logo
Kern County officials decline behavioral services grant due to new proposition

Kern County officials decline behavioral services grant due to new proposition

Yahoo14-02-2025
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — Kern Behavioral Health and Recovery Services earned a $2 million grant to open up a Children's Crisis Residential Program and on Tuesday, the Board of Supervisors declined that grant.
Workers like Daisy Graven, a Substance Use Disorder Specialist, are asking why.
'I don't know why they would decline a state grant, because it's services that are very well needed,' said Graven.
Graven joined her local SEIU 521 colleagues on North Chester Avenue Thursday afternoon to protest what they say – the county's unwillingness to spend money.
'The past three years, the board of supervisors underspent public services by $532 million,' said Josh Armstrong, an SEIU member. 'That's why roads go unrepaired, wait times for mental health services drag on and families in crisis don't get the help they need fast enough.'
At the rally, SEIU wanted to get the word out about FixKernNow, a movement to get voters to put pressure on their supervisor for more staffing, better infrastructure and more.
Graven said that this grant was important, to help children with mental health issues.
'The younger that we're able to get people that have mental health issues, the less adults suffering that we have out on the streets,' said Graven.
The Children Crisis Residential Program was going to be used to house anyone under 18-years-old after inpatient psychiatric care.
Children leaving the mental hospital could stay there for a short amount of time, to help them get reacclimated before sending them home.
It could have also housed someone during a crisis, instead of going to a mental hospital.
This still begs the question: Why would the county ever decline grant money?
Alison Burrowes, the director of BHRS, wrote a letter to the county asking to decline the grant. Burrowes explained the grant was for costs getting the program up and running, but Behavioral Health had to pay to operate it.
'He's loved': Bakersfield family shares how Safe Surrender program strengthened their family
Under Proposition one, a law that passed in 2024 to reallocate behavioral health funds across the state, takes treatment funding and puts it into housing.
'So what we were providing through this funding for treatment services, now we need to shift some of those dollars, 30 percent of them, over into housing rental subsidies,' said Burrowes.
Burrowes also highlighted that BHRS was awarded a different $17 million grant for other youth programs which allowed the department to pivot.
'It's going to be used to construct a youth crisis stabilization unit, so for youth going into crisis this is a safe place for them to go, receive some short term treatment and evaluation in case they do need to be hospitalized,' said Burrowes. 'Alongside that facility is going to be a family resource center.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kern County's 2026 primary candidates: One-on-one interview with CD-22 hopeful Jasmeet Bains
Kern County's 2026 primary candidates: One-on-one interview with CD-22 hopeful Jasmeet Bains

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Kern County's 2026 primary candidates: One-on-one interview with CD-22 hopeful Jasmeet Bains

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — The 2026 Election is already underway, as candidates throw their names in the ring for local, state and federal offices. Wednesday morning, Assemblywoman Dr. Jasmeet Bains announced her run for California's 22nd Congressional District. 17 Political Reporter Jenny Huh sat down with Bains for a candidate profile. CD-22 is one of the most contentious house races nationwide, each election cycle, without fail. The big question for 2026 — will Bains be the Democratic candidate? 'This is about being a doctor who's taking her oath to the highest level to protect her community,' said Bains of her decision to throw her hat in the ring. The assemblywoman — just re-elected to her second term in California's 35th Assembly District — is now eyeing the title of congresswoman. 17's Jenny Huh: 'Did you feel like 2026 was really your year to run, just given that health care, your expertise is front and center?' Asm. Dr. Jasmeet Bains: 'I never signed up for this to be a career politician. I'm a doctor. Things lined up in a way that this community needs their doctor. When I first got elected and I brought in about $10 million for the fentanyl task force, one of the things we did with it was open up a detox option for people on Medicaid,' Bains recalled. Speculation of Bains' congressional run began with Congress considering President Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill. On the chopping block — billions in funding to health care programs like Medicaid. And in the hot seat — David Valadao, who ultimately voted with his party in passing the bill. 'The beginning of this year, a lot of people were asking me, are you going to run? Are you going to run? And I waited. I waited to see if he would do the right thing and put the I mean, we all have seen David Valadao do that before,' Bains said. Like, she noted, when he was one of 10 House Republicans that voted to impeach Trump. 'When you vote to impeach Trump? That brought nothing back to the district. That didn't put food on the table. That was politics.' Jara standoff: Police feared county supervisor's husband wanted officers to shoot him Bains went as far as to say when Valadao faced off against 2018 Democratic challenger TJ Cox and lost, she had actually voted for the congressman. Cox, after just a term, was charged with fraud. The 40-year-old Bains is a family doctor at the Delano branch of Adventist Health. During the week, Bains is in session in Sacramento. During the weekend, she's back in the district at her clinic. 'I'm a doctor, and this community saw a doctor that put the people over politics over and over and over again,' Bains said. 'I have bucked my own party.' Most notably, Bains in her first term was the lone Democrat to vote against Gov. Gavin Newsom's bill to prevent price-gouging by oil companies and was temporarily stripped of a committee assignment. Recently, in the two special legislative sessions addressing the state's gas prices, she was the only Democrat to oppose both measures, though the bills eventually passed. 'Kern County has been bullied by both sides. It's been bullied by the Republicans and bullied by the Democrats. We need someone that's going to stand up for the Valley,' Bains said. 'Running for Congress, especially in a race like this. It's not easy. You know how ugly it's going to get. I'm going to get beat up from both sides.' CD-22 has a history of being one of the most expensive, contested congressional races nationwide, with the House majority running right through it. It's described as a moderate district — majority Latino, leans Democrat, yet a Republican has been reelected time and time again. 17's Jenny Huh: 'Do you feel like voter turnout is really the problem or has it, quite frankly, just been weak candidates, weak messaging about your party? Asm. Dr. Jasmeet Bains: 'That's a really good question. And it's both. Yes, we have some of the worst voter turnout in the state here, right here. But at the same time, what is it that gets voters to turn out?' Again, it's health care, Bains underscored. She also pointed out that her people have, historically, shown up when it matters. She cited the labor rights movement founded in Delano and the national impact it carried. It all depends on a 'community believing in someone,' she said. 'Instead of doing more to strengthen health care, we cut it by a trillion dollars?' Bains said. 'I stutter saying that because through my eyes as a doctor, I and every doctor in this community, every health care worker, every nurse, every person that's on the frontlines of health care in this community sees what's about to happen.' She also noted a direct impact of the bill when it comes to her work at the state capitol. 'My biggest dream for this community was my UC, the Kern medical school,' Bains said. 'Well within the Big Beautiful Bill is a tax on endowment funds that Congressman David Valadao voted for.' Bains said as the bill made its way through Congress, it was actually her patients that asked her to do something, amid looming health care cuts. Her work about being a party loyalist because the issue of health care will only get worse, the congresswoman hopeful said. The daughter of immigrants from India, Bains was born in Cleveland but grew up in Delano. She's fluent in English, Spanish, Punjabi. She was the first South Asian woman elected to the California Legislature and first Sikh American in California state office. Bains cannot run for CD-22 and reelection to her AD-35 simultaneously. So, she's taking the risk of being out of office, if she did not advance past the June primary or emerge victorious in November. If that's the case, Bains said, she can be found, 'Right back in that clinic in Delano providing care.' Also in the candidate pool is fellow Democrat Randy Villegas — viewed as the more progressive candidate. Click here for the full interview with Jasmeet Bains. Click here for the full interview with Randy Villegas. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

With Butler Hospital strike, a vital R.I. resource is being put at risk
With Butler Hospital strike, a vital R.I. resource is being put at risk

Boston Globe

time11-07-2025

  • Boston Globe

With Butler Hospital strike, a vital R.I. resource is being put at risk

Get Rhode Island News Alerts Sign up to get breaking news and interesting stories from Rhode Island in your inbox each weekday. Enter Email Sign Up However, Advertisement From the beginning, In recent meetings, the union has openly discussed 'setting a template' for statewide labor actions. They're framing this as a strategic escalation against hospital leaders, while also expanding their campaign to the government, board members, banks, and civic organizations. Advertisement Unlike SEIU, other unions have chosen not to strike and to continue negotiations, despite having a strike authorization, whereas SEIU decided on an indefinite strike. They are coordinating with political activists, using community events, and targeting our Board of Trustees with public pressure tactics aimed at intimidating rather than engaging. In short, this is not a conventional Let me be clear: we respect the right of workers to organize and advocate for better compensation, benefits, retirement, and working conditions. However, Butler Hospital is a behavioral health facility that serves some of the most vulnerable Rhode Islanders. It was never meant to be a stage for a political theater of escalation. The damage being done is real: critical behavioral health programs across the state were already strained, and capacity at Butler is now being reduced out of necessity because of the union's action. A vital community resource is being put at risk — not because of its policies or finances, but because it was chosen as a beachhead for a broader conflict. There's a moral price for that. And a practical one as well. We must not allow the illusion of a righteous movement to obscure the deeper reality: when a strike becomes a symbolic crusade, it stops being about resolution and starts being about power. The people of Rhode Island deserve better. Our patients deserve better. And our health care workforce — union and non-union alike — deserves leadership that seeks solutions, not standoffs. Advertisement There is still a path forward. It begins with an honest consideration of Butler's actual circumstances — not those of other hospitals, not ideological ambitions, not long-term organizing goals. The future of health care in Rhode Island should be shaped through collaboration, not coercion. We want the workers on strike to return to their positions. We urge the union to end the strike and return to work, allowing our leaders to focus on the negotiations while the employees focus on the patients who need them. If this doesn't happen, we will continue to encourage more workers to cross the line to join those who have already courageously done so. Plus, we will be forced to explore further reductions. Continuing the strike will only reduce access to behavioral health services across the state — at a time when our most vulnerable patients need these services more than ever. This is not about winning a narrative. It's about doing the right thing. We encourage Butler employees to return to their positions to do what they do best — caring for patients. Dr. Michael Wagner is the president and CEO of Care New England.

Mosquito sample tests positive for West Nile virus in Kern County
Mosquito sample tests positive for West Nile virus in Kern County

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Mosquito sample tests positive for West Nile virus in Kern County

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — Kern County Public Health officials are urging residents to take steps to prevent becoming the first human case in the county for 2025. On June 13, Kern County Public Health announced the first positive sample of the West Nile virus has been found in a mosquito. There have been no reported cases of a human contracting West Nile virus in the county so far in 2025. The virus is mainly transmitted to people through mosquito bites, officials said. Officials said you can reduce mosquito breeding sites by: Remove standing or stagnate water from containers such flowerpots, fountains, birdbaths, pet bowls, and wading pools. Clean/scrub containers that collect water weekly to remove any potential mosquito eggs. Maintain swimming pools in working condition. Stock garden ponds with fish that eat mosquito larvae. Report areas of mosquito infestation to your local vector control district. You can decrease the risk of mosquito-transmitted infections by: Avoiding mosquitoes and mosquito-infested areas at all times of the day. Wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants when outdoors. Apply mosquito repellant to exposed skin when outdoors. Ensure doors and windows have screens in good repair to keep mosquitoes out of your home. Although the first positive mosquito sample has been identified in the 93307 zip code, it is important for everyone to take precautions to avoid mosquito bites. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store