Murmurs: State to Demend More Accountability From Counties Over Mental Health Spending

STATE TO DEMAND MORE ACCOUNTABILITY FROM COUNTIES OVER MENTAL HEALTH SPENDING: The Oregon Health Authority is going to demand greater accountability for the millions of dollars it hands to counties to spend on behavioral health, according to a state official who presented the plan at a recent public meeting. The changes, OHA’s Christa Jones said, were aimed at “setting clear expectations and holding ourselves accountable-and holding the community mental health programs accountable.” They’ll be incorporated into the next version of what are known as “county financial assistance agreements,” which the state signs with counties to provide mental health services. Such contracts are hefty. Multnomah County’s grant is $36 million this year. But a 2021 legislative report found the agreements “are cumbersome, do not center outcomes for the people served, and lack accountability and outcome metrics.” The contract changes come as OHA begins a Legislature-mandated “cost study” to determine whether it gives the counties sufficient funding. The new agreements are scheduled to go into effect next summer, Jones told a meeting of the Oregon Health Policy Board last week. “It’s a big lift,” she said. “Hopefully, it’s going to be a new way of looking at this work.”

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