The campaign to defeat forced drugging, in your home, against your will, with no court review failed. Here, nonetheless, is a description by those who were fighting this bill (and failed).
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Sept. 30, 2002 |
CONTACT: |
Alicia Aebersold 703 294 6008 or
aebersolda@psychlaws.org |
AB 1421 will help those with severe mental illnesses who are too sick to help themselves
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Preliminary findings in New York, where similar legislation passed August 1999, indicate that those in that state's "Kendra's Law" program experienced a 129% increase in medication compliance; a 26% decrease in harmful behavior; and a 100% decrease in homelessness. |
The Treatment Advocacy Center, a national nonprofit dedicated to eliminating barriers to timely and humane treatment for millions of Americans with severe mental illnesses, commends California Gov. Gray Davis for signing California Assembly Bill 1421, updating the state's archaic mental illness treatment law. The new legislation 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. In those counties that adopt one, an AB 1421 program will ensure that everyone has the right to live in a world free of psychotic delusion.
AB 1421 can make a tremendous difference to family members struggling daily to find help for loved ones with severe mental illness, and to those who are the sickest - especially the 24,000 homeless and the 25,000 inmates in California's prisons, which de-facto makes the LA County jail the nation's largest psychiatric hospital. Preliminary findings in New York, where similar legislation passed August 1999, indicate that those in that state's "Kendra's Law" program experienced a 129% increase in medication compliance; a 26% decrease in harmful behavior; and a 100% decrease in homelessness. The passage of AB 1421, also known as "Laura's Law," brings California into line with the majority of states that are changing their laws to make it easier to get appropriate and timely treatment.
The victory for Californians who most suffer from severe mental illnesses is a monument to the determination of Assemblywoman Helen Thomson (D-Davis), a former psychiatric nurse who conceived this humane treatment legislation and worked tirelessly for four years for passage.
The Treatment Advocacy Center also commends the members of the California Treatment Advocacy Coalition (CTAC), a grassroots alliance of those most directly affected by state laws that have protected the "right" to be psychotic over the true right to treatment. Led by coordinators Carla Jacobs, Randall Hagar, and Chuck Sosebee, this coalition of family members, medical professionals, law enforcement personnel, and people with mental illnesses spawned a statewide movement that was backed by more than 30 supportive editorials from California's newspapers. We are especially grateful to The San Francisco Chronicle and The Los Angeles Times for their series of editorials on this issue - two of The Times' editorial writers won a well-deserved Pulitzer Prize for their work; all the supportive newspapers can take pride in being part of saving the lives and hopes of thousands in California.
Laura Wilcox's name is on the legislation, but the law stands equally for the tens of thousands of victims of suicide, homelessness, incarceration, victimization, and homicide attributable to lack of treatment. Now California's counties must put this powerful tool to good use, to prevent further tragedies caused by untreated severe mental illnesses.
If you want a list of some of the enemies, besides the above organization, then look at the list of California newspapers that supported this bill:
CALIFORNIA TREATMENT ADVOCACY COALITION
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ON THIS PAGE:
about CTAC |
new from CTAC |
fact
sheets |
action
alerts |
editorials
|
op-eds
articles & columns |
state legislature documents |
how CTAC began
UPDATED OCTOBER 2, 2002
Gov. Davis signs
Laura's Law
AB 1421 will help those with severe mental illnesses who are too sick to help themselves
The new legislation 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. In those counties that adopt one, an AB 1421 program will ensure that everyone has the right to live in a world free of psychotic delusion. The law becomes effective January 1, 2003.
READ
MORE
TAC statement
Followup
Oct. 2 editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle
Technical information on the bill from the
CA legislature
Gov. Davis'
press release
Coverage of passage by the
Los Angeles Times
and
San Francisco Chronicle
A last-ditch
Sept. 28 editorial by the Los Angeles Times
|
Passage of AB 1421 brings hope to tens of thousands of people. The coalition supporting its passage over these past few years was extraordinary and included ...
FAMILY
MEMBERS"My
mother has been showing signs of the illness
schizophrenia for seven years or more. It tears me up
inside everyday that when I look into my mother's
eyes, they aren't hers anymore. She is removed from
all that she once knew about the world. She has
turned into a recluse and produces accusations of
espionage everyday. ... My life would be so
completely wonderful if that bill becomes a reality.
I could have my mother back in some form or another."
JUDGES"These
persons wander the streets hungry, homeless, and
without hope. They cycle through our hospitals and
are released with no assured after-care or plan to
meet their human needs -- and, all too often in my
experience, wind up in our jails and prisons, not
because they are criminals but because there simply
is no place for them in our society."
LAW ENFORCEMENT "It
is society's job to help those who cannot help
themselves. Nobody knows this better than law
enforcement officers. And nobody knows more than we
do the dangers of facing down a person who has had a
psychotic break, who is not rational, who may believe
we are aliens or that we mean them harm."
LEGISLATORS"I hated
this bill when it was first introduced four years
ago," said local state Sen. Martha Escutia,
D-Norwalk, chairwoman of the powerful [judiciary]
committee [that passed the bill]. "But, now I am
confident that the due process protections are there
at every step of the way to protect their rights."
EDITORIAL
BOARDS "Based
on New York's "Kendra's Law," AB 1421 achieves a
delicate balance between a society's responsibility
to protect the safety of its citizens and an
individual's right to absolute freedom."
EDITORIAL
BOARDS Imagine
a train wreck that scatters passengers across the
landscape. Paramedics arrive and begin loading the
injured onto stretchers. But when anyone screams out
in pain, "No! Don't touch me!" the medics nod
compassionately and leave that person sprawled amid
the rocks and cactuses. A similar scene has been
unfolding on the urban landscape for the last 40
years. People with severe mental illness, tossed from
state hospitals, have landed on public sidewalks and
in wretched urban encampments. And no one helps them
because they say they don't want help.
RESEARCHERS
"We concluded that
outpatient commitment can help an individual adhere
to a beneficial regimen of psychiatric treatment, and
may also influence the mental health service system
by getting case managers more invested in outreach,
in mobilizing resources and in leveraging more
services on behalf of a patient."
PARENTS
"If people overwhelmed by
severe mental illness, like Abrams [who killed the
author's 4-year-old daughter], were instead placed in
mandated community treatment, they could get well
enough to knowingly exercise and enjoy their civil
rights. Meanwhile, our right to live in a safe and
secure society would be protected."
SIBLINGS
"My parents lived in
sorrow and fear for their youngest child. They died
without being able to get her the help she needs.
Even the late Assemblyman Frank Lanterman realized,
after observing the unintended effects of the
legislation he sponsored, that this law had come to
'prevent those who need care from receiving it.'"
ACTIVISTS
"Had my sister-in-law
been provided treatment under the criteria and
structure proposed in AB 1800, the cost to the state
might have been $20,000. Instead, expenses for her
trial and restricted hospitalization are close to $2
million." |
WHY REFORM? Before Laura's Law was signed, California law forbade the provision of care to thousands overcome by mental illness, ignoring what has been learned about and the vastly improved medications developed for mental illnesses in the three decades since the original law was passed. The old law - which compared poorly to standards in many other states - championed the “right” to be sick over the right to be well. People rendered incapable of making rational decisions had to be an immediate danger to themselves or others before the law would permit any type of intervention - nothing could be done if a person overwhelmed by mental illness was not actively dangerous. Interventions were essentially limited to short inpatient stays. You no doubt have seen the results on our streets and in our headlines. Until Laura's Law was signed, California did not have the less intrusive mandated community treatment programs available in most states.
About the California Treatment Advocacy Coalition
|
The California Treatment Advocacy Coalition (CTAC) is dedicated to helping those lost to the symptoms of severe mental illness. The Coalition is working to change California's laws so that they promote the care of those rendered incapable of making informed medical decisions by mental illness. CTAC has worked to support a reform of the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act (LPS), the hopelessly outdated legislation that governed when and how Californians who are overcome by mental illness can be placed in needed treatment. Their efforts have been a huge success, as Laura's Law was signed by the governor Sept. 28. More about CTAC ... |
From 2000's Campaign
for AB 1800
Key reforms of AB 1800
Newspaper Editorials Supporting LPS Reform
|
"The sort of court-ordered treatment
programs Laura's law would permit, far from
confining people to oppressive hospitals, actually
cut hospital admissions by more than half, reduce
the number of people living on streets and in parks
and help seriously mentally ill people stay on new
medications. ... civil libertarians have fought
fiercely to kill it in the committee. In fact,
since its introduction more than two years ago, AB
1421 has been amended numerous times to provide
comprehensive civil rights protections" |
NEW! The San Francisco Chronicle,
The Los Angeles Times,
The Los Angeles Times, Aug. 2
The Los Angeles Times,
The San Francisco Chronicle, J
The San Jose
Mercury News, July 8, 2002
Say yes to help: Mentally ill don't have to sink deeper
into delusion; State Senate should restore AB 1421 and
pass it
The Los Angeles
Times, June 26, 2002
Helping people off the streets: A tiny, and huge,
change
The Los Angeles
Times, June 12, 2002
Helping people off the streets: Last boost on Laura's
Law
The San
Francisco Chronicle, June 12, 2002
A vote to save lives
The Los Angeles
Times, May 28, 2002
Helping people off the streets: Shield the sick, and
society
The San
Francisco Chronicle, May 1, 2002
Why it's called 'Laura's Law'
The Los Angeles
Times, April 14, 2002
Helping people off the street: An Rx against violence
The Los Angeles
Times, January 2, 2001
Wishes for an uneasy world
The Los Angeles
Times, October 6, 2001
Mind the
mentally
ill
The Los Angeles
Times, June 8, 2001
Suspect
priorities
The San
Francisco Chronicle, May 31, 2001
State of
neglect;
Money well
spent
The Los Angeles
Times, May 7, 2001
A
case
against
liberty
The San
Francisco Chronicle, May 7, 2001
State of
neglect;
An ounce
of prevention
The Los Angeles
Times, April 30, 2001
Make Chris
take
his
'meds'
The Los Angeles
Times, April 23, 2001
A
law
to reclaim
lives
The San
Francisco Chronicle, February 18, 2001
State of
neglect;
California's 30-year
failure
to confront
mental
illness
The Los Angeles
Times, June 30, 2000
Sometimes
'coercion'
is
a virtue
The San
Francisco Chronicle, June 11, 2000
Neglect on
mental
illness
The Los Angeles
Times, June 1, 2000
For
mentally
ill
and society
too
The Desert Sun,
March 29, 2000
Our
voice:
Bridge gaps
in mental
health
The San
Francisco Chronicle, March 10, 2000
Hope for the
mentally
ill
in
assembly
legislation
Ventura County
Star, January 2, 2000
Making
it
easier
to
help
the
sick
The San
Francisco Chronicle, December 21,
1999
Mental
health
system
not
working
for
anybody
Los Angeles
Times, December 20, 1999
Redefining
mental
illness;A
bill
broadening
the criteria
would
enable
more
Californians to qualify
for state
aid
The Long Beach
Press-Telegram, December 17, 1999
Reforming mental treatment bill: Deciding who needs
help - Against their
will
Opinion Editorials Supporting LPS Reform
|
"In California, you have the right to act
crazy and destroy your life, and Marie Elise
exercised that right …Unfortunately, she killed
someone at the same time." |
And see the letter that one prominent Los Angeles judge sent to his senator supporting passage.
San Gabriel Valley Tribune,
June 13, 2002
Pass AB 1421: Promote treatment, don't mandate tragedy
Official Documents from California State Legislature on Assembly Bill 1421
Bill text, status, voting records, and analyses are available on the California Assembly website. Go to that site, type "1421" into the window marked "Bill Number," and click on "Search."
A grassroots task force comprising mental illness advocates, physicians, constitutional lawyers, social workers and law enforcement officials unveiled a landmark white paper on February 16, 1999, on the need for reform in California's involuntary treatment laws. LPS Reform: A New Vision for Mental Health Treatment Laws takes sharp aim at the inadequacies of the state's antiquated Lanterman-Petris-Short Act (LPS).
WHITE PAPER
LPS Reform: A New Vision for
Mental Health Treatment Laws
LPS Reform Task
Force, February 16, 1999
STATEMENT The
Treatment Advocacy Center outlines its position on LPS
reform in "California Must Strengthen LPS Act for
Mentally Ill"
Treatment Advocacy Center, February 16, 1999
STATEMENT
The California Treatment Advocacy Coalition outlines
specific reform initiatives in their statement
"California Must Care For, Not Criminalize the Severely
Mentally Ill"
California
Treatment Advocacy Coalition, February 16, 1999
|
Mental Health Recovery
AB 1421 -- Forced Psychiatry in California Update: AB 1421 passes. Update: Action urged to write Governor Davis and attend rally.
Following is part of a News Alert
sent to California clients and advocates. You can fax your letter to stop
expansion |
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