Bucks County commissioners today broke ground on a new mental health treatment center in Doylestown.
The center will sit next to the Bucks County Correctional Facility and will help the county divert mental health patients away from the carceral system and into the treatment facility.
The seriously mentally ill shouldn’t be in jail, said Bucks County Commissioner Vice Chair Diane Ellis-Marseglia. “We have corrections officers who were taught to deal with people who have engaged in criminal activity,” she said. “They’re not mental health professionals.”
The county has been planning the project since 2016 and construction is expected to start mid-August. Donna Duffy-Bell, administrator of the county’s Behavioral Health and Development Programs, said the center should start receiving patients by the end of 2024.
An incarcerated man alleges officers used excessive force, and that the county fails to properly train officers on interacting with prisoners who have mental illnesses.
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Duffy-Bell said the center will offer an alternative to incarcerated persons and law enforcement agencies. Instead of jail time, judges can set bail and release a person to the diversion center; the facility can also serve as a re-entry program to aid people out of the prison.
“Judges don’t often have a lot of options for individuals, and so by default individuals stay incarcerated or go to incarceration,” Duffy-Bell said. “This gives our community and our system more options to appropriately treat people and keep them out of institutionalization.”
Donna Duffy-Bell, administrator of the county’s Behavioral Health and Development Programs. (Courtesy of Bucks County)
In the last year, two incarcerated individuals with mental illnesses have sued the county alleging mistreatment inside the county jail.
Last year, Kim Stringer’s parents sued after she was pepper-sprayed and placed in a restraint chair. Mubarak Alexander is also suing the county, alleging correctional facility employees used excessive force while he was detained in the mental health unit in 2018. Alexander claimed that Bucks County fails to train its correctional officers on how to interact with prisoners with mental illnesses.
A rendering of the county’s new Diversion, Assessment, Restoration and Treatment Center. (Courtesy of Bucks County)
An investigation began in January 2022 when the Doylestown Hospital’s board of directors reported they were receiving insufficient funds charges on one of their accounts.
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