An effort to make more changes to Georgia’s mental health system could stall in the closing days of the 2023 legislative session even though a Senate committee on Wednesday unveiled a rewritten bill that House sponsors and advocates found broadly acceptable.
That’s because the Senate Health and Human Services Committee didn’t take a vote on House Bill 520 and didn’t schedule another meeting before a Thursday deadline for bills to advance out of Senate committees.
Committee Chairman Ben Watson, a Savannah Republican, said that means a two-thirds vote of the Senate would be required to set aside normal rules and vote on the bill after the deadline. When asked whether he would seek that move, Watson said “That’s probably not my question to answer.”
TEEN GIRLS ARE STRUGGLING WITH MENTAL ILLNESS AT RECORD LEVELS, WITH MANY ‘PERSISTENTLY SAD,’ DATA REVEALS
That’s an apparent reference to Senate Republican leaders who on Wednesday escalated a dispute with the House over hospital permitting, threatening end-of-session talks on the budget, mental health and other issues. The session is scheduled to end next Wednesday.
House Speaker Jon Burns, a Newington Republican, has made further changes to mental health a top priority, a year after then-speaker David Ralston pushed through an overhaul in the last session before he died.
The plan is aimed at recruiting more mental health workers, helping people who bounce between hospitals, jails and homelessness, and studying other needs.
The Senate bill, although rewritten, kept many of those goals. It removed sections that would have barred insurers from withholding certain drugs and that would have mandated a housing plan for certain mentally ill homeless people, even if potential tenants had criminal records that might normally cause landlords to refuse to house them.
“We’ve reduced a lot of redundancies,” Watson said of the new bill during the meeting. “We have tried to make it clear. We have left things out when we did not…
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