Saturday, April 2, 2022

New approaches to housing and behavioral health top Inslee’s budget takeaways list

As legislators convened for the start of the 2022 session in early January, Gov. Jay Inslee called on elected leaders to continue their bold charge on housing and homelessness, reducing poverty, and tackling climate change.

Source link: https://medium.com/@GovInslee/new-approaches-to-housing-and-expanding-behavioral-health-top-inslees-budget-takeaways-list-d8870cbf8be0


The themes may sound familiar, but the updated operating and capital budgets the governor signed this week show a willingness in Olympia to stake out new approaches to these increasingly urgent challenges.

Inslee lauded legislators for prioritizing programs that will address many of the most pressing issues facing Washington families and communities.

“Thanks to Washington’s strong economic recovery and an infusion of federal COVID-19 relief funding, we are scaling up much-needed resources to help communities across the state get back on their feet and focus on building for the future,” Inslee said.

Rapid housing funding allows communities to build ‘in a matter of months, not years’

One clear example of state leaders taking a new approach is on homelessness.

For decades, the state’s biggest investments in housing happened through the state’s Housing Trust Fund. Grants and loans from the HTF go to community organizations and Tribal and local governments to build or preserve shelters or permanent housing units for low-income people.

These investments are especially important as the state’s population has grown but housing inventory hasn’t kept pace.


Since 2013, the Legislature has approved somewhat modest HTF increases. But during the 2021 session, in the wake of COVID-19, legislators added a historic $113 million to the $173 million from the prior budget.

The investment showed the Legislature was willing to prioritize funding for housing. The problem?

New permanent housing units can take years to build.

Meanwhile, COVID-19 forced shelters to close their doors to new residents and leave thousands of people living outdoors with nowhere to go. Job losses put thousands of Washingtonians at risk of homelessness due to eviction or foreclosure. Available housing inventory shrunk, further adding pressure to an already stressed housing system.

The state’s point-in-time count from 2020 indicated approximately 23,000 Washingtonians experiencing homelessness.


It was time to do something different.

In 2021, legislators passed the first budget to fund an entirely new approach to housing: rapid capital acquisition funding. These funds allow communities to purchase properties, including hotel or apartment buildings, and quickly turn them into a shelter or housing facility.

Already within its first year, these facilities are opening and helping people transition out of homelessness. Inslee visited several such facilities this year, including True Hope Village in Seattle and Skagit First Step Center in Burlington. He’s heard from residents who have secured permanent housing thanks to having a safe place to live and connection to services.

In this recent session, legislators added more rapid acquisition funding that will almost double the number of new rapid acquisition units to 4,460.


There is no question these investments will help ease our affordable housing crunch over the coming years,” Inslee said. “But while we work on our long-term housing solutions, we also need options for today. These rapid acquisition investments significantly improve the ability of communities to build thousands more units in a matter of months, not years.”


Legislators funded several other housing related priorities including:

Over $170 million to help families and individuals remain in their homes. This includes $100 million that Inslee proposed for a grant program to cover unpaid utility bills, which will help renters obtain and keep housing.

More than $50 million to transition people living in unsanctioned encampments on the public right of way to permanent housing, and to work with local governments and social service organizations to remediate encampment sites.

More than $30 million to expand behavioral health services to reduce the barriers that often prevent people with behavioral health needs from being housed or employed.

Behavioral health transformation expands to better support Washington’s youth

In 2018, Inslee joined a bipartisan group of legislators to announce a plan to transform and modernize Washington’s behavioral health system. Inslee’s vision was to move away from providing care at large, century-old state hospitals to smaller, community-based facilities better equipped to meet the unique needs of patients. Legislators supported the effort the following year with major policy and budget actions.

The investments are beginning to take shape as community-based facilities have started serving patients in recent years. To continue the transition, legislators approved $98 million in the updated budget to build up additional capacity at community-based behavioral health facilities, including for crisis triage and stabilization facilities for adults. About $26 million will fund a variety of behavioral health services projects including long-term civil commitments, triage, crisis diversion, detox, and adolescent services.

State leaders are now ramping up new kinds of behavioral health support for children and youth.

The updated state budgets more than double the state’s capacity for children’s long-term inpatient beds from the current 37 beds to 84 beds by 2024. It provides new community-based supports such as school-based health centers, youth behavioral health navigators, and youth suicide prevention.

The budget also includes funding to plan for 32 new short-term youth crisis stabilization beds. The state currently has none.

For youth within the state’s foster care system, legislators provided funding to help providers deliver therapeutic approaches that help families stay together, services that support the timely reunification of families, and offer more specialized placement options for high-needs foster youth. In addition, the budget provides important financial supports for youth transitioning out of extended foster care.

The operating budget also funds more counselors, nurses, psychologists and social workers in our K-12 schools.

To ensure facilities can hire the folks they need, the operating budget includes a 7% rate increase for behavioral health providers and $100 million in provider relief to support the behavioral health workforce.

Other budget successes include climate, education, broadband and more

Last week, Inslee signed the Move Ahead Washington package and transportation budgets that included billions of dollars for clean transportation options.


The updated operating and capital budgets further support the state’s climate, clean energy, and salmon recovery efforts. The operating budget, for example, includes more than $113 million for electric vehicle incentives and infrastructure, and $57 million for community solar installation and battery storage grants.

The supplemental operating and capital budgets provide almost $227 million to bolster state salmon habitat restoration and recovery efforts.

The capital budget dramatically boosts the spending authority for the Weatherization Plus Health program, which upgrades low-income homes with energy-efficient improvements and leverages matching dollars. And legislators added $20 million for the state’s Clean Energy Fund to support important clean energy projects, one at an aluminum smelter restart project in Whatcom County and the other to help Grant County Public Utility District develop infrastructure for a solar manufacturing facility in central Washington.

Other notable budget updates include:

K-12: An additional $800 million for schools and newly-passed education policies. This includes $100 million for much-needed seismic safety enhancements. It also includes funding for compensation for educators, funding to hire new nurses, counselors, social workers and psychologists at schools, and to expand outdoor learning and education opportunities.


Early learning: Funding to increase the availability of full-day preschool options with a gain of 366 new slots, as well as funding for grants and loans that providers can use to purchase or upgrade facilities.

Post-secondary education: Additional funding for the state’s Career Connect Washington program, launched by Inslee in 2017 to connect employers and students to registered apprenticeships and technical training. Legislators expanded apprenticeship opportunities in areas such as education and health care, and funded the creation and expansion of programs to train more people for careers in cybersecurity.

In addition, legislators provided funding that allows the Washington Student Achievement Council to help more students apply for federal financial aid. Fewer than half of eligible Washington students apply for federal aid, leaving millions of dollars unclaimed. WSAC will also be able to partner with community organizations to recruit more students to post-secondary opportunities.

Broadband: $100 million in federal funds to build broadband infrastructure in places without access, and $50 million for digital equity. These funds will ensure more Washingtonians have affordable service, access to a device, and basic digital literacy skills. Inslee and the state’s broadband office have set a goal of universal high-speed broadband access by 2028.

Community reinvestment: $200 million for a new Community Reinvestment Account. Inslee proposed this program to provide grants to communities that experience inequitably enforced criminal laws and penalties regarding drug sales, possession and use. The grants will begin next year and will be used for economic development, legal assistance, reentry programs and more.

Poverty reduction: Expanded food assistance and hunger relief programs to help serve about 2.5 million Washingtonians. University of Washington and Washington State University issued a report last summer affirming that food insecurity surged in Washington during the pandemic with more than one in four Washingtonians reporting difficulty affording food.

For the first time in over 10 years, legislators significantly increased the very small cash benefits that support more than 21,000 low-income, vulnerable Washingtonians, such as those with disabilities. The maximum cash benefit under the state’s Aged, Blind or Disabled program will increase from $197 to $417 per month for a single-person grant, and from $248 to $528 per month for a two-person grant.

Infrastructure: $120 million from the Public Works Assistance Account to finance loans for local projects related to sewer, drinking water, solid waste, street, and stormwater projects statewide.



Want to dig into the details?

Visit fiscal.wa.gov for more details about the 2021–21 operating and capital budget, including interactive maps and tools. For legislative news and events or to learn about your legislator’s policy and budget priorities, visit leg.wa.gov.



IN OTHER STATE NEWS HEADLINES:


Hold your horses - what horse owners need to know about EHM and EHV-1

Spring is just around the corner and horses are going to be coming together under stressful conditions whether for a weekend trail ride, jackpot roping, or a large, nationally-organized event – prime conditions for equine herpes virus (EHV). 

https://wastatedeptag.blogspot.com/2022/03/hold-your-horses-what-horse-owners-need.html


AG Ferguson launches anti-robocall initiative to stop illegal, harassing calls.

AG’s Office rolls out new robocall complaint form specifically designed to assist attorneys and investigators to quickly react to complaints and stop the calls

https://www.atg.wa.gov/news/news-releases/ag-ferguson-launches-anti-robocall-initiative-stop-illegal-harassing-calls


Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission to hold special meetings on motorized mining equipment, Willapa Bay policy development.

https://wdfw.wa.gov/news/washington-fish-and-wildlife-commission-hold-special-meetings-motorized-mining-equipment


Recreational sturgeon fishery to open May 11 in Columbia River estuary.

OLYMPIA – Fishery managers from Washington and Oregon today announced an opportunity to catch and retain legal-size white sturgeon in the lower 40 miles of the Columbia River beginning May 11.

https://wdfw.wa.gov/news/recreational-sturgeon-fishery-open-may-11-columbia-river-estuary


WDFW plans prescribed fires, dependent on conditions, on Eastern Washington wildlife areas.

https://wdfw.wa.gov/news/wdfw-plans-prescribed-fires-dependent-conditions-eastern-washington-wildlife-areas


Second COVID-19 booster dose recommended for certain individuals.

Additional mRNA dose will help further increase protection for those at highest risk

OLYMPIA – People age 50 and older and certain immunocompromised individuals can now get a second booster dose of an mRNA (Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna) COVID-19 vaccine at least four months after receiving their initial booster dose. The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) updated its booster dose recommendations following guidance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Western States Scientific Safety Review Workgroup.

https://doh.wa.gov/newsroom/second-covid-19-booster-dose-recommended-certain-individuals


Annual DNR Forest Health Report Highlights Impact of Record Heat on Trees in Western Washington.

Damage caused by extreme temperatures, increased detection of sooty bark disease of maple among key findings of DNR, USFS scientists.

https://www.dnr.wa.gov/news/annual-dnr-forest-health-report-highlights-impact-record-heat-trees-western-washington


Private electric and natural gas utilities cannot charge late fees or deposits 

LACEY, Wash. - State regulators extended protections for energy customers who continue to experience financial hardship in the wake of COVID-19. ---utc

https://www.utc.wa.gov/news/2022/utc-extends-customer-protections-fee-bans-energy-customers



WORLD NEWS HEADLINES:


Ukraine: No ‘plan B’ for evacuation of shattered Mariupol, say humanitarians.

Efforts to help thousands of desperate residents flee the embattled Ukrainian city of Mariupol continued on Friday, as humanitarians warned that there is “no Plan B”, after weeks of constant shelling since the Russian invasion on 24 February.

https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/04/1115282


Syria: Rights experts call for humanitarian access to detained children.

Humanitarians must have full and unimpeded access to children arbitrarily held in detention centers in northeast Syria, a group of independent UN human rights experts said on Friday. 

https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/04/1115302


First Person: ‘I fear I will never see my husband again’

Nataliia Vladimirova fled her home in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on the first day of the Russian invasion, on 24 February, with her four-year-old daughter Oleksandra and mother-in-law. They are amongst the thousands of Ukrainian refugees with temporary protection status in Portugal. She shares her heart-wrenching story of family separation and loss, with UN News.

https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/04/1115242


The key to climate action and sustainable peace? Women’s full and equal participation.

Women and children increasingly bear the brunt of climate change, which deepens the inequalities and vulnerabilities they already face, such as poverty, violence, lack of opportunities and basic human rights. Yet women are not victims; they are survivors, innovators and solution-multipliers who deserve a real seat at the table. Two Colombian activists tell us why this is true.

https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/03/1115272


World can end ‘downward humanitarian spiral’ of Afghanistan.

As the world focuses its attention on the war in Ukraine, the UN reminded the international community on Thursday to remember Afghanistan as it kicked off a pledging conference to save the lives and livelihoods of those in the landlocked country. As the conference drew to a close, it was announced that a total amount of $2.44 billion had been promised.

https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/03/1115102



Sending 4 Drafts to General Assembly, Fifth Committee Approves Funding for Human Rights Council Mechanism, Support Mission in Libya, Concluding Resumed Session--UN PRESS RELEASE

https://www.un.org/press/en/2022/gaab4381.doc.htm


Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield’s Meeting with Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi--USUN

https://usun.usmission.gov/ambassador-linda-thomas-greenfields-meeting-with-jordanian-foreign-minister-ayman-safadi/


Remarks at the Closing of the UN Fifth Committee First Resumed Session--USUN

https://usun.usmission.gov/remarks-at-the-closing-of-the-un-fifth-committee-first-resumed-session/



NATIONAL NEWS HEADLINES:


A Proclamation on World Autism Awareness Day, 2022--WH

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2022/04/01/a-proclamation-on-world-autism-awareness-day-2022/



Recognizing National Arab American Heritage Month--US STATE DEPT.

https://www.state.gov/recognizing-national-arab-american-heritage-month/


Some Russian Forces Disengage From Kyiv, but Airstrikes Continue--DOD

https://www.defense.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/2985210/some-russian-forces-disengage-from-kyiv-but-airstrikes-continue/


Former Coal Company Vice President Arrested and Charged with Foreign Bribery, Money Laundering, and Wire Fraud

A former coal company executive was arrested today on charges of violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), laundering funds, and receiving kickbacks as part of an alleged scheme to pay bribes to government officials in Egypt in connection with contracts with an Egyptian state-owned and state-controlled company, Al Nasr Company for Coke and Chemicals (Al Nasr).--DOJ

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-coal-company-vice-president-arrested-and-charged-foreign-bribery-money-laundering-and



Treasury Targets Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) Weapons of Mass Destruction Organization and Subsidiaries--US TREASURY DEPT

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0695


Letters about third-round of Economic Impact Payments issued; important steps to take for missing payments and corrections--IRS

https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/letters-about-third-round-of-economic-impact-payments-issued-important-steps-to-take-for-missing-payments-and-corrections


USDA to Provide Payments to Livestock Producers Impacted by Drought or Wildfire

New Emergency Livestock Relief benefits to be delivered through two-phased approach; compensation for 2021 forage losses--USDA

https://www.usda.gov/media/press-releases/2022/03/31/usda-provide-payments-livestock-producers-impacted-drought-or


US DEPARTMENT OF LABOR ISSUES DIRECTIVE PROMOTING EFFECTIVE ENFORCEMENT TO ADVANCE EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY, GREATER COMPLIANCE

‘Effective Compliance Evaluations and Enforcement’ directive updates guidance on the agency’s compliance evaluation policies, expectations for federal contractors

https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/releases/ofccp/ofccp20220331




NEWS FROM OTHER SOURCES:


Another January 6th 'Bombshell' Conspiracy Crumbles--PJ MEDIA

https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/matt-margolis/2022/04/01/another-january-6th-bombshell-conspiracy-crumbles-n1586141


Disney Doubles Down on Depravity

Florida’s commonsense Parental Rights in Education law has attracted the full fury of Disney and its woke fellow travelers.-- Patriot Post

https://patriotpost.us/articles/87351-disney-doubles-down-on-depravity-2022-04-01


Hunter Laptop Story Confirms: Rein in Big Tech or Cease To Be a Free People

The upcoming elections are crucial.--AMERICAN SPECTATOR

https://spectator.org/hunter-laptop-story-confirms-rein-in-big-tech-or-cease-to-be-a-free-people/


The Biden Family Racket Is Everything Leftists Fabricated About The Trumps, And Media Are Crickets--THE FEDERALIST

https://thefederalist.com/2022/04/01/the-biden-family-racket-is-everything-leftists-fabricated-about-the-trumps-and-media-are-crickets/


Hollywood Face-Slaps Conservatives---DAILY SINGAL

https://www.dailysignal.com/2022/03/31/hollywood-face-slaps-conservatives/


House approves bill legalizing marijuana--THE HILL

https://thehill.com/news/house/3256370-house-approves-bill-legalizing-marijuana/


Media and Big Tech censorship is alive and well--WASHINGTON TIMES

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2022/mar/31/media-and-big-tech-censorship-is-alive-and-well/


The Right Gets a Second Shot at the Culture Wars--NR

https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/04/the-right-gets-a-second-shot-at-the-culture-wars/



LOCAL MEETINGS:


CLALLAM COUNTY MEETINGS:


Clallam County Commission work session for 4/4/22

https://clallam.granicus.com/GeneratedAgendaViewer.php?view_id=2&event_id=1309


Clallam County Commission Board meeting for 4/5/22

https://clallam.granicus.com/GeneratedAgendaViewer.php?view_id=2&event_id=7311


City of Port Angeles Council meeting for 4/5/22

https://www.cityofpa.us/DocumentCenter/View/11350/Council-Packet-04052022-


OMC BOARD MEETING FOR 4/6/22

https://www.olympicmedical.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/AGENDA-April-6-2022.pdf



JEFFERSON COUNTY MEETINGS:


Jefferson County board meeting for 4/4/22

https://media.avcaptureall.cloud/meeting/f95dce25-11b3-4caf-9a07-e50d34e64784


PORT TOWNSEND CITY COUNCIL BUSINESS MEETING AGENDA 4/4/22

https://cityofpt.granicus.com/GeneratedAgendaViewer.php?view_id=4&event_id=1698





Weekly devotional

BIBLE VERSE:  Matthew 20: 17-19 (New International Version)
 
Now Jesus was going up to Jerusalem. On the way, he took the Twelve aside and said to them, “We are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be delivered over to the chief priests and the teachers of the law. They will condemn him to death and will hand him over to the Gentiles to be mocked and flogged and crucified. On the third day he will be raised to life!”
 

Weekly Bible Study: Crossing the Sea, by Jeffrey W. Hamilton


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