August 27, 2025
(8/25/25) The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) announced $43 million in supplemental funding for State Opioid Response (SOR) grantees to expand recovery housing for young adults ages 18–24. The one-year funding, aligned with President Trump’s executive order on crime and public safety, aims to address addiction and homelessness by supporting states and territories in developing or expanding recovery housing and related services. Grant recipients will be able to provide treatment, family-based care, care coordination, and a range of recovery supports such as vocational training, childcare, transportation, and employment assistance. SAMHSA officials emphasized the role of recovery housing in breaking cycles of addiction and homelessness, underscoring the initiative’s focus on creating stable pathways to long-term recovery. (Press release here)
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(8/27/25)
The New York State Office of Mental Health has issued a Request for Proposals to develop and operate a Housing First Scattered Site Supportive Housing for Homeless Adults program in the New York Cityregion. Through this RFP, OMH intends to support the development and operation of up to 200 units of supportive housing. Applications must be submitted through the Statewide Financial System. The Scattered Site Supportive Housing for Homeless Adults NYC region RFP can be found on the OMH website: https://omh.ny.gov/omhweb/rfp/2025/housing-first-sssh/index.html.
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Attention NYS Council members in NYC and environs:
NY Law School Policy Briefing Sept. 4, 2025
Responding to Homelessness and Severe Mental Illness in NYC’s Subways and Other Public Spaces
Use this link to register: https://nyls.wufoo.com/forms/policy-briefing-sept-4-2025/
An expert panel will discuss the newly updated state legal standard for involuntary removals of individuals with severe mental illness from subways and other public spaces; the expansion of co-response programs and options for inpatient and community-based care; the impact of a relevant recent Executive Order from the White House; and more.
Please RSVP to reserve your seat at the policy briefing on the morning of Thursday, September 4, 2025 at New York Law School. The event will run 8:45 -10 AM and is hosted by NYLS’ Center for New York City and State Law.
Participants:
– Omar Fattal, M.D., System Chief of Behavioral Health, NYC Health + Hospitals
-Jeremy Feigelson, Senior Advisor, Metropolitan Transportation Authority
-Ozioma Offor, RN, NYC Department of Homeless Services
-Brian Stettin, J.D., Senior Advisor for Severe Mental Illness, Office of the Mayor
-Cassandra White-Hemphill, Deputy Commissioner, NYC Department of Homeless Services
Moderator:
Ben Max, Program Director, Center for New York City and State Law
Thursday, September 4, 2025
8:45 – 10:00 AM
New York Law School, Events Center
185 West Broadway
Refreshments 8:45 AM
Program 9:00 AM
A livestream will also be available.
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| Overcoming Opposition to Substance Use Programs: Leveraging Anti-Discrimination Law |
| Thursday, September 18, 20252:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. EST |
| Local opposition to substance use programs often delays their opening or blocks their operation. As a result, people who need these critical services may not receive them. This training will explain how to overcome local opposition to SUD services by leveraging federal civil rights laws that prohibit discrimination against people with disabilities. |
| By the end of this webinar, participants will be able to: |
| Identify the major federal laws that prohibit discrimination against people with SUD and other disabilities; Understand how local efforts to block harm reduction and other SUD programs can violate federal anti-discrimination laws; Craft educational and advocacy strategies to overcome local opposition to substance use programs; Leverage the Americans with Disabilities and other anti-discrimination laws in their advocacy. |
| Prerequisite: None. Audience: Substance use disorder service providers, harm reductionists, attorneys, other advocates, and policy makers Important Registration Information! To register for this webinar, click here and enter your account log-in information. Please note: This training is based on Legal Action Center’s recent publication, Overcoming Opposition to Substance Use Programs: Leveraging Anti-Discrimination Law. All are invited to read this publication before or after the training and to share it widely! |
| Meet your Presenter |
| Sally Friedman: As Senior Vice President of Legal Advocacy, Sally plays a key role in LAC’s strategic planning, fundraising, and program development and oversees its Legal Department. Under her direction, the department’s team of attorneys and paralegals helps over 1,500 clients annually to access jobs, housing, health care, and other basic rights. The legal department also trains and advises hundreds of health and social programs and publishes educational materials read by tens of thousands of individuals. |
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Break down silos. The National Council for Mental Wellbeing is excited to offer a learning community for implementation of the Comprehensive Health Integration Framework. This virtual learning cohort will help you effectively apply the CHI Framework in your organization to improve outcomes for your clients. Here’s what makes the CHI Framework different:
Mark your calendar! We’re hosting an info session on Sept. 10. Join us to learn how this opportunity can enhance integration at your organization. |
| Learning Community Details Format: Six interactive, 90-minute calls plus two individual coaching sessions Investment:$8000 per team with special discount for National Council members Timeline: Registration opens October 2025 Learning community runs November 2025 to April 2026 |
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Hochul’s $17B Medicaid Surge Leaves Little to Brag About
Bill Hammond, 8/27 – Empire Center for Public Policy
Governor Hochul has made Medicaid her dominant budget priority over the past four years, increasing the state’s annual share of the program by $17 billion – which is more new money than she allocated for every other part of state government, combined.
Yet she barely mentions the program in a list of accomplishments she posted to mark her fourth anniversary in office, suggesting that her heavy spending has bought few results that she cares to boast about.
The list used the word “Medicaid” only once, noting that Hochul signed legislation authorizing the program to cover remote monitoring of pregnant women.
The program plays an uncredited role in two other listed items: a $1 billion “investment in mental health care” over several years, a portion of which is to come from Medicaid; and efforts to bolster access to abortion, which include higher Medicaid reimbursements for providers.
Otherwise, the safety-net health plan that covers one-third of the population goes unmentioned in a list of 47 bullet points. The list touts a cumulative school-aid increase of $8 billion, but says nothing about the more than twice-as-large amount that she plowed into the health-care system.
State-funded spending under Hochul (millions)
| Fiscal year | State-share Medicaid | School aid | All other state funds |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022* | 27,693 | 29,266 | 60,445 |
| 2023 | 31,295 | 31,383 | 61,073 |
| 2024 | 35,860 | 34,484 | 58,129 |
| 2025 | 38,437 | 35,827 | 59,390 |
| 2026 | 44,699 | 37,574 | 63,830 |
| Change under Hochul | 17,006 | 8,308 | 3,385 |
| Percent change | 61% | 28% | 6% |
*Cuomo’s last budgetTable: Empire CenterSource: NYS Budget DivisionGet the dataCreated with Datawrapper
This near-silence is consistent with her State of the State speech in January, in which she had little to say about Medicaid or health care generally.
Hochul has occasionally spoken out about problems that need fixing – such as the dismal quality ratings of the state’s hospitals, or the rapidly rising cost of home health care. Yet her actions have mostly consisted of adding billions to the Medicaid budget (which is already the highest per capita in the country) and pushing to grow the health-care workforce (which is already the largest per capita in the country).
Both of these priorities happen to align with those of the health-care industry and its major labor union, 1199 SEIU, which are consistently among Albany’s biggest-spending special interests – and campaign donors.
The result has been a 61 percent increase in state-share Medicaid spending in four years, compared to a 57 percent increase over 10 years during the Cuomo administration.
Meanwhile, festering health-care problems are going unaddressed, such persistently low quality ratings (and high emergency-room wait times) in New York’s hospital system, and the grim conditions in many nursing homes, as exposed in lawsuits by Attorney General Letitia James.
In one major attempt at reform, Hochul abruptly moved to consolidate Medicaid’s Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program, or CDPAP, under a single statewide contractor, replacing hundreds of smaller “fiscal intermediaries.”
Secretively negotiated and hastily implemented, the overhaul has proven to be disruptive for recipients and caregivers alike, promises modest savings and does not address the eligibility rules that have allowed the program to grow so explosively.
One of the few stakeholders with reason to cheer was 1199, because the consolidation has paved the way for the union to organize CDPAP workers and boost its dues-paying membership by hundreds of thousands.
In 2023, Hochul established a Commission on the Future of Health Care and filled it with well-credentialed appointees, many of which come from outside the Albany bubble.
Although its report is eight months overdue, Chairwoman Sherry Glied, dean of the NYU Wagner School of Public Service, said in a recent interview that improving the poor quality of New York’s hospitals – which she called “not acceptable” – would be one of the panel’s top priorities.
In creating that commission, Hochul tacitly acknowledged that she needed a stronger agenda on health care – or at least one that goes beyond spending more on Medicaid.
Improving hospital quality would be a good place for her to start.
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Here’s an update on the newest COVID-19 vaccine, and who is eligible to get it, from the NY Times today:
