California's 'CARE Court' Won't Help the Homeless
It will just give the state more power to control those deemed mentally ill.

California may now have a new method for treating the mentally ill and getting the homeless off the streets—even if it is against their will.
The Community Assistance, Recovery, and Empowerment (CARE) Act, was signed into law last month by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom. The law creates CARE Courts, a new form of civil mental-health court designed to usher untreated, severely mentally ill individuals into medical treatment and other forms of state support.
While many have lauded the law as an important step toward getting treatment for the most severely mentally ill Californians—many of whom are homeless—civil liberties organizations have expressed concerns about the bill's potential for abuse and the expansion of state power. While some severely mentally ill people certainly need treatment, the potential for coercion is cause for serious concern.
According to the bill text, CARE plans can include mandates to enter "behavioral health care, including stabilization medication, housing, and other enumerated services." Those who do not complete the directives of their CARE plan risk involuntary hospitalization or being placed under a conservatorship.
According to a California Health and Human Services Agency FAQ, the process would work like this: someone in one of several listed positions, including family member, first responder, clinician, and adult protective services, can a petition arguing that an individual meets the requirements for participation in the CARE program.
The requirements are that: the person must be over the age of 18 and currently suffering from severe psychotic mental illness (such as schizophrenia) that is not currently stabilized in voluntary clinical treatment; a CARE plan or agreement would be the least restrictive way to ensure the respondents stability; and the respondent is likely to benefit from such a plan or agreement. Additionally, the person must either be unlikely to "survive safely in the community without supervision and the person's condition is substantially deteriorating," or "the person is in need of services and supports in order to prevent a relapse or deterioration that would be likely to result in grave disability or serious harm to the person or others."
A CARE Court would then review the petition to determine if the respondent meets the criteria for involvement in the CARE program. If there is insufficient evidence that the individual meets necessary criteria, or the respondent voluntarily accepts services, the case is dismissed. If the criteria are met and the respondent declines services, an attorney is appointed to the respondent, and a series of hearings takes place.
If, after the end of these hearings, the court again determines that the respondent does meet CARE criteria, it will order the county behavioral health agency, the respondent's attorney, and a "voluntary supporter" to attempt to persuade the respondent to enter into a CARE agreement, which is a voluntary "settlement" which requires the respondent to enter into certain stabilizing medical care and resources.
If such a voluntary agreement is not reached, the court will order that the respondent be clinically evaluated. During a followup hearing, the respondent will have an opportunity to respond. If the court again finds that the respondent meets the CARE criteria, the court will order that the respondent, their counsel, and the county health agency develop a CARE plan. This plan can stay in place for up to one year, with the possibility of a voluntary one-year extension.
While CARE agreements can provide relief to mentally ill individuals who want help, the coercive nature of CARE plans should give pause to those concerned about the bill's ability to become coercive—and its potential to be overzealously used.
While those brought before CARE courts would receive an attorney, according to the information available from the California Health and Human Services Agency, it is unclear whether a mentally ill person could effectively refuse a CARE plan. Further, while mentally ill individuals are theoretically supposed to collaborate on their CARE plans, it is unknown if they would have meaningful veto power over provisions like mandated medication or hospitalization.
Civil liberties groups, disability rights organizations, and journalists who have been reporting on the issue for years have all expressed opposition to the bill, citing its potential for abuse. The CARE Act "merely create[s] a new legal framework for the same failed approach, making mental illness tantamount to a crime," wrote The Los Angeles Times editorial board in July. "But the only real step forward is Newsom's separate but related commitment to fund thousands of affordable housing units, some of which counties could use to bolster their slim stock of supportive housing." This refers to the California Comeback Plan, a $22 billion program that claims it will create over 84,000 new housing units and "exits from homelessness."
CARE plans, though presented as an alternative to much more restrictive court-ordered guardianships, seem startlingly similar to them. Both systems may strip adults of their rights to make personal decisions, and both have the potential to ensnare individuals who aren't incompetent. "In the worst cases of guardianship abuse, functioning adults are completely stripped of their autonomy: where they live, where they can go…even how and where they will die," wrote C.J. Ciaramella in the May 2022 issue of Reason. "Even with comparatively strong oversight…bad actors, conflicts of interest, and crushing caseloads can undermine those protections."
In addition to civil rights concerns, the CARE Act asks much of county health agencies and other local services, demanding that they massively expand their capacity to provide housing and mental health services. How exactly the state will expand these services with its current staff and resources (and how much the taxpayers will pay for it) is unclear.
Only time will tell if CARE plans are utilized as a last resort solely for individuals who are truly a danger to themselves and others. But there's no reason to think that a system that gives local governments new power to force people off the streets will be immune from abusive coercion and ineffective at solving the actual housing affordability problem.
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I’m surprised they haven’t started talking about how it’s justified to shoot these people for trespassing on public property.
Not so fast; one of our regular lefty shits is more than happy with murder if the alternative is some prole putting feet on a holy-congress-critter's desk:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
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Well the obvious answer is to hire more staff. The question is less how they will expand capacity than how they will expand capacity without reducing the quality of the services they provide.
No such thing as negative quality.
Have you looked at what the CDC has been upto lately?
Don't CARE.
Camps AlReady Enlarging?
This is a lefty-driven measure; we'll see how the ACLU does this time regarding involuntary restraint.
My guess?
They won't care.
Unless one of the people being locked away is transgendered or something. Progressives gotta' watch progressive's backs.
They only cared when Regan was governer, it had nothing to do with rights
I'm not quite as negative concerning this as most, apparently. It's got more bureaucracy and safeguards than red flag laws, from what I understand from this article. I mean, it's got that going for it, amirite?
The last decade of the Soviet Union saw no people put into prison for political reasons. Many were sent to psychiatric institutions because they did not believe in communism, a sure sign of mental illness.
If you believe that this couldn't go wrong you are a person of great faith.
How about we assign an illegal to supervise the crazies?
There are legitimate objections to the CARE Act. But something like it just might have saved the life of a homeless family member of mine years ago. If your family has not been in the same situation, count yourself fortunate.
Additionally, the person must either be unlikely to "survive safely in the community without supervision and the person's condition is substantially deteriorating," or "the person is in need of services and supports in order to prevent a relapse or deterioration that would be likely to result in grave disability or serious harm to the person or others."
Ok, I've skimmed the article here, but how does this differ from the existing mental health regime we already have in this country, where you can be detained against your will if you're deemed to pose a danger to yourself or others?
I don't know, and wonder the same. Some people need to be detained involuntarily, like serial killers or career burglars. Do you wait until they die from someone acting in self-defense, or shootout with a cop? Is mental ability anybody's business? Irredeemable career criminals need to be locked up regardless of illness, and the mentally ill don't deserve forced treatment if they aren't dangerous or don't want it.
It's a mess no matter what.
the mentally ill don’t deserve forced treatment if they aren’t dangerous or don’t want it
If you want treatment, you are clearly competent and wouldn't be eligible. People who actively deny that they need help must be forced. How could that possibly be arbitrarily applied?
the California Comeback Plan, a $22 billion program
LOL! Catch-22 billion, do you suppose Camp wrote that on purpose?
Nice catches. I was specifically thinking of people who have meds but sometimes forget to take them. I can imagine forgetful people with a bracelet or locket with an emergency supply and a notice saying "I want these but sometimes forget, please don't shoot me if I am barking".
And other people who explicitly don't want to be on meds, yet the State says you must because you have the prescription.
""If such a voluntary agreement is not reached, the court will order that the respondent be clinically evaluated.""
Socialist do have a different definition of voluntary than the rest of us.
What is "voluntary" becomes meaningless when someone is hallucinating.
Or way more interesting...
Don't forget many high schools have a mandatory requirement for volunteer work in order to graduate.
Good. Leaving severely mentally ill people to live like animals on the streets is savagery.
Allowing them to roam free has serious environmental repercussions when they are not spayed or neutered.
Look for the clipped tip of one ear. It's a sign of feral cats having been fixed then released back into the neighborhood, I'm sure they could do the same for
bumserrstreet peopleerr people experiencing homelessnessWell, that or having fought Mike Tyson.
No, it's beneficial to their wellness. Otherwise, why would so many Soros-funded groups file lawsuits to keep them there?
To contribute to the collapse of Western civilization? Just a guess.
Wellness for the world.
This is a very tough issue and I don't claim to have the answers but here's my take. I have been intimately involve with families that have a member with full blown schizophrenia. The emotional and sometimes financial cost can be devastating. My libertarian side makes the argument that these people perceive reality differently than most of us and for all I know their reality may be the correct one. My practical side tells me that these people can't pay the costs they create for the people trying to keep them alive. Many years ago SCOTUS decided that involuntary commitment didn't square with constitutional rights and we shut down our insane asylums. Good for liberty but... There is no question that the rights of many of these people were abused. They were imprisoned, lobotomized, subject to shock therapy and whatever fad treatment the experts came up with. JFK had a sister who got disappeared in that world. Maybe she was better off. I don't know. But the Kennedys were better off.
Currently people with mental illness often times end up living on the street. But they really don't have a place in the "homeless community" anymore than they do in an institution. Most people on the street have chosen to be there. Whether because it's just better for them to get drunk or do drugs all day or they just couldn't tolerate the relentless hamster wheel that is middle class life. At times I find the idea seductive. But crazy people are a problem for everybody.
It appears that this legislation attempts to mitigate the crimes of the past but of course it creates another legal/bureaucratic system wherein self interested individuals will profit at the expense of the mentally ill. But maybe it's better than the nothing we have now.
You can perceive reality differently, if you want to. It’s a free country.
However, if your different perception of reality is leading you to shit on the sidewalk, set fires, and assault passersby, my perception of reality is one where you get locked up.
It's also cruel to allow human beings who are not mentally competent to care for themselves to live like stray dogs. These people are suffering and in danger, even though their mental condition might lead them to say they're living the way they want to. It's effete and silly to suggest they're exercising some kind of "freedom".
I don't disagree.
But maybe it’s better than the nothing we have now.
I would say yes, unquestionably.
Not really sure where to go on this, but I am pretty sure the is middle ground between letting them roam free and mandatory shock therapy. I know when the gov is involved its "let's think of the worst thing to do first"
No CARE act, no $22 billion California Comeback Plan, no-fucking-nothing short of a Red Army sized battalion of Guardian Angels on steroids can solve the homeless problem in CA’s cities. Which will never happen.
Your only hope is to un-elect your incumbents that won’t deal with it while it’s still solvable in your town. That’s the stimulus that politicians respond to.
Makes no sense. You get someone not in their right mind to sign a legal agreement? How can that even be legal?
Is it just me, or does it seem like an argument could be made that Gavin qualifies for this very program?
Let’s overlook that Reason has published an article pushing for mental health workers to be detailed instead of cops in some cases. Authoritarianism is much better in the guise of the therapeutic state.
But there are people who need to be coerced for their own benefit and that of others they threaten. An adult libertarianism has to acknowledge such uncomfortable realities. There are sick people incapable of exercising liberty. They deserve our compassion and help.
Perhaps the State should only get involved when they are a threat to others, violating individual/private property rights. Some standards could be set (undoubtedly imperfect) to determine whether they should receive mental health treatment. If they're a threat only to themselves, private charity could help.
Cali should take a page out of other states' playbooks and ship them back to Nevada and Montana and anywhere else. Hell, do like Texas and Florida did and just ship them there.
Apparently it's ok to play politics with peoples' lives so...