The influx of funding has bolstered a sector that has languished with insufficient support.
Kay Dervishi
The day after Gov. Kathy Hochul released her budget proposal in 2023, she declared that “the era of ignoring mental health needs is over.”
She had just announced a historic $1 billion plan to transform the state’s mental health system at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx. Her plan came on the heels of the COVID-19 pandemic, which stripped bare immense mental health needs across the state and beyond. In New York City alone, nearly half of teens experienced symptoms of depression in 2023, according to city data. Teenagers across the country are more likely to say they are persistently sad and think about suicide than a decade ago, a trend exacerbated by the isolation and stress caused by the pandemic. The pandemic also diverted hospital resources away from mental health, leaving fewer inpatient beds for people in mental health crises.
For Ann Marie Sullivan, commissioner of the state Office of Mental Health, the governor’s commitment to mental health expansion is unprecedented. Since 2022, the agency’s budget has seen a whopping 45% increase to a total of $4.8 billion, growth she said she hasn’t seen in 50 years.
“It’s really very impressive that the governor is committing to this,” she said. It really gives us an opportunity to do things that, personally, I’ve wanted to see for decades.”
The governor’s plan touches on many pressing needs: restoring inpatient psychiatric beds, expanding outpatient behavioral health clinics, establishing mental health centers in every school in the state and creating 3,500 housing units. It’s a welcome influx of funding for an issue that mental health advocates say has long languished with insufficient support. It’s too early to tell what impact the governor’s approach will have, as many of its priorities are still in the process of rolling out. But one challenge will likely affect most of them: workforce shortages.
“If you hire good people, then the programs are going to work,” said Glenn Liebman, CEO of the Mental Health Association in New York State. “If you’re unable to hire those folks, then unfortunately, what’s going to happen is that these programs will not be as successful as they should be.”
Jihoon Kim, who previously served as deputy secretary for human services and mental hygiene in the Hochul administration, said the governor’s office sought to take action after someone who had fallen through the cracks of the mental health system had pushed a person onto the subway tracks.
“That really was the impetus for the call for an overview of what the state has done in the past and what needed to be done,” he said.
Several pillars of the state’s mental health infrastructure have seen years of decline. Psychiatric inpatient capacity at hospitals had been decreasing even before the pandemic, dropping by nearly 11% from April 2014 to December 2023, according to a report from the state comptroller’s office. The capacity of clinics to serve people with mental health needs outside of hospitals also had been on the decline between 2015 and 2020, according to state data. Mental health workers hadn’t received a cost-of-living adjustment in about a decade until 2022. The result has been that people seeking mental health care – including youth – often sit on waitlists for weeks or months. More than 1,000 New Yorkers living with a serious mental illness were on waiting lists for community mental health programs in 2022, according to Crain’s New York Business.