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2020 Campaign for a Trauma-Informed Virginia’s Session Successes!

  • Trauma

By Chlo'e Edwards

We would like to thank the advocates who joined us to advocate on behalf of our 2020 Campaign for a Trauma-Informed Virginia’s Unified Policy Agenda. In recognition, we are celebrating our Session successes! The goal of our 2020 Unified Policy Agenda is to reduce the impact of trauma and adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). In order to do so, communities must be prepared to identify ACEs and respond appropriately. There are two critical ways to build community resilience. Through our 2020 Unified Policy Agenda, we have fostered resilience across systems to prevent trauma, mitigate the impact of trauma, and resist retraumatization. Thank you for contributing to a successful 2020 General Assembly Session!

View the Campaign for a Trauma-Informed VA Advocacy Day RECAP

Community-Level Prevention

Provide funding to support community-based trauma networks. The Family and Children’s Trust of Virginia provides financial and technical support to community-based trauma networks across the state. Currently, FACT only has enough funding to support six of the more than 20 community networks. Additional state resources are needed to provide more operational support to local networks, as well as evaluation and technical assistance.

Results: If the 5 communities decide to allow casinos through a voter referendum, FACT is included as a dedicated recipient of additional revenue in future years. Estimate that FACT could receive an additional $300,000 per year in 4 to 5 years.

Continue statewide rollout of ACEs Interface training. The nationally recognized ACEs Interface model has been supported by the state as a training program to help child-serving professionals identify trauma in children and families they serve. Additional funds are needed to scale up the number of communities and providers who can participate in the training and to provide oversight and administration of the training protocol.

ResultsAn additional $143,260 per year and 1.5 positions to continue ACEs Interface training and oversight.The final budget includes approximately $600,000 to continue the Linking Systems of Care project.

Family-Based Prevention

Improve infant and maternal health through policies that promote healthy births and reduce racial disparities in maternal and infant health. The US has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world. Research shows that Black mothers are two to three times more likely to die during pregnancy or in their first year of motherhood because they lack access to stable health care and often face institutional biases which create barriers to receiving appropriate care. Policies targeted to low-income mothers and women of color will help to reduce these disparities, such as Medicaid reimbursement for doulas and midwives.

Result: An additional $3 million in state funds is included to extend FAMIS MOMs eligibility to 12 months. Additionally, the Department of Medicaid Services is tasked with forming a workgroup to make recommendations regarding the state regulation of doulas and establishing a community doula benefit for pregnant women covered by Medicaid by Dec. 1, 2020.

Expand access to home visiting services for pregnant women and families with young children.  Less than 10% of targeted families currently receive prenatal and early childhood home visiting services to improve health connections and help parents in their role as their child’s first teacher. Creating a Medicaid reimbursable service for home visiting will expand access to home visiting and bring down additional federal funds.

Result: The legislature approved an additional $12 million per year in FY21 and the authority to begin planning for Medicaid reimbursement for home visiting for pregnant women and families with young children.

Promote economic stability for families that have experienced economic hardship and trauma. Long-term economic hardship is an adverse childhood experience and creates toxic stress on a young brain. The child poverty rate in Virginia has remained unchanged since the 2008 recession, and financial support for families, such as monthly cash assistance provided by TANF, have not kept up with inflation. To improve financial security for families, Virginia should take advantage of its surplus of federal TANF funding to increase TANF payment rates and eligibility levels and to test proven anti-poverty initiatives.

Result: Increases cash assistance and eligibility by 15% over FY20 amount. This would equate to approximately an additional $55 per month for a 2-person household. Even with this eligibility increase, only working families in deep poverty, below 50% of the federal poverty level, would be eligible for TANF.  

Early Identification and Intervention

Address preschool suspension and expulsion by creating an ECMH consultation model. Recent data indicate that suspension and expulsion practices occur regularly in early childhood settings and at a much higher rate than in K-12 education. Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation (ECMHC) has demonstrated impacts for improving children’s social skills, reducing teacher stress and turnover, improving child-adult relationships and preventing preschool suspensions. Adopting a statewide ECMHC model for all children 0-5 will give early educators, parents and children resources to address challenging behaviors. A recent study by the National Center for Children and Poverty found that 63% of Virginia preschool teachers identified access to ECMHC as a top priority. To implement ECMHC statewide, we must identify an agency to provide oversight and what resources are needed to fund it.

Result: HJ51 passed both the House and Senate. The Department of Education will form a workgroup to address questions and make a recommendation for implementation.

Support the integration of mental health services in primary care by building capacity for the Virginia Mental Health Access Program (VMAP). VMAP is a new integrated care pediatric program that increases access for children and adolescents to behavioral health services through enhanced pediatric training, psychiatric consultations, tele-health, and care navigation. Partially funded in 2019, additional funds are needed to build capacity and expand access to all regions of the state.

Result: An additional $4.2 million is included in the budget each year to bring VMAP to scale statewide.

School-Based Interventions

Provide supports in schools to respond to trauma. Help schools to implement trauma-informed practices by increasing the support personnel resources in schools. Build on efforts to reduce the counselor to student ratio and fund schools at the necessary level to provide more staff positions to provide counseling, mental health support, and to recognize and address trauma in students. In addition, take steps towards increasing access to school-based health centers.

Result: A total of $47 million, $21.2 million in FY21 and $24.9 million in FY22, to provide funding for one counselor for every 325 students in kindergarten through 12th grade. This would fund approximately 615 additional school counselors by FY22.

Scale-up Evidence-Based Practices to Achieve Better Outcomes for Children and Families

Enable providers to implement more trauma-informed and evidence-based practices by funding efforts to train providers in new models. To support implementation of the Family First Prevention Services Act we must continue to invest in the infrastructure to scale up evidence-based services.

Results: A total of $46 million over two years that will help to fund more evidence-based mental health and support services for familiesOne training coordinator position at DBHDS; and additional $16.8 million per year through the Department of Social Services to fund prevention services. As well as $7 million in FY21 and $24 million in FY22 for enhanced behavioral health services funded by Medicaid.

Workforce Recruitment and Retention

Increase the minimum salary for local DSS Family Services Series positions and provide a salary adjustment for current Family Services employees. The 2018 JLARC report highlighted that stability of the foster care workforce as one of the primary challenges. Turnover rates for an entry-level Family Services Worker Specialist is 42%, with retention efforts being an even greater issue is small, rural the 2019 Federal Poverty Level for a family of four. The impact of the high-turnover of caseworkers on children is found in our low rate of permanency of children and the number of placements children experience.

Results: An additional $5.6 million in general funds per year to address salary compression issues and raise base salaries of local DSS case workers.

Improve access to mental health services by increasing Medicaid reimbursement for mental health providers. In Virginia, there is a critical shortage of licensed mental health professionals available to treat children and adolescents in need. This request is to increase rates for mental health providers to the equivalent of 110 percent of 2019 Medicare rates for these services. Increasing Medicaid reimbursement rates for mental health providers is necessary to promote access to specialized behavioral health services.

Results: The budget includes $6.6 million each year to increase Medicaid rates for outpatient mental health services. 

Create a student loan repayment program specifically for behavioral health providers. The Community Services Boards (CSBs) continue to struggle with a workforce shortage and high staff turnover. A student loan repayment program specific to behavioral health safety net providers will make the CSBs a more desirable choice for employment.

Results: An additional $1.6 million per year is included to reimburse student loans for mental health providers working with the public mental health system.

You can view our 2020 Campaign for a Trauma-Informed Virginia Advocacy Day RECAP blog here. 

Contact Policy Director, Emily Griffey at Emily at vakids dot org with any questions related to our 2020 Unified Policy Agenda Session Successes. 


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