Current:Home > NewsDepartment of Justice sues Maine for treatment of children with behavioral health disabilities -Mastery Money Tools
Department of Justice sues Maine for treatment of children with behavioral health disabilities
View
Date:2025-04-13 23:13:11
Maine unnecessarily segregates children with behavioral health disabilities in hospitals, residential facilities and a state-run juvenile detention facility, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday in a lawsuit seeking to force the state to make changes.
The actions violate the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Supreme Court’s 1999 Olmstead ruling that aimed to ensure that people with disabilities aren’t needlessly isolated while receiving government help, federal investigators contend.
The Justice Department notified Maine of its findings of civil rights violations in a June 2022 letter, pointing to what it described as a lack of sufficient community-based services that would allow the children to stay in their homes.
At the time, the department recommended that Maine use more state resources to maintain a pool of community-based service providers. It also recommended that Maine implement a policy that requires providers to serve eligible children and prohibit refusal of services.
“The State of Maine has an obligation to protect its residents, including children with behavioral health disabilities, and such children should not be confined to facilities away from their families and community resources,” Kristen Clarke, an assistant attorney general with the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, said in a statement.
The governor and Legislature have worked to strengthen children’s behavioral health services, said Lindsay Hammes, a spokesperson for the state Department of Health and Human Services. The DHHS has also worked with the Justice Department to address its initial allegations from 2022, she said.
“We are deeply disappointed that the U.S. DOJ has decided to sue the state rather than continue our collaborative, good-faith effort to strengthen the delivery of children’s behavioral health services,” Hammes said. “The State of Maine will vigorously defend itself.”
In 2022, Mills said improving behavioral health services for Maine children was one of her goals. Her administration also said that the shortcomings of the state’s behavioral health system stretched back many years, and that the COVID-19 pandemic set back progress.
Advocates welcomed the lawsuit, noting that 25 years after the Olmstead decision, children in Maine and their families are still waiting for the state to comply with the ruling.
“Despite calls for more than a decade to ensure the availability of those services, Maine has failed to do so. Unfortunately, this lawsuit was the necessary result of that continued failure,” said Atlee Reilly, managing attorney for Disability Rights Maine.
The ADA and Olmstead decision require state and local governments to ensure that the services they provide for children with disabilities are available in the most integrated setting appropriate to each child’s needs, investigators said.
Services can include assistance with daily activities, behavior management and individual or family counseling. Community-based behavioral health services also include crisis services that can help prevent a child from being institutionalized during a mental health crisis.
The lawsuit alleges that Maine administers its system in a way that limits behavioral health services in the community.
As a result, in order for Maine children to receive behavioral health services, they must enter facilities including the state-operated juvenile detention facility, Long Creek Youth Development Center. Others are at serious risk of entering these facilities, as their families struggle to keep them home despite the lack of necessary services.
The future of Long Creek has been a subject of much debate in recent years. In 2021, Mills vetoed a bill to close the facility last year.
veryGood! (48)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Welcome to USA TODAY Ad Meter 2024: Register to rate the best big game commercials
- Canadiens' Brendan Gallagher gets five-game supsension for elbowing Adam Pelech's head
- NBA announces All-Star Game starters; LeBron James earns 20th straight nod
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Milo Ventimiglia Makes Rare Comment About Married Life With Jarah Mariano
- 2 lucky New Yorkers win scratch-off games worth millions
- Mardi Gras 2024: New Orleans parade schedule, routes, what to know about the celebration
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Ukrainian-born Miss Japan rekindles an old question: What does it mean to be Japanese?
Ranking
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Meet Noah Kahan, Grammy best new artist nominee who's 'mean because I grew up in New England'
- New Hampshire veteran admits to faking his need for a wheelchair to claim $660,000 in extra benefits
- General Hospital Actor Tyler Christopher's Official Cause of Death Revealed
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- A landslide of contaminated soil threatens environmental disaster in Denmark. Who pays to stop it?
- Bill decriminalizing drug test strips in opioid-devastated West Virginia heads to governor
- Inflation slowed further in December as an economic ‘soft landing’ moves into sharper focus
Recommendation
Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
After Kenneth Smith's execution by nitrogen gas, UN and EU condemn method
Mikaela Shiffrin escapes serious injury after crash at venue for 2026 Olympics
New North Carolina state Senate districts remain in place as judge refuses to block their use
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Tesla recalls nearly 200,000 vehicles over faulty backup camera
New England Patriots WR Kayshon Boutte charged in illegal sports gaming scheme
Exotic animals including South American ostrich and giant African snail seized from suburban NY home