Subcommittees add funds for mental health, autism, housing vouchers and foster-care supports

2531422 · March 10, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Sign Up Free
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Appropriations panels approved new funding for behavioral health and developmental‑disability services, autism centers, a Georgia housing voucher pilot and multiple child-welfare supports including foster-care rate increases and family supports.

House appropriations subcommittee presentations and votes added multiple targeted appropriations for behavioral health, developmental disabilities, autism services and child-welfare programs.

Key additions included: $1,000,000 for alcohol use-disorder peer-support expansion serving Northeast Georgia Medical Center and surrounding rural counties; funding for hepatitis C screening (an existing program described as having completed about 90,000 screens and 950 cures since 2016); a $1,700,000 allocation cited for the Georgia Housing Voucher Program (associated with roughly 100 vouchers in the presentation); and $9.4 million (presented as approximately $9,400,000) to advance a North Fulton behavioral health crisis center that had prior planning funds in the amended budget.

The subcommittee listed additional allocations for autism services (a $100,000 add for a Savannah-area autism center and $500,000 for Marcus Autism Center to expand year‑round programming), $300,000 to Mercy Care for expanded homelessness-linked behavioral health supports, and $750,000 for Partners for HOME to deliver intensive services to about 75 people identified as homeless with persistent mental illness. The committee also moved funding to expand forensic/jail diversion and inpatient-discharge planning positions for psychiatric residential settings.

On child-welfare matters, the committee added about $19,000,000 for increased utilization growth in out‑of‑home care and separate line items for clothing and essential supplies for foster youth; it also approved a 2% provider-rate increase for child‑caring institutions, child-placing agencies, foster parents and relative caregivers. The presentation included a $500,000 grama for family support and a modest one‑time daily stipend proposal to facilitate openings of foster homes (described as $10 per day per child in the talk). The committee recorded motions and voice votes to advance the human‑resources and human‑services items.

Ending

The subcommittee directed follow-up on implementation details for voucher eligibility, capacity for autism and behavioral-health expansions, and timelines for phased openings of crisis‑center and housing‑voucher programs.