Montana eyes $30M revamp of mental health, developmental disability facilities
Jan 22, 2025
HELENA, Mont. As part of a proposed revamping of the states behavioral health system, Republican Gov. Greg Gianfortes administration is looking into moving a facility for people with developmental disabilities, beefing up renovations at the Montana State Hospital, and creating a Helena unit of that psychiatric hospital.The changes, backers say, would fill gaps in services and help people better prepare for life outside of the locked, secure setting of the two state facilities before they re-enter their own communities, reports KFF Health News. I think part of the theme is responsibly moving people in and out of the state facilities so that we create capacity and have people in the appropriate places, state Sen. Dave Fern, D-Whitefish, said of the proposed capital projects during a recent interview.Related video: Montana State Hospital set to lose federal fundingFern served on the Behavioral Health System for Future Generations Commission, a panel created by a 2023 law to suggest how to spend $300 million to revamp the system. The law set aside the $300 million for improving state services for people with mental illness, substance abuse disorders and developmental disabilities.Gianfortes proposed budget for the next two years would spend about $100 million of that fund on 10 other recommendations from the commission. The capital projects are separate ideas for using up to $32.5 million of the $75 million earmarked within the $300 million pool of funds for building new infrastructure or remodeling existing buildings.The state Department of Public Health and Human Services and consultants for the behavioral health commission presented commission members with areas for capital investments in October. In December, the commission authorized state health department director Charlie Brereton to recommend the following projects to Gianforte: Move the 12-bed Intensive Behavior Center for people with developmental disabilities out of Boulder, possibly to either Helena or Butte, at an estimated cost of up to $13.3 million. Establish a step-down facility of about 16 beds, possibly on the campus of Shodair Childrens Hospital in Helena, to serve adults who have been committed to the Montana State Hospital but no longer need the hospitals intensive psychiatric services. Invest $19.2 million to upgrade the Montana State Hospitals infrastructure and buildings at Warm Springs, on top of nearly $16 million appropriated in 2023 for renovations already underway there in an effort to regain federal certification of the facility. The state Architecture & Engineering Division is reviewing the health departments cost estimates and developing a timeline for the projects so the information can be sent to the governor. Gianforte ultimately must approve the projects.Health department officials have said they plan to take the proposals to legislative committees as needed. With Commission recommendation and approval from the governor, the Department believes that it has the authority to proceed with capital project expenditures but must secure additional authority from the Legislature to fund operations into future biennia, said department spokesperson Jon Ebelt.Related video: Lawmakers hear concerns about Montana State HospitalThe department outlined its facility plans to the legislatures health and human services budget subcommittee on Jan. 22 as part of a larger presentation on the commission's work and the 10 noncapital proposals in the governors budget. Time limits prevented in-depth discussion and public comment on the facility-related ideas.One change the commission didnt consider: moving the Montana State Hospital to a more populated area from its rural and relatively remote location near Anaconda, in southwestern Montana, in an attempt to alleviate staffing shortages.The administration is committed to continuing to invest in MSH as it exists today, Brereton told the commission in October, referring to the Montana State Hospital.The hospital provides treatment to people with mental illness who have been committed to the states custody through a civil or criminal proceeding. Its been beset by problems, including the loss of federal Medicaid and Medicare funding due to decertification by the federal government in April 2022, staffing issues that have led to high use of expensive traveling health care providers, and turnover in leadership.State Sen. Chris Pope, D-Bozeman, was vice chair of a separate committee that met between the 2023 and 2025 legislative sessions and monitored progress toward a 2023 legislative mandate to transition patients with dementia out of the state hospital. He agreed in a recent interview that improving not moving MSH is a top priority for the system right now.Right now, we have an institution that is failing and needs to be brought back into the modern age, where it is located right now, he said after ticking off a list of challenges facing the hospital.State Sen. John Esp, R-Big Timber, also noted at the October commission meeting that moving the hospital was likely to run into resistance in any community considered for a new facility.Fern, the Whitefish senator, questioned in October whether similar concerns might exist for moving the Intensive Behavior Center out of Boulder. For more than 130 years, the town 30 miles south of Helena has been home, in one form or another, to a state facility for people with developmental disabilities. But Brereton said he believes relocation could succeed with community and stakeholder involvement.The 12-bed center in Boulder serves people who have been committed by a court because their behaviors pose an immediate risk of serious harm to themselves or others. Its the last residential building for people with developmental disabilities on the campus of the former Montana Developmental Center, which the legislature voted in 2015 to close.Drew Smith, a consultant with the firm Alvarez & Marsal, told the commission in October that moving the facility from the town of 1,300 to a bigger city such as Helena or Butte would provide access to a larger labor pool, possibly allow a more homelike setting for residents, and open more opportunities for residents to interact with the community and develop skills for returning to their own communities.Related video: Employees, patients blast conditions at Montana State Hospital in public commentsIdeally, Brereton said, the center would be co-located with a new facility included in the governors proposed budget, for crisis stabilization services to people with developmental disabilities who are experiencing significant behavioral health issues.Meanwhile, the proposed sub-acute facility with up to 16 beds for state hospital patients would provide a still secure but less structured setting for people who no longer need intensive treatment at Warm Springs but arent yet ready to be discharged from the hospitals care. Brereton told the commission in October the facility would essentially serve as a less restrictive extension of the state hospital. He also said the agency would like to contract with a company to staff the sub-acute facility.Health department officials dont expect the new facility to involve any construction costs. Brereton has said the agency believes an existing building on the Shodair campus would be a good spot for it.The state began leasing the building Nov. 1 for use by about 20 state hospital patients displaced by the current remodeling at Warm Springs a different purpose than the proposed sub-acute facility.Shodair CEO Craig Aasved said Shodair hasnt committed to having the state permanently use the building as the step-down facility envisioned by the agency and the commission.But Brereton said the option is attractive to the health department now that the building has been set up and licensed to serve adults.It seems like a natural place to start, he told the commission in December, and we dont mind that its in our backyard here in Helena.KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.