement, then seeing no change, and not receiving any report from the county the following year.
An uninformed community cannot speak up. This has to end. This veil of privacy by an organization that has seen its budget mushroom to $1.3 billion a year, with scant insight by its Behavioral Health Advisory Board, a handful of light-duty 'education' opportunities, and little to no understanding by the community, and even well-versed stakeholders of the planning process... the one where actual data is delivered, programs and services evaluated, comparisons, questions, hard-hitting challenges... priorities... we were not at those tables between September and March.
Until the community insists on seats at the planning table, who are well informed >>throughout the year<< about programs, services, challenges, gaps, opportunities... the whole enchilada... any mention of the community being part of the 'planning' process is meaningless.
Now, with so many programs being cut, with a significant part of the budget now going towards homelessness, without deep, meaningful, community engagement... I'm expecting more of the same. A lot of people are suffering, and a lot of shoulder shrugging. I hope I am wrong.
I care. Deeply. But I have hit my head on the BHS wall for years with little to no real impact. Until we approach our community behavioral health challenges as a community, we are dead in the water.
C'mon San Diego, there's a whole lot of people that need your voice to ensure their voice is heard. A special thanks to the ten people who commented on this plan through this interface. Your insight is gold.
I shared more through BHSAplans.com and BHABrehab.com, and would love to contribute to the conversation of redesigning this 'community planning process' into a truly authentic community-led behavioral health care delivery system. One can hope!
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 7:28PM on page 152
There are 490,000 adult and older adult family caregivers in San Diego County. Over 50% provide support to individuals with Alzheimer's disease or related dementias. Research demonstrates that the more severe the case of dementia, such as that caused by Alzheimer’s disease, the more likely the caregiver is to experience depression. Local SCRC data confirm statewide and national statistics. Between January 1, 2023 – September 30, 2025, family caregivers reported the following:
• 33% experienced clinical depression using the Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item (PHQ-9) screening tool.
• 13% experienced moderate to severe depressive symptoms.
• 18% experienced significant loneliness and isolation using the Caregiver UCLA Loneliness 3-Item Scale.
• 24% experienced high caregiver burden scores using the Caregiver Zarit Burden Scale.
• Other research has also demonstrated that 1 in 4 dementia caregivers have contemplated suicide more than once in the past year.
These rates are much higher among ethnically minority populations, LGBTQ, and lower socio-economic older adult caregivers.
Stuart Duffy Apr 14 2026 at 3:44PM on page 2
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 2:21PM on page 152
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 10:57AM on page 148
Southern Caregiver Resource Center, along with Justice in Aging and thirty-two (32) California based organizations believe that the BHSA has an opportunity to address the behavioral health needs of older adults and address long-standing barriers to care for this population. It is essential that older adults are prioritized at every stage of BHSA implementation.
We request reconsideration along with the following:
1. Include adult and older adult family caregivers who suffer from or are at great risk of distress (like moderate to severe depression, adjustment disorders, or generalized anxiety disorders) (W&I Code section 14184.402, subdivision (c) and implemented in DHCS guidance [13]), as a priority population in the County Integrated Plan (IP).
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 10:43AM on page 101
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 9:57AM on page 72
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 9:46AM on page 53
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 9:30AM on page 51
• 33% experienced clinical depression using the Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item (PHQ-9) screening tool.
• 13% experienced moderate to severe depressive symptoms.
• 18% experienced significant loneliness and isolation using the Caregiver UCLA Loneliness 3-Item Scale.
• 24% experienced high caregiver burden scores using the Caregiver Zarit Burden Scale.
The IP does not include any programs that address the serious mental health needs of family caregivers that are needed to keep adults and older adults with dementia safe and out of institutions. Southern Caregiver Resource Center offers several evidence-based programs, including Caregiver TLC: Thrive, Learn & Connect (CG TLC), Cuidando Juntos, and CALMA which have demonstrated to significantly reduce depression, caregiver burden, and loneliness through social connection, and improve overall health and mental health among family caregivers. Southern Caregiver Resource Center's programs have need terminated by SDCBHS effective 6/30/2026 and should be reinstated.
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 9:03AM on page 43
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 8:26AM on page 8
Erin Hogeboom Apr 14 2026 at 8:24AM on page 8
Roberto Velasquez Apr 14 2026 at 8:21AM on page 8
Erin Hogeboom Apr 14 2026 at 8:17AM on page 6
Kathleen Derby 3 1 1 1 1 1 2 Apr 12 2026 at 1:54PM on page 1
I won’t presume that you did not touch on those subjects because it has been difficult to navigate through this document.
What I would like to do is explain why those topics are just as important as any you will address.
1) First, I am aware that this is an area of concern for the county. If we do not address the loss of liberty of individuals who sometimes cannot speak for themselves, it appears that it still remains a secret and contributes to the continuing stigma of mental health in our society.
2) You will find the following all present in every hospital in this county: trauma, stigma, and even abuse. The degree varies among hospitals and types of patients. The patients that are able to speak up for themselves in what staff members consider a socially appropriate way may be treated fine. However, patients tell me, and I have seen, patients who demand their liberty or communicate with emotions, are “agitated” or annoying, will often be treated poorly, especially if they are refusing medication. Medieval tactics are still used in hospitals, often before alternative means are attempted. Forced injections of medication, where patients underwear of often forceful pulled down, physical restraint by holding and mechanical restraints, painful 4-point restraints holding someone down with the purpose of helping them calm down? Seclusion - a cruel form of punishment where a patient is not allowed to leave a room and is not sure when they will be. Supposedly another way to “help” them calm down.
These methods are not supposed to be used unless a person is in immediate danger of harming themselves or others. Unfortunately, these “tools” are also used to quiet someone who is “agitated” or to punish someone who has attempted to elope. This has been testified to in multiple legal hearings.
I am hopeful that universal recovery education for staff will help these facilities to treat their patients in a humane manner, as other methods appear not to have made much of an impact.
I also think County BHS should focus more on the people languishing in long-term locked facilities. Some have been there for years. It is truly a crime to keep people locked up when the have done nothing wrong except experience an illness.
State laws have served to support this inhumane deprivation of rights, but our County should aim to brainstorm alternative methods that give people the care they need and preserve their dignity and freedom. When someone is “physically” ill, they are treated warmly and given special treatment. They are given a comfortable adjustable bed and their own phone and TV, as well as bedside service.. When they are “mentally” ill they are basically arrested, forcefully put in handcuffs and given a room with basically a flat Vinyl mat. I could go on, but it’s exhausting.
Finally, when I mentioned the police treatment, that should make it clear how important the MCRT is for transportation. I am aware that the state is attempting to remove funding and behavioral health directors have rightfully advocated against it.
Kathleen Derby 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 Apr 12 2026 at 1:09PM on page 275
In addition, when you have a group of peers to interview, they should also be asked to comment on how services impact them from a cultural perspective.
Robin Sales 2 Apr 12 2026 at 1:00PM on page 213
Kathleen Derby 3 1 1 1 1 1 Apr 12 2026 at 12:57PM on page 161
Kathleen Derby 3 1 1 1 1 Apr 12 2026 at 12:47PM on page 53
1) Public comment should be 60 days. This will allow for input sessions that are not just giving feedback, but helping to build the plan. We helped to host some input sessions but they end up being so general as not to make a difference. 60 days would allow peers to educate themselves and. E educated about the current plan. Then, the engagement sessions could focus on various section of the plan so that input is more specific and helpful when amendments are needed.
2) Finally, unfortunately the plan was hard to handle. I can’t speak to how it works on a desktop or laptop computer, but I’ve heard it is still difficult. I am currently using the both the pdf and the unwieldy engage website that collects comments. There are no page numbers on either. In addition, as I toggle back and forth, I lose the page I am on and it’s frustrating. I have a feeling that most people in the community are trying to use their phones too. I just thought these notes might be helpful.
Kathleen Derby 3 1 1 1 Apr 12 2026 at 12:30PM on page 140
Kathleen Derby 3 1 1 Apr 12 2026 at 12:18PM on page 136
Much needs to be accomplished in this area. First, I didn’t see reference to certified peer support specialists, though I hope that comes later in the plan.
1) First, there are many certified peers looking for employment - some full-time, some part-time. What I hear from peers seeking part-time, they want to remain secure that they will not lose access to social security if they need it. I am getting the impression also that they want to protect their mental health. To this end, I am hearing that “peer support for peer supporters” is also a need. Besides training for certified peer support specialists (which is high quality) we need just as high quality training and preparation for those who will be working with them. Professional peer support is specific. It is professional but not clinical. I fear those supervising or working with peer specialists will either diminish their capacity or expect them to complete clinical tasks. They are needed in high numbers in hospitals. On the milieu of a hospital unit, professionals are not outreaching much to the patients. Most nurses do not spend much time talking to the patients but instead stay in the nurses’ station and are often irritated when patients know on the door or the glass to get their attention. It would be as wrong for a CPSS to simply take on the role of a mental health worker or to take on the role of a social worker. So, training for these other workers, including doctors, is essential.
2) Staying on the topic of training… what would considerably improve the performance of doctors, nurses and social workers is recovery-oriented training. Hospitals are based solely on the medical model (despite what you may hear). This sole focus has been detrimental to patients If professionals view patients as diseased and deficient, the patients are more likely to be vulnerable to mistreatment and even abuse when they resist the medical model, including medication.
If there is mandatory training on recovery methods, patients will feel valued, more supportive activities will provided, it is more likely that the negative effects of stigma will be addressed and people will be more likely to want to care for their own conditions
Kathleen Derby 3 1 Apr 12 2026 at 11:44AM on page 131
Kathleen Derby 3 Apr 12 2026 at 11:37AM on page 104
Kathleen Derby 2 Apr 12 2026 at 11:06AM on page 51
General comments on CCP: 1) make sure it is interactive. When people give their input, let them know it has been considered and what has become of it. Let them know how many others also agree with them and what will be done about it. 2) Consider peer comments with extra weight. Lived experiences is a reality. And “the customer is always right” in the sense that you want to make them happy. The state is not actually your boss, it is the people you serve. 3) peer involvement at the level of developing plans but also informing the community planning process. Peers heard from a county employee at a peer council meeting that it was their public discussion of peer respite houses (mainly for short term living for crisis prevention), yet no one from County BHS approached to peers to find out more information and ideas for implementation. As a result, the peers heard that County BHS planned to include peer respite in their new campus. Again, nothing was mentioned to peers, for example peers being able to connect the County to people who do this in other counties and to direct them to the model for doing this. 4) a wider reach - TV/radio. 5) return to councils that report directly to the BH Director and not funneled through an organization that serves as a gatekeeper rather than a conduit and prohibits any kind of advocacy. Have councils for youth outside of school hours and outreach doctor to them. Try youth mental health orgs. When I participated as a visitor to the child and TAY councils. There were no youth involved. 6) Going back to 1 - I participated in 3 UCSD intentions and had no idea where that input went.
Kathleen Derby 1 Apr 12 2026 at 10:40AM on page 51
I think it’s a good idea to call things what they are. If the intention is a clubhouse, it should be peer/member run and contain the activities that those members want to engage in. If it operates within a framework of helping peers to be productive through assigned tasks to prepare for entering the workhouse, it should be made something else. Something more akin to employment prep, etc.
Kathleen Derby Apr 12 2026 at 9:27AM on page 2
This is wrong headed and also based on politicians wanting to “clean up” areas where unhoused people are visible. Any further efforts based on this flawed purpose may also unfortunately be flawed.
The state and our county need to listen to peers as has finally started to happen at the end of 2025 and the first 4 months of 2026. I hope you will take in the comments of peers and let them help you design programs and services that they know will help them.
It’s going to be difficult in this new structure presented by the state because there buckets of funding don’t necessarily mirror the needs of the county.
I will do my best through my review of this document to see how the priorities of peers can fit into what appears to be a fairly rigid structure. However I am heartened by what I had heard - that sine percentages on the community services side may be increased.
Carol Clemens Apr 10 2026 at 10:49AM on page 178
Lindsey Yourman Apr 8 2026 at 4:18PM on page 486
YET
there is not a single dollar in the budget that I can find that is specifically allotted to older adults (All 21 year old plus are effectively grouped together). I highly recommend that we be intentional about budgeting and planning to serve the unique needs of older adults, which is the fastest growing demographic in San Diego and fastest growing segment of our homeless population. It will be much more efficient to do this proactively than reactively.
Lindsey Yourman Apr 8 2026 at 4:08PM on page 164
Lindsey Yourman Apr 8 2026 at 4:08PM on page 152
- This is descriptive of a planning process but it doesn’t specify any services, dollars, or targets for older adults within FSP. My patients have previously depended on many of these service providers (the community engagement and input sections talking about these various programs, which can be life-altering and life-saving, are important)
Comments
View all Cancel