Newly formed Senate committee prioritizes mental health issues amid
pandemic
Send a link to a friend
[February 04, 2021]
By GRACE BARBIC
Capitol News Illinois
gbarbic@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Leadership in the Illinois
Senate has formed a new committee to focus on mental health issues in
the current General Assembly as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to
significantly alter everyday life.
“Although it’s always been important, because mental health and physical
health are one in the same in my opinion, now because of COVID it’s
become even more essential that we really address these problems head
on,” said Sen. Laura Fine, D-Glenview.
Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, named Fine as chair of the
newly created Senate Committee for Behavioral and Mental Health. When
Fine joined the Senate last year, she approached Harmon about
establishing a committee focused specifically on mental health and
behavioral issues.
Her advocacy on the issue was nothing new.
Prior to joining the Senate, Fine served in the state House of
Representatives for the 17th district from 2013 to 2019, where she
served as vice chair on the House Committee for Addiction and Mental
Health, chaired by Rep. Deb Conroy, D-Elmhurst.
Fine said she understands firsthand how detrimental and challenging it
can be to ensure mental health needs are met. Her own life experiences
have inspired her to bring the issue of mental health to the forefront
in the state.
Over 10 years ago, her husband was hit head-on by a truck and his left
arm was amputated at the scene. The truck driver did not have insurance,
so Fine’s family had to rely on their own insurance to cover the medical
bills.
Amid a seven-month legal battle with her insurance company over coverage
of multiple surgeries, Fine said her husband struggled to adjust to his
life-changing injury.
It got to the point where her husband tried to take his own life.
Fortunately, Fine said, she was able to find her husband in time to make
it to the emergency room. But she said she felt helpless because her
insurance company didn’t cover mental health, despite her husband’s
urgent need for care.
“We need to make sure that when you’re looking for these services, you
have coverage for these services,” Fine said. “Because the last thing
that enters your mind is ‘this is the health that could save my life,
but I can’t afford it.’ And just knowing from our experience, that
happens to a lot of people and we can’t let that happen.”
Previously, most mental health-related bills heard in the Senate would
go to the Human Services Committee, but Fine said that committee was too
broad and she wanted to chair one with a more focused approach to mental
health.
She said she hopes the new committee, the first of its kind for the
Senate, will lead the passage of groundbreaking legislation.
[to top of second column]
|
State Sen. Laura Fine, D-Glenview, is pictured on the
floor of the Illinois Senate. (Credit: Senatorfine.com)
John Patterson, spokesman for Harmon, acknowledged Fine’s dedication
to bettering mental health services in the state.
“The Senate believes it deserves a forum for debate and a launching
pad for progress,” Patterson said on behalf of Harmon. “The Senate
President looks forward to the great work Sen. Fine and the
committee will do.”
The House Committee for Addiction and Mental Health has been working
for about four years now with Conroy as its Chair. Conroy saw a need
for such a committee when she witnessed the intersectionality of
mental health and addiction issues her constituents were facing as
the opioid and heroin crisis became prevalent in her district and
the state.
As vice chair of that committee, Fine worked closely with Conroy,
passing legislation related to mental health parity to ensure that
mental health issues would receive the same protections under law as
other health issues when it comes to insurance coverage.
The new law, enacted in the state in 2015, includes important
provisions to extend and clarify coverage, educate consumers about
their rights, require certain minimum treatment benefits and improve
enforcement of the law, according to Get Covered Illinois.
“We started that fight together,” Conroy said. “So now that she’s
able to actually have a committee devoted to that in the
Senate...it’s great news for our state, for our constituents.”
Conroy said their work with mental health parity will continue into
the 102nd General Assembly, and she is looking forward to the
working relationship between the two committees.
“When you’re able to take on big issues that affect mental health
and addiction and you can educate both chambers at the same time, it
helps you to expedite that fight and issues much faster than having
to go from one chamber to the next,” Conroy said.
Fine said she plans to file a number of mental health-related bills
in the new General Assembly, focusing on medical necessity,
addressing the need for psychiatrists in mental health deserts and
increasing telehealth availability for those seeking safe ways to
get help during the pandemic.
“I feel like if we could save one person’s life with this committee,
that’s huge,” Fine said. “My goal with this committee is to take
away that stigma, so everybody who needs help can seek it and do so
in an affordable and accessible way. I’m really excited Illinois is
taking mental health seriously.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |