Mental Health Education & Training Bill Passes Senate Floor

Friday, May 26 2023

For Immediate Release: May 30, 2023

Contact: Lerna Shirinian, (818) 409-0400

 

Mental Health Education & Training Bill Passes Senate Floor

Sacramento, California – SB 509, authored by Senator Anthony J. Portantino (D – Burbank), passed the Senate Floor. The bill addresses the growing mental health crisis among California’s youth by implementing mental health education and training in schools. 

“Healthy school environments are crucial to having healthy children,” stated Senator Portantino. “In order to prepare school employees to help our students with mental health challenges, we must provide them with adequate mental health education and training. When someone needs a Band-Aid for a wound, we give it them without hesitation. When a person is hurting inside, it is imperative that our campuses have trained personnel to direct that individual to the proper expert for help. That’s why we it is imperative to focus attention on first aide training for behavioral health and not just physical health.”

Approximately 75% of mental illness manifests between the ages of 10 and 24. Since adolescents visit the doctor less often than any other age group, early warning signs of mental health needs go can undetected. Under existing law, the California Department of Education is required to identify an evidence-based mental health training program for local educational agencies to use to train teachers and other school personnel who have direct contact with pupils. However, schools are not mandated to require such training for their staff.

SB 509 will require the California Department of Education to ensure that 75 percent of classified and certificated employees on school campuses complete an evidence-based behavioral health training program. The bill builds on the success of SB 224, a mental health education bill authored by Senator Portantino in 2021, and requires that all students between grades 1 and 12 receive evidence-based age-appropriate mental health education from a qualified instructor at least one time during elementary school, one time during middle school, and one time during high school.

“CBHA is proud to sponsor this important measure and continue working to advance policy that improves school climate and access to behavioral health interventions,” ,” said Le Ondra Clark Harvey, Ph. D., Chief Executive Officer of California Council of Community Behavioral Health Agencies (CBHA). “We understand the plight of so many students and school staff who are in need of training like the ones this bill would mandate- especially in the aftermath of a pandemic that has impacted the youth our members serve. We stand in support of Senator Portantino as he advances policy changes that will benefit the most vulnerable.”

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