leanderbuzz
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Contact Us
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Austin
  • Texas
No Result
View All Result
LeanderBuzz
No Result
View All Result

Texas bill proposes study on psychiatric facility needs

April 8, 2025
in News
3 min read
Texas memorial honors 11 volunteer firefighters lost in the line of duty

AUSTIN (KXAN) — Senators mulled legislation Tuesday that would authorize an expansive study of Texas’ inpatient psychiatric facilities, capacity and needs.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

Austin pilot program cuts left-turn crashes, boosts pedestrian safety

'First steps' to formally exonerate men previously accused of yogurt shop murders | Unsolved: Central Texas

Senate Bill 719, authored by Sen. Sarah Eckhardt, D-Austin, would direct the Health and Human Services Commission to conduct a study of the current use and future projected needs for inpatient psychiatric beds, including beds for juveniles, adults, people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, and people waiting in jail for competency restoration so they can proceed with their criminal cases.

The study and resulting report would be submitted to the legislature with recommendations.

The state hospital system is “overstrained and over-capacity,” according to Eckhardt. HHSC has long maintained a waitlist for individuals in jail declared incompetent to stand trial and ordered to get psychiatric care before their cases can move forward. That waitlist peaked in 2022 with over 2,500 people on it, many of them stuck in jail for months, or more than a year, before getting treatment.


Explore KXAN’s extensive coverage of Texas’ mental hospital backlog

Lawmakers have approved over $2 billion to revamp and expand state hospitals across the state, with many renovations still ongoing. Meanwhile, Eckhardt said state leaders should approve her bill’s study to better understand what more will be needed going forward.

“This is a knowledge is power moment,” Eckhardt said at the Senate Health and Human Service Committee hearing. “It gives us the ability to look at all of our options out into the future for meeting this demand.”

Eckhardt filed similar legislation that passed the Senate in 2023 but didn’t progress further.

The study could cost an estimated $1.5 million, according to a fiscal note. It calls for point-in-time data to be captured twice, to spot any anomalies. Eckhardt said she would be open to changing that, if the fiscal impact would imperil the measure.

In raising the importance of the study, Eckhardt referenced a state audit report released last November on Texas’ competency restoration system for individuals in jail. The report spotlighted numerous shortfalls and deficiencies, including that more than 50 people who died since 2018 while on the state hospital waitlist.


At least 54 died since 2018 waiting for state hospital opening, senator calls for more tracking

Several witnesses spoke on, or for, the bill, but none expressly against it at the hearing.

Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, said he was concerned the bill was prematurely calling for a study of the system before the impact of improvements – which were previously passed into law – have come to fruition.

“What we did last session was predicated on a lot of study, so we’re a little early to be here talking about all these crisis points and what we haven’t got,” Perry said. “We got it in the pipeline.”

Sonja Burns, an Austin-based mental health advocate, told the committee the study doesn’t go far enough to identify and probe certain populations of people that are currently being left behind by the mental health system.

For example, what are the outcomes following shorter term stays in private psychiatric facilities, Burns asked, and which mental health facilities exclude people with intellectual or developmental disabilities?

Sen. Lois Kolkhorst, R-Brenham, who chairs the Senate’s Health and Human Services Committee, said she was also concerned by the lack of information from local mental health authorities, commonly called LMHAs.

“Quite honestly, I’ve gotten a little fatigued of funding the LMHAs … and I don’t see the results,” Kolkhorst said. “Where are the outcomes? What are the measurable outcomes? Some do a great job; some don’t.”

Credit: Source link

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Austin ranks on list of challenging places to live with allergies

Next Post

Amber Alerts issued for missing Temple area girls

Related Posts

Austin pilot program cuts left-turn crashes, boosts pedestrian safety
News

Austin pilot program cuts left-turn crashes, boosts pedestrian safety

December 18, 2025
'First steps' to formally exonerate men previously accused of yogurt shop murders | Unsolved: Central Texas
News

'First steps' to formally exonerate men previously accused of yogurt shop murders | Unsolved: Central Texas

December 18, 2025
Fire union, city of Austin sign off on four-year labor contract
News

Fire union, city of Austin sign off on four-year labor contract

December 18, 2025
Austin police investigating two homicides in north Austin
News

Austin police investigating two homicides in north Austin

December 18, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

No Result
View All Result

Recent News

Austin pilot program cuts left-turn crashes, boosts pedestrian safety

Austin pilot program cuts left-turn crashes, boosts pedestrian safety

December 18, 2025
'First steps' to formally exonerate men previously accused of yogurt shop murders | Unsolved: Central Texas

'First steps' to formally exonerate men previously accused of yogurt shop murders | Unsolved: Central Texas

December 18, 2025
Fire union, city of Austin sign off on four-year labor contract

Fire union, city of Austin sign off on four-year labor contract

December 18, 2025
LeanderBuzz

LeanderBuzz.com is an online news portal which aims to share latest trendy news from USA especially northern Austin, Leander Texas Feel free to get in touch with us!

Recent News

  • Austin pilot program cuts left-turn crashes, boosts pedestrian safety
  • 'First steps' to formally exonerate men previously accused of yogurt shop murders | Unsolved: Central Texas
  • Fire union, city of Austin sign off on four-year labor contract

Subscribe NOW

  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© 2019 LeanderBuzz.com - All rights reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Austin
  • Texas

© 2019 LeanderBuzz.com - All rights reserved!