News Clips


More help on the way: How Eagle County is building up behavioral health resources

September 2, 2021 By: Scott Miller It wasn’t so long ago that Eagle County was in a behavioral health crisis. One of the problems was a lack of resources to help people in crisis. That’s changed, and continues to change. The change started in 2017. Eagle County voters by a wide margin passed Ballot Measure 1A, which imposed an additional tax on recreational marijuana sales. Vail Health in April 2019 pledged $60 million over 10 years to behavioral health projects, and began a separate $100 million fundraising effort in Dec. 2019. Vail Health also created Eagle ...

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COURT CRAWL | High-profile murder convictions get reconsidered, mental health law called into question

August 30, 2021 By: Michael Karlik Welcome to Court Crawl, Colorado Politics' roundup of news from the third branch of government. The Court of Appeals had a busy week, from considering the fairness of high-profile murder trials to deciding a multimillion-dollar penalty against a for-profit college must be retried. Plus, one judge called into question the constitutionality of a mental health law in Colorado. Read the full article in Colorado Politics  

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Colorado is expanding mental health support for teachers, students ahead of uncertain school year

August 20, 2021 By: Nicole Brady Originally appeared on the Denver 7 Channel As another uncertain school year gets underway in Colorado, mental health for teachers and students is a top concern. Two bills that passed in the 2021 Legislature will provide more support for both. The Supporting Our Educator Workforce Act will create new programs to recruit and retain teachers, with financial incentives like student loan forgiveness, and more support for their mental well-being. A second bill, Rapid Mental Health Response for Colorado Youth, will provide a mental ...

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Appeals judge warns Colorado mental health law is unconstitutional

August 24, 2021 By: Michael Karlik Vincent Atchity, president and CEO of the advocacy group Mental Health Colorado, shared Vogt's concern that automatic psychiatric commitment solely as a ... Read the article on Colorado Politics

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Bang! Colorado cops increasingly using lasso device fueled by gunpowder to detain people from afar

August 15, 2021 By: Elise Schmelzer Article originally published in the Denver Post Fifteen agencies in the state are using the BolaWrap, which is used to fire a Kevlar tether at someone’s legs. The man wandered through the dark parking lot shouting unintelligibly as Glenwood Springs police officers trailed him. He’d been running through traffic and officers wanted to stop him before he got hurt. But the man didn’t heed their commands, body camera footage of the incident shows. After one final warning, the officers deployed the department’s newest tool ...

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Legislators, Community Members Urge Transformation of Colorado’s Mental Health System

August 4, 2021 By: Mental Health Colorado This article was found in the Pagosa Daily Post Legislators and community members will convene the Behavioral Health Transformational Task Force in August to decide how to spend $450 million dollars from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) dedicated to behavioral health. According to Mental Health Colorado, this is a once in a generation opportunity to invest in course corrections, which will point Coloradans toward better health outcomes and more sensible use of health and justice resources. Children’s Hospital ...

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Denver’s behavioral health task force to convene in Aug.

August 3, 221 By: Dani Birzer Article originally found in Fox21News DENVER– The Behavioral Health Transformational Task Force plans to meet in August to decided where and how to dedicate the $450 million received from the American Rescue Plan Act. Vincent Atchity, Mental Health Colorado president & CEO, said, “It is time for us to make a bold move to address homelessness, promote substance use harm reduction and recovery, and end the use of jails and prisons as our de facto psychiatric facilities. We have been systematically neglecting and crimina...

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Colorado Isn’t Prepared To Deal With the Mental Health Fallout From COVID-19

August 2021 By: Shane Monaghan Coloradans have endured a lot in the past year and a half, and mental health professionals are worried about the long-term effects of that trauma. Here, we examine who’s been most affected, and how local experts are trying to help us cope. Read the full article in 5280  

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After major legislative wins, Mental Health Colorado scores lawmakers

July 26, 2021 By: Joey Bunch Originally found on Colorado Politics After a session that put hundreds of millions of dollars into mental health programs, some Colorado lawmakers surged to the front of the class, while others need remedial guidance, according to the state's chief advocacy organization. Mental Health Colorado celebrated scoring about $132 million for new programs in the legislative session that ended last month. Based on their votes on bills backed Mental Health Colorado, 39 House and 18 Senate Democrats scored 100. Sen. Kevin Priola of ...

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NEWS Mental Health Colorado’s Legislative Scorecard Shows Wide Partisan Gap, Especially in House

July 29, 2021 By: James O'Rourke Article originally found on the Colorado Times Recorder Yesterday, Mental Health Colorado released its 2021 Legislative Report, detailing the bills it pushed for during the Colorado Legislature’s 2021 session. “Each policy priority positively impacts the well-being of our state and will help Colorado achieve healthier minds from one end of life to the other,” the report says. The report contains a legislative scorecard, listing each state legislator’s vote on six key mental health bills passed during this session ...

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