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Showing posts sorted by date for query mental health. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query mental health. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

July Opens With Bevy of New Georgia Laws

89 new laws take effect today, or ahead on January 1st. They include the massive overhaul of Georgia’s health and social service agencies. Identified by lawmakers and Governor Sonny Perdue as lacking in several areas, especially mental health, the restructuring begins today. Essentially three agencies will now handle the work previously done by two--adding one dedicated to mental health delivery.

Among some of the other laws ushered-in with the arrival of July:
-A pair of laws in the courtroom to strengthen victim’s rights.

-Embryos can now be adopted. The legal custodian of the embryos will decide how and where they are stored, along with whether they can be disposed of. Some medical doctors, researchers and biotech financers opposed the legislation, saying it could hinder reproductive treatments and innovations in the state.

-A new measure now designates April as Confederate History Month.

DHR Re-organization Begins Today

Governor Sonny Perdue has high hopes for the restructuring of health and social service agencies in the state. That begins today with the arrival of the new fiscal year.

Basically, the sweeping changes will spread the services previously handled by two agencies—Department of Human Resources and the Department of Community Health—to three. The main reason is to help Georgia to get a better handle on its failings in mental health, which has been under the federal microscope over the past year.

Governor Perdue says he’s confident of future success for the newly-created Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities:
"I firmly believe by separating these functions organizationally, the resulting standalone department focused on mental health will be a nimble, flexible and responsive unit…better able to fully implement the commission’s recommendations."
Advocates are hopeful, yet worried about whether the state’s continued budget crisis will cripple the effort.

Perdue says other areas of concern, like access to vital records, should be better handled in the new set-up.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Juvenile Advocates Say DOJ Pullout Too Soon

The U.S. Department of Justice has withdrawn its oversight of the state's juvenile detention facilities. Governor Sonny Perdue made the announcement earlier today, more than a decade after a scathing report citing physical abuses and massive overcrowding. But advocates say the reform is not enough.

In 1998, the Department of Justice found what it described as "egregious conditions violating the federal rights of juveniles" locked up by the state, including young people stripped and sometimes left naked for days, physical abuse by staff, overcrowding and inadequate mental health care.

Commissioner Albert Murray took the helm at Department of Juvenile Justice in 2004. Among his priorities … alternatives to incarceration.
"There were children being placed in the juvenile facilities on minor offenses who could be dealt with as effectively in the community. So, we made a heavier investment in community programs whereby children were being served outside of juvenile facilities."
When the state signed the Department of Justice Memorandum of Agreement in 1998, it promised better training and education for juvenile offenders. Today schools in Georgia's juvenile justice system are accredited by the Southern Association of College and Schools.

However, despite the gains being hailed, juvenile advocates say the Department of Justice pulled out too soon. Rick McDivitt heads the Georgia Alliance for Children.
"What they've done is basically cited them in '98 and then saw whether or not they adequately addressed what they were cited for. So, their oversight isn't current as if they reinvestigated. They haven't reinvestigated."
All requirements contained in the 1998 Memorandum of Agreement have been met and the U-S Department of Justice has closed its investigation here in Georgia.

Budget cutbacks forced the Department of Juvenile Justice to close one its long-term incarceration centers. However, agency officials say the other centers were able to absorb the overflow, making overcrowding a non-issue.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Savannah's mental health hospital to remain open

The new director of a new state agency for mental health is wasting no time making his mark on the state's mental health system. Governor Sonny Perdue appointed Doctor Frank Shelp to head the new Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities eight days ago. And today we learn that Shelp is reversing an unpopular decision to close a mental health hospital in Savannah

The decision last year to close Georgia Regional Hospital caused an uproar among local officials, who denouced the plan as a recipe for disaster. The plan would have left South Georgia without any place nearby to take the most seriously mentally ill patients. But that plan was made by the state Department of Human Resources. There's a new agency over mental health now, headed by Doctor Frank Shelp.

"I would say that it is a new course correction of about 35 to 40 degrees," says Shelp.

Shelp doesn't characterize the move to keep Georgia Regional open as a complete reversal because his vision for mental health keeps in place many aspects of D-H-R's proposal, known as "the game plan."

"The discussion became around closing a hospital or leaving a hospital open," says Shelp. "And that discussion reached such a level that it really precluded discussing other aspects of the game plan."

Shelp says, the plan was always to increase the continuum of care, such as with crisis stabilization programs, or C.S.P.'s, that promise more local services for most mentally ill patients, while none for the most seriously ill. Shelp says, a few patients might still be moved to the state's main mental health facility Milledgeville, but "the goal right now is to come up with a modification that will manage 95% plus of patient needs in their own region."

Shelp says, he's still developing plans for what to do with patients referred to the mental health system from the criminal justice system. He says, that part of the "game plan" was never fully explained. And just hearing that pleases advocates for the mentally ill. June Dipolito runs the Pineland mental health agency in Statesboro.

"I am excited beyond words," Dipolito says. "You cannot really run community mental health services without having the deep and intensive services of the acute psychiatric beds."

The new Commissioner of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities currently works at Georgia Regional in Savannah. Frank Shelp is set to move to Atlanta by July.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Chatham Judges On Petition To Keep Mental Hospital Open

Judges in Chatham County have joined a petition urging state officials not to close Georgia Regional Hospital in Savannah. The petitions seek a delay in the Department of Human Resources’ plan to close some of the state's seven mental hospitals, move some patients to other facilities, and direct many would-be hospital patients toward community-based mental health care facilities.

The signatures of six Superior Court judges, and judges from State, Recorder's and Probate courts are among more than 10,000 expected to be on petitions for state Senator Lester Jackson to present to the Legislature. Judges and others are concerned the plan relies on community treatment options that are "lacking and uncoordinated."

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Lawmakers Have Packed Schedule With Two Days to Go

Wednesday marks Day 39 in this year’s legislative session. And both chambers have a packed schedule.

The big issue for House lawmakers is the transportation governance bill. The measure no longer includes the creation of a new state agency – a plan backed by Governor Sonny Perdue. Instead, legislators would have more power when it comes to managing Department of Transportation dollars.

And there’s also a measure to curb property taxes. The legislation would put a 3% cap on property assessment increases.

In the Senate, next year’s budget is the hot topic. And there's a plan to do away with both the sales tax and the so-called birthday tax on car purchases. Instead, every sale would be subject to a title fee of up to $1500. Some of that money would be set aside for trauma care.

Below is a list of the bills that are on tap for the second-to-last day of the 2009 session.

House:
SB 27 - Confederate Heritage/History Month; create; encourages observances/celebrations; provide statutory construction
SB 49 - Georgia Registered Professional Nurse Practice Act; nursing education program
requirements; revise certain provisions
SB 85 - Georgia Aviation Authority Act; create; provide for membership, governance,
operation, power, duties
SB 114 - Education; provide for transfer of students who are military dependents into a local school system
SB 128 - Motor Vehicles; option of owner; permanent license plates for boat, utility,
noncommercial cattle/livestock trailers; provide for fees
SB 133 - Health Share Volunteers in Medicine Act; provide certain compensation; health care provider; sovereign immunity protection
SB 144 - Insurance Agent License; applicant shall be appointed by an authorized insurer prior to issuance of the license; repeal requirement
SB 163 - Human Resources Commissioner; authorize to appoint a diabetes coordinator
SB 164 - State Highway System; signs and signals; height limitations; allow owners to obtain permits to remove vegetation from the viewing zones
SB 172 - Victim Compensation; provide for recovery for serious mental and emotional
trauma; change definitions; provisions
SB 178 - Education; advance funding, exceptional growth, low-wealth capital outlay grants; embed/extend a sunset date
SB 194 - State Purchasing; benefits based funding projects; revise provisions; change
membership of an oversight committee
SB 195 - Professions/Businesses; clarify applications submitted in prescribed form not necessarily written document; provisions
SB 200 - Transforming Transportation Investment Act; create State Transportation Agency; definitions; purposes; abolish State Road/Tollway Authority
SB 201 - Health; provide voluntary contributions through individual income tax returns for cancer research
SB 207 - Proceedings; admit general public to hearings in juvenile court with certain
exceptions
SB 246 - Courts; provide notice of the release of child from detention under certain
circumstances; definitions
SB 253 - Sparklers; provide a definition for the term "indoors"
SR 1 - Appropriations; provide for prioritized funding requirements regarding certain
supplementary appropriations Acts - CA
SR 153 - Education Improvement Districts; provide creation and comprehensive regulation - CA
SR 176 - James H. Chandler, Jr. Memorial Intersection; dedicate


Senate:
HB 2 updates and clarifies many existing provisions in Georgia law related to illegal immigration.
HB 16 prohibits the use of an electronic tracking device to determine the location or movement of another person without that person’s consent, with several exceptions.
HB 56 revises provisions relating to distribution of proceeds and renegotiation of distribution certifications.
HB 63 deletes the chapter governing the Redevelopment Powers Law and replaces with some existing and new language. It also adds new language regarding the Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) Restriction Act.
HB 64 specifies that a funeral director must file a death certificate within 72 hours.
HB 69 allows a physician to issue a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) order without the concurrence of another physician so long as there is oral or written consent from an authorized health care agent operating under a durable power of attorney or pursuant to an advance directive.
HB 86 allows that absentee ballots must be counted by precinct, and separate returns must be made showing the results by each precinct.
HB 101 allows that a transit agency may authorize the placement, erection, and maintenance of commercial advertisements on or in transit vehicles or facilities owned or operated by that transit agency.
HB 119 makes and provides appropriations for the State Fiscal Year beginning July 1, 2009, and ending June 30, 2010.
HB 120 authorizes the annual sales tax holiday for school supplies and energy efficient appliances.
HB 141 is the annual housekeeping bill for the Department of Banking and Finance (the Department), which addresses the regulation of financial institutions and commercial paper in Georgia.
HB 147 relates to proceedings for forfeiture of bonds or recognizances, so as to relieve a surety from liability under certain circumstances.
HB 169 provides a notice of new or revised flood elevations to Georgia property owners affected.
HB 173 permits non-compete and non-solicitation clauses in employment and business contracts.
HB 184 directs the Department of Human Resources to prepare information for public dissemination on the department’s website describing the importance of obtaining a blood test for sickle cell disease.
HB 186 extends the income tax credit for teleworking through FY2012. It also increases the available credit to $2.5 million for Fiscal Years 2011 and 2012.
HB 189 revises the applicability of the Georgia Arbitration Code because the General Assembly finds that entities need to cooperate with each other to ensure parents with better options on child support obligations.
HB 217 sets forth the requirements for influenza vaccine protocol agreements between physicians and pharmacists or nurses.
HB 221 amends two statutes to require that writs of mandamus and writs of prohibition to compel the removal of a judge cannot be issued if a motion to recuse has not been filed first, nor where a motion to recuse has been denied after assignment to a different judge.
HB 243 provides conditions of employment of certificated personnel in elementary and secondary education for salary increase for persons receiving certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards.
HB 258: Driver's license; minor of disabled guardian; restricted learner's permit; provisions
HB 278 allows local school system to waive the expenditure control requirements under the Quality Basic Education Act
HB 304 revises the rights of county appraisers and tax assessors and authorized agents of the county to go onto property to conduct official business.
HB 310 provides that the statewide recycling program for state agencies.
HB 318 defines several terms relating to the place of return for tax purposes of motor vehicles and mobile homes.
HB 321 relates to "group accident and sickness insurance" defined and "true association" defined, so as to provide for changes in the definitions of the terms.
HB 344 Probation; Department of Corrections; collections of additional fees; authorize
HB 349 Sales and use tax exemption; new construction of civil rights museum; provide
HB 371 Public Retirement Systems Investment Authority Law; increase in allowable fund investment; provisions
HB 379 Income tax; certain real estate investment trusts; disallow expenses paid
HB 388 The Option of Adoption Act
HB 395 Sales and use tax; personal property; construction of certain symphony halls; extend exemption
HB 406 Service delivery strategies; certain drinking water projects; funding limitation; provide exemption
HB 438 Income tax; tax credits for qualified jobs and projects; comprehensive revision
HB 439 Income tax; credits; business enterprises
HB 453 Superior courts; sunset dates for property filing fees; change
HB 455 Elementary and secondary education; annual contracts for certified personnel; extend certain deadlines
HB 473 Community Affairs, Department of; grants for clean energy property
HB 477 Retirement and pensions; creditable service; application requirement
HB 480 Taxation of motor vehicles; comprehensive revision
HB 483 Ad valorem tax; modernization and revisions of certain provisions
HB 485 Income tax; alternative credits for base year port traffic
HB 487 Superior Court Clerks' Retirement Fund of Georgia; employee contribution
HB 488 Superior Court Clerks' Retirement Fund of Georgia; eligibility criteria for creditable service
HB 492 Time-share projects and programs; private residence clubs
HB 493 Georgia Youth Conservation Corps; creation and purposes of the corps;
HB 509 Professions and businesses; regulation; change provisions.
HB 514 Judicial system; assignment of senior judges;
HB 528 Specialized land transactions; developers provide audits to homeowners
HB 549 Driver Services, Department of; information for purposes of creating juror lists
HB 568 Public Service Commission; members shall represent entire state
HB 575 Kidnapping; change certain provisions
HB 608 Time-share projects; estate shall include certain interests
HB 639 Special license plates; protect wild dolphins in Georgia
HR 161 White, Mr. John Jerome; compensate
HR 336 CPL Jonathan Ryan Ayers Memorial Interchange; dedicate

Monday, February 16, 2009

Mental health plan draws local officials' ire

Savannah's top elected officials expressed their frustration today over the imminent closure of the city's mental hospital. Georgia Regional Hospital is set to close by July first. After that date, Department of Human Resources officials say the hospital will be "repurposed."

Part of that repurposing includes the fact that the hospital will no longer use its 53-beds to stabilize critically mentally ill patients or to treat long-term patients. Those services would be moved into the community and to a centralized facility in Milledgeville.

At a sometimes contentious meeting at Georgia Regional today, Savannah Mayor Otis Johnson, Chatham County Chairman Pete Liakakis, Chatham County Sherrif Al St. Lawrence and other local elected officials pressed DHR officials for details.

DHR officials could not say exactly where in the local community they would treat patients who otherwise would be treated at the mental hospital, although they said they have identifed four sites in Savannah. That prompted Mayor Johnson to warn of a "not in my backyard" response by local residents.

Sherrif St. Lawrence said that he would have to hire more deputies to transport arrested mental patients to Milledgeville, in addition to what the county spends to house and treat the mentally ill in the jail. He complained of a lack of preparation, saying, "Their orders are that there will be no more in-patient beds here after June 30th and nothing's in place!"

Outside, about 40 protesters waved signs and shouted slogans against the DHR's plans.

DHR officials said, the plan to re-organize state mental health services actually would provide more services on a statewide level. They said that while some of those services would not be provided in Savannah, the plan would increase the number of patients able to be seen in the Savannah area from 2,713 in 2008 to 5,215 in 2010.

DHR Commissioner B.J. Walker told reporters afterwards, "We came to get feedback. We got it. We came to hear concerns. We hear them. But we also know we have to provide the very best services for people with mental illness and we're not doing that right now."

Friday, January 23, 2009

DHR Commissioner Details Budget Pain

State budget writers today heard from the heads of Georgia's social services and health care.

B.J. Walker addressed lawmakers this morning. She’s in charge of the largest state agency , the Department of Human Resources. And it’s where the state budget crisis might be felt the most.

Walker has to manage an agency budget of around $3.8 billion. Her department was hit by the budget-ax last summer, and it’s bracing for more in the Governor’s recommendations for the next fiscal year.

"Given the times we’re in and what we have to work with, I’m comfortable the Governor put us through a rigorous enough process that what he has put on the table, is something I can figure out how to make work."

But, Walker did admit to lawmakers Friday the challenge of "making it work" will be tougher with heavier across-the-board cuts to come in fiscal budget year 2010.

Last summer, DHR began one-day-a-month furloughs for a bulk of its 19,000 employees. The state hopes the move saves more than $100-million. And more furloughs could be on the way. Cutbacks are everywhere in the department, with money being pulled from all services, such as children and family services, and programs for the elderly.

Mental health services are in the firing line also. The state just recently signed an agreement with federal officials promising the troubled system will be vastly improved in the next five years. The obvious question today to Walker--how to do that, given budget cutbacks?

"We know that we’ll probably need some sort of resources at some point. But we have not fully calculated what that need is at this time...we’re working that through right now, and I’m sure we’ll be bringing some ideas about that at some point."

Walker did say the option of privatizing at least a portion of the mental health system is still an option--if it makes sense fiscally.

As budget committee hearings concluded at the Capitol today, Walker may have delivered the best line in summing-up how she’s trying to manage her department’s budget.

"It is my intent to go through these times not worrying about is it raining, or worrying about how to get out of the rain, but it’s my intent to figure out how you can dance in it."

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Thousands Flock to Centennial Olympic Park to Watch Inauguration


Around 6,000 people braved the cold, windy weather today at Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta to watch President Barack Obama take the oath of office.

Naseer Bayan is a mental health counselor in downtown Atlanta. He says the election of President Obama shows the country is moving in the right direction.

"We're growing as a country... We're learning, and we're healing as a country. It's good stuff."
David Dryer works at a law firm in downtown Atlanta and was also at the event.
"It's just a thrill to be here when Obama takes the oath of office and see history in the making... I hope he takes a progressive agenda, moves forward labor reforms, furthers equality and reforms our healthcare system."
Both Dryer and Bayan say they took extended lunches so they could attend the event.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Perdue Inks Deal to Fix State Mental Hospitals

An agreement signed-off-on by Governor Sonny Perdue and federal Justice officials puts Georgia on-watch to vastly improve its mental health system.

The five-year settlement requires the state to make widespread changes to better deliver care and ensure safety of patients in Georgia’s seven psychiatric hospitals. Last year, a Justice Department report found critical errors in the system that led to unnecessary deaths and injuries. Georgia has mental health facilities in Atlanta, Savannah, Milledgeville, Rome, Augusta, Columbus, and Thomasville.

Under the deal’s terms, the state has one year to correct the worst conditions that have led to deaths in hospitals. Within four years, improvements must be made in other areas. There will be regular federal inspections.

Governor Sonny Perdue say the state is absolutely on-board to correcting the problems:

"To have our federal-steward oversight...we welcome that because we want to be held accountable. We want to do it the right way, to be acclaimed as doing it the right way. It’ll take investments that we’ll make because it’s the right thing to do."

And those investments might be costly. Asked by GPB Friday where the extra money would come from, Perdue stated only "It’ll come from the budget."

That budget is already challenged with a two-billion dollar plus shortfall.










Friday, January 2, 2009

State mental health chief to resign

Georgia’s mental health agency chief is stepping-down later this year. Gwen Skinner says she will leave her post at the helm of the Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Addictive Diseases in the fall. She’s had the job since 2004.

For her career, Skinner will be wrapping up three decades of work in Georgia’s juvenile justice, mental health and child welfare systems. In her current post however, Skinner has faced issues of under-funding and criticism from federal reports. Last August, Governor Sonny Perdue announced a sweeping re-organization of state social services.

Friday, December 12, 2008

One-two punch for mental health in Savannah

A commission studying mental health in Georgia says, the Department of Human Resources should explain itself better before going forward with a proposal to close or privatize mental health hospitals.

The proposal would close some mental hospitals and move patients to community-based mental health facilities. The first hospital to close would be the one in Savannah, where a community-based mental health collaborative is shutting down.

Diane Reeder is President of the National Alliance for Mental Illness Savannah chapter. "This is a disaster," Reader says. "We're appalled at our state's ability to provide mental health services."

The Savannah Area Behavioral Health Collaborative is shutting down following a year of turmoil among its members. D.H.R. is proposing the state hospital shut-down to deal with sky-rocketing costs at an aging facility.

Members of the state's Mental Health Service Delivery Commission say, they don't have enough information to recommend for or against the proposal. Among the things they'd like to know: where would the patients go?

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

DHR mulling private mgm't of state mental hospitals

Private firms may soon run some of the State’s psychiatric hospital services, according to Department of Human Resources Commissioner, B.J. Walker.

The Atlanta-Journal Constitution says Walker considers the step, quote, “a creative way” to improve the state’s ailing mental hospital system.

DHR officials say Georgia could turn over one of its seven facilities to a private company, and others could be closed down.

However, DHR Spokesman David Noel called the idea only an “exploratory proposal.”

The State is also weighing moving mentally ill criminal defendants to a new facility in Milledgeville, according to the report.

Gov. Sonny Perdue in 2007 signed an executive order creating a state commission on mental health.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of Georgia's mental health system.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Perdue unveils plan to target state mental health

Governor Sonny Perdue says a reorganization of the state’s health and social services will help pave the way toward fixing Georgia’s severe deficiencies in mental health care.

Perdue says a newly-created Department of Behavioral Health would handle only mental health and addiction programs. The plan also creates a Department of Health, to oversee programs such as Medicaid and Peachcare, and a Department of Human Services--handling welfare and elderly issues.

The state has been under federal scrutiny for what investigators say are dangerous conditions in Georgia’s seven mental hospitals. Perdue says this new arrangement is vital.

"I firmly believe by separating these functions organizationally, the resulting standalone department focused on mental health will be a nimble, flexible, responsive unit better able to fully implement the commission’s recommendations".

The announcement comes on the heels of a report from the Governor’s task force on how to improve the state’s troubled mental hospitals and services.

While the reorganization looks good, it still makes Lei Ellingson cautious. She’s assistant director for mental health programs at the Carter Center in Atlanta.

"I think it’s a good step to have mental health and addictive diseases pulled out and brought closer to the Governor, if there’s this direct link. But the budget has to be there".

The reorganization would take-hold on July 1st of next year, if approved by lawmakers.


Perdue ready to address DHR issues

Governor Sonny Perdue this morning is expected to announce significant changes to operations within the state's Department of Human Resources. Streamlining operations, or moving programs elsewhere within Georgia government are some of the possible actions. The DHR has been under severe scrutiny for its handling of mental hospitals in the state. The system has also been under investigation from officials with the U.S. Department of Justice. Along with those problems, the DHR is another state agency trying to deal with budget cuts. The state’s DHR oversees about 80 programs from child welfare, to mental health, to services for the aging. It has an annual budget of 1.6 billion dollars.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Proposed cuts to social services, higher ed

Georgia's social services programs face deep cuts. Today the board of the Department of Human Resources approved the cuts following a directive from Gov. Sonny Perdue to slash spending. Georgia is facing a 1.6-billion-dollar budget shortfall. Among the programs that could be cut are waivers for mentally disabled adults which allow them to move from institutional settings into home care. There would also be cuts to the state's mental health system and substance abuse programs.

Also today the state Board of Regents approved its budget cut proposals. They include lay-offs and a hiring freeze, hiking student fees and health insurance premiums for employees, and revoking guaranteed tuition rates. The Governor will look over all agencies’ proposals and make final budget cut decisions this fall.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Diving with the sharks at the Georgia Aquarium


Whale shark and friends at the Georgia Aquarium. (Dave Bender)


It might have been the setting for a “Jaws” movie.

Six snorkelers wading like ducks in a row, cruising just below the surface of the water while watching exotic fish dart beneath them. It was all very peaceful, until the mysterious whale shark appeared out of the deep blue.

The whale shark is one of the most perplexing and elusive creatures in the ocean, still largely a mystery even to the marine biologists who have dedicated careers to studying the creatures.

But here, in the confines of the Georgia Aquarium in downtown Atlanta, it’s impossible not to see the giant whale sharks — particularly when you’re in the middle of their fish tank.

It’s also somewhat hard to avoid them: The creatures seemed more intrigued by the visitors, often lumbering toward them like a slow, curious locomotive.

The guests were circling the world’s largest fish tank through the aquarium’s “Swim With Gentle Giants” program, which plucks six snorkelers and six divers into the 6.3-million-gallon fish tank each day.

The visitors are treated to close-up encounters of roving bands of sting rays, sleek hammerhead sharks, enormous grouper and countless other species. But the puzzling whale sharks were the real draw — and for good reason.

The aquarium is the only one outside Asia to house the whale sharks, and the only one in the world to offer tourists a chance to dive with the creatures. The program’s directors pitch it as an innovative and safe way to help visitors better understand animals they’d otherwise never see.

“An immersion experience is the ultimate way of connecting people and animals,” said Bruce Carlson, the aquarium’s chief science officer.
“It’s a real opportunity for us to expand ways for people to get to know the animals here at the aquarium and a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for our visitors to see animals they’ll probably never get a chance to see in the wild.”
But the ambitious program has raised concerns from critics who worry that dangling legs and curious tourists could stress the habitat of the whale sharks and thousands of other animals that share the massive tank.
“There’s a chance these animals can become stressed because of the increase in the amount of people in their environments,” said Lori Marino, an Emory University biologist who studies whale biology. “Not only can it affect their physical health, but their mental health. And we don’t know how much stress this puts on the animals or how they could respond.”
The Georgia Aquarium is one of the few places that have ever attempted to house the creatures and the only one in the United States.

So far their record is spotty: Two of the whale sharks have died since the aquarium opened in 2005. But the aquarium has invested in research projects on the whale shark in Mexico and Taiwan.

And the facility is quickly making a name for itself in the research community for its whale shark work, thanks to divers who have already logged thousands of hours feeding and studying the massive animals.

Carlson said he gave the go-ahead to the new program because the dives have so far had “no effect on the whale sharks’ behavior.”
“We’re the experts on that, and we can make the judgment because we probably spend more time with whale sharks than anyone criticizing us,” he said.

“Most people who have contact with them have probably had a minute-long experience in the ocean. You have to trust our ju
dgment on that. We’ve gotten to understand their nature, and we feel quite confident that our presence is not affecting them.”
Go to The Georgia Aquarium whale shark page for more details.

(The Associated Press)

Friday, June 13, 2008

Cagle critical of DHR mental health management

A legislative committee Thursday agreed to transfer over five million dollars from a mental health program to other programs within the state's Department of Human Resources. However, the move angered some lawmakers who accused the Department of poor planning.

The committee voted 8-to-4 to allow the money transfer after DHR commissioner B.J. Walker said if they didn't approve it, the money would lapse. She says the five million is left-over from a program that provides mental health care for foster children. It will how help pay for case workers in the foster care system--federal money for that program was cut-off in March.

Lieutenant Governor Casey Cagle voted against the money transfer because he says there is a lack of leadership within the department.

"I have questions about the strategy of addressing mental health by the department. I have huge concerns relative to not being able to anticipate the funds that were coming from the change in federal policy".

Mental health care in Georgia in general is under scrutiny from the U.S Department of Justice. State officials say they are addressing those concerns.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Funding cut for state child mental health possible

Governor Sonny Perdue later today is set to recommend a cut of 8.4 million dollars in funds for mental health services for children. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports the money will be moved from those services to other programs within the Department of Human Resources to help meet administrative expenses and other funding deficits. Some of those deficits include filling gaps in state child welfare services and child adoption services. The proposed transfer of money has upset many health advocates.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Fed report critical of state mental hospitals

State health officials say Georgia's mental hospital system is on the road to recovery. That reaction comes as a blistering report was sent by federal investigators to Governor Sonny Perdue.

The U.S. Department of Justice outlined "critically deficient" conditions at Georgia Regional Hospital in Atlanta. Problems such as continued failures to address fatalities and violence were detailed at the Atlanta facility, with similar problems found in facilities in Rome and Savannah.

The federal investigation was conducted last fall. State officials say since then, 'fixes' to the problems have already begun.

Gwen Skinner heads Georgia's mental health system:

"I think that when you get reports like the one from the Department of Justice, it gives you focus. Because you're getting that kind of information from separate groups of people. It helps you focus on the things that are the most critical".

A mental health panel created by Governor Sonny Perdue just released its first progress report this week. The commission was set-up following the start of the federal probe last fall. Perdue spokesman Bert Brantley:

"Much of what’s in that (Dept. of Justice) letter are things that we have identified, things that we’ve already done--some short-term improvements, staffing levels, equipment purchases, those kinds of things. And then some long-term improvements as well many of which are contained in the mental health commission reports".

A federal lawsuit has been threatened by late July unless the state proves concrete
improvements in its mental health system.

GPB News Team: