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Incarceration is not a
solution to mental illness
Original
published in the April 2000 issue of Mass Dissent.
By Peter
Wagner
The
Rebellious Law Conference at Yale in late February sponsored a lively
panel on how the state oppresses those with disabilities. The new welfare
law denies the disabled benefits. Despite the fact that prisons cost more
and are less effective than treatment, state governments have slashed
mental health budgets to build more prisons. The result has been more
public demonization and oppression of the mentally ill.
The
Rebellious Lawyering 2000 Conference was held at Yale Law School on
February 25-27. The opening address was by UCLA School of Law Professor
Gerald P. Lopez, author of Rebellious Lawyering: One ChicanoÍs Vision of
Progressive Law Practice. The keynote address was by Peter Neufeld,
co-founder and direct of "The Innocence Project," which currently
represents more than two hundred prisoners seeking post-conviction release
through DNA testing. Four WNEC students attended the conference.
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The theme
of the Rebellious Lawyering conference was "Innovative Advocacy for a New
Millennium". Explicitly or indirectly, all of the speakers talked about
why lawyers and law students need to think "outside the box" of
traditional legal work, be it in challenging oppressive laws or
challenging traditional -- and sometimes ineffective -- methods of
standard leftist organizing. All the speakers stressed the importance of
serving our clients, an unfortunately radical concept in the legal
profession.
Early on
the afternoon of the 2nd day, a "Disability and the State" panel
discussion was held.
Russ
Overby of the Tennessee Justice Center described his work trying to get
disabled clients exempted from the welfare and workfare requirements of
Tennessee. Overby and Heather Barr of New York City's Urban Justice Center
explained how the welfare program's purpose is to frustrate people so they
will leave the welfare rolls, and not to help them get jobs. For example,
the welfare office will require a large number of appointments before
benefits can be received, and the workfare requirements of 40 hours of
"volunteer" work do not take into account the difficulties the poor have
with transportation and childcare.
A variety
of different studies were cited by Overby, showing that 40% of families on
welfare have a long term functional disability; another that 23% had
psychiatric disorders and a third said that 75% had slight to severe
mental health problems. According to Overby, welfare clients are reluctant
to disclose their medical history to the State, so the exact number of
people with disabilities who are on welfare is unknown.
But the
lack of data is not the problem with the workfare requirements. While
federal law does allow a number of people with documented disabilities to
be exempted from the workfare requirements and 5 year limit on benefits,
even the National Governors Association concluded that the number of
people with disabilities outstrips the number allowed to retain their
benefits.
Russ
Overby criticized politicians for claiming that because the welfare rolls
are down, that poverty must have been defeated. To Overby, that's "like
curing the measles by painting over the spots. The research about the
numbers leaving the rolls does not address the question of where those
families go."
"Rikers
Island is the largest psychiatric facility in the country" began Heather
Barr of the Urban Justice Center's Mental Health Project, where she does
advocacy for people with mental illness who are in the criminal justice
system. Barr summed up the state policy since the 1970s: "we demolished
the mental health system at the same time we skipped merrily down the path
of criminalizing everything."
Years
ago, behavior that would have been considered annoying, such public
urination, is now treated as a criminal offense -- including in a city
like New York without public toilets. Other mentally ill people are
arrested for public drinking or panhandling. Barr reported that when she
sees arrest reports that read "resisting arrest and disorderly conduct"
the likely truth is that a person was talking to himself and the police
told him to move along and he didn’t. And like the rest of the prison
system, there is a general exemption for white people when it comes to
ending up in prison. As Barr pointed out, behavior that would land a Black
or Latino in prison will often not lead to prison for a white person.
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Rikers
Island holds 20,000 prisoners, or 130,000 over the course of a year.
Around 20% of those have a serious mental illness, and 80% have substance
abuse problems. The Federal DOJ estimates that 16% of all prisoners are
mentally ill, and NY State estimates 10% of its prisoners are mentally
ill. But Barr takes those numbers with "serious skepticism" as they count
only those who have been diagnosed and receive treatment, whereas many are
ignored by the system.
New York
State has quite openly replaced it's mental health hospitals with prisons.
[See Chart 1] Ms. Barr believes that many of the people released from the
closed state hospitals are the same people who are now incarcerated in the
state prisons. When the hospitals were closed, the state merely released
the patients into the streets without building community centers or other
resources. Ms. Barr also warned that deinstitutionalization is not
something confined to the 1960s or 1970s, but rather continues today, with
500 hospital beds closed in New York State last year. At the same time,
New York allocated $360 million for 2 new supermax prisons with
psychiatric wings.
Prison
costs society more than "crime"
Ms. Barr
is currently representing a man charged with jumping a subway turnstile,
denying the city $1.50. The prosecution's deal? One year in prison. This
would cost the state $69,000 for his incarceration. This is clearly not a
rational way to deal with the cost to society of a jumped turnstile.
Former
Rikers Island and Attica prisoner and manic-depressive David Gonzalez
explained that he is now in a program that subsidizes his housing to the
cost of $34 a day. The subsidized housing creates a personal stability
which makes it possible to remain free of drugs and alcohol and receive
treatment for his manic-depressive disorder. For the cost of $34 a day,
society gets another productive member, in this case a strong advocate for
the mentally ill with the Urban Justice Center. The other alternative,
espoused by many politicians, is to pay for society-denying incarceration
at more than twice the price.
Prison
is a harm, not a treatment.
Heather
Barr described what happens when the mentally ill go to prison. Mentally
ill prisoners are frequently victimized and isolated. When they are unable
to follow the rules, punishment often takes the form of segregation -- 23
or 24 hours a day locked in your cell alone.
During
one visit with the prison watchdog group Correctional Association of New
York to the Attica Prison's Special Housing Unit, Ms. Barr was unable to
talk to some of the prisoners because of plexiglass covering the bars. The
only method of communication was through yelling. When asked about the
glass, the guards explained: "that's for the shit throwers." But this was
half the cells in the SHU! Many of the prisoners were screaming or in a
catatonic state, and the guards acted liked this was normal. When human
beings are reduced to throwing their excrement to express themselves that
shows a clear failure of society to address the basic needs of its
citizens.
While the
New York Department of Corrections boasts of its treatment programs and
state of the art medicines, all of the prisoners Ms. Barr has spoken to
report that they are taking older, cheaper medications. Newer medicines
have been proven to be more effective.
Barr is
currently suing the City for it's failure to do discharge planning for
mentally ill prisoners. Prisoners from Rikers Island are dropped off very
early in the morning with none of the medicine they were taking, no
prescription for that medicine, no referrals to mental health clinics and
no referrals to shelters with mental health services. They are given only
$1.50 in cash and a $3 metro card. While the ex-prisoners would be
eligible for Medicaid to pay for medication, it takes 3 months to get a
Medicaid card. In response to a question suggesting a prioritization of
getting funding for mental health services at homeless shelters over those
for ex-prisoners, Barr explained that it's the same people, with 6 or 7 of
those in her lawsuit currently homeless. Outside of prison, there are
essentially no services for the mentally ill.
In New
York, there are no alternatives to incarceration programs that are
available to people with mental illness. If you are on medication, the
programs will not accept you. To that end, Ms. Barr is the director of new
pilot program to provide alternatives to incarceration for mentally ill
felony offenders.
Demonization of the mentally ill
Gonzalez
described the media backlash after a mentally ill man in New York threw a
woman in front of a train. In response to the murder, New York passed
"Kendra's law" by which the mentally ill can be subject to court ordered
"Involuntary Outpatient Treatment".
But in
the Kendra case, the man wasn't refusing treatment. The underfunded system
refused him 13 times in the 2 years prior to the murder. Kendra's law
doesn't provide for more services, just more repression, and targets all
of the mentally ill not merely those prone to violence. The purpose of
this law is to increase repression of the mentally ill and equate all
mentally ill people with the person who committed this murder. And as
Gonzalez pointed out, studies have shown that mental illness is less
accurate a predictor of violence than having recently lost your job. And
certainly no politicians are proposing that fired employees receive
medication against their will. But the mentally ill are a population much
easier to stigmatize.
The
discussion section took two directions on how to strategically fight the
stigmatization of the mentally ill. The first prong continued a criticism
of how the power structure can use and abuse the label of mental illness
to further weaken the oppressed. As Gonzalez pointed out, the label of
"insanity" it used against the most radical people or to justify divorce.
Audience
members repeatedly put forth the analysis that mental illness and
disabilities in general are environmentally defined. Environmental
stresses and demands create disabilities, and society continually changes
the line between "annoying" and "criminal" to serve its larger purpose.
The
second prong about how to keep the prison system off the backs of the
mentally ill without further stigmatizing the mentally was more
contentious.
Ms. Barr
reported that the conservative New York Post supports her lawsuit because
they don't want the mentally ill being deposited in people's neighborhoods
by the prison system. Even putting the words "criminal" or "criminal"
justice in the same sentence with "mental illness" will allow the
mainstream press to twist your words. So while this kind of support makes
her nervous, it's also true that the mayor probably reads the Post. If the
immediate goal is to get services for the mentally ill, it may not be
negative if other people support or grant it for their own, negative,
reasons.
The most
animated part of the discussion was whether using mental illness as a
defense to keep the mentally ill out of prison serves to help the mentally
ill as individuals or further stigmatize them as a group. A number of
audience members and ex-prisoner Gonzalez argued that this creates a
double standard and would increase stigmatization. Ms. Barr responded that
she is a prison abolitionist, and doesn't want to see anyone go to prison.
Keeping people out of prison entirely -- mentally ill or not -- is more
important than the question of discharge planning, but Ms. Barr could not
find a legal theory to base that important goal on, hence her lawsuit.
Ms. Barr
returned to the fact that prisons are not an effective way to treat mental
illness. The fact that the prisons are disproportionately Black and Latino
should make the fact that behavior is not a predictor of imprisonment
clear.
Ms. Barr
summed up the issue at the end of the session: "This is a problem of
services, not a legal problem. Alternatives to incarceration are needed."
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