Part of the Twin Towers jail in Los Angeles will be used to treat inmates with severe mental illness, a way to provide emergency care and evaluate those who may be a danger to themselves or others, according to an action approved Tuesday, May 16, by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors.
The board’s action sets up a Jail Inpatient Unit, also known as the Acute Intervention Module, at the county jail at 450 Bauchet St., in Chinatown in Los Angeles.
Initially, the county wants to provide 16 beds for those entering the unit, but an additional 32 beds are a possibility if approved at a later date. The county is seeking approval of this program from the California Department of Health Care Services, which is needed in order to operate the facility.
“This will create a more organized system inside the jail to deal with the most acutely mentally ill,” Fifth District Supervisor Kathryn Barger, a co-author of the motion, said during an interview Tuesday. “You will have individuals who will not be diverted into the community. That’s why we need to start building this infrastructure.”
The establishment of an acute mental health intake unit at the Twin Towers is an effort to satisfy the requirements of a consent decree imposed on the county and the Sheriff’s Department by the U.S. Department of Justice for inadequate mental health treatment and for a lack of beds for mentally ill inmates in custody.
“It is important for us to put something in place right now,” Barger said. “Especially since we’ve got the DOJ looking at what we are doing, and they are none too pleased.”
Obtaining mental health treatment is a continual problem for those in custody in county jails.
Since the huge Twin Towers jail opened in 1997, “it has become the largest de facto mental health institution in the United States,” the county reported.
About 6,800 county jail inmates participate in mental health programs with different kinds of treatment depending on…
Read the full article here