SAMHSA Announces $19M in Additional Funding

The supplemental funding is to strengthen housing capacity for homeless people

Key Highlights

  • The funding is part of a broader effort to support individuals with serious mental illness experiencing homelessness.
  • Key focus areas include improving cross-system capacity and utilizing Assisted Outpatient Treatment programs.
  • The initiative aligns with the President's Executive Order to reduce crime and disorder on streets nationwide.
  • HHS Secretary Kennedy emphasizes the importance of providing real care and restoring dignity for affected individuals.
  • SAMHSA aims to build data-driven capacity at state and local levels to create safer, healthier communities.

On August 27, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced in a press briefing that the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) is awarding $19 million in new supplemental funding through the Community Mental Health Services Block Grant to address the intersection of homelessness and serious mental illness (SMI).

According to HHS, a key priority of this initiative is enhancing cross-system capacity to support individuals with a history of non-adherence to voluntary outpatient treatment and/or anosognosia—a disorder that prevents them from recognizing their mental illness—by utilizing tools such as Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) programs.

“Americans living on the streets with serious mental illness deserve real care and support,” said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. in a statement. “This funding drives action. We are tackling the root causes of homelessness head-on to restore dignity, build stability, and open the path to recovery.”

“This investment will help build data-driven capacity at the state and local level and is critical to make our communities safer and healthier,” said SAMHSA Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Dr. Art Kleinschmidt in a statement.

According to the news brief, this funding advances the President’s Executive Order regarding Ending Crime and Disorder on America’s Streets.

About the Author

Pietje Kobus-McAllister

Pietje Kobus-McAllister

Pietje Kobus-McAllister has an international background and experience in content management and editing. She studied journalism in the Netherlands and Communications and Creative Nonfiction in the U.S. Pietje joined Healthcare Innovation in January 2024.

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