Includes increased investments to support an equitable recovery and safeguard the health of our residents
BOSTON (5/28/2021) – Senator Cindy F. Friedman (D-Arlington) joined her colleagues in the Massachusetts State Senate in unanimously passing a $47.7 billion budget for Fiscal Year 2022 (FY22), after adding $63.7 million in targeted investments over the course of three days of robust deliberations. Approved with unanimous bipartisan support, the budget maintains fiscal responsibility and recommends targeted investments to address emerging needs, safeguard the health and wellness of the most vulnerable populations and ensure residents will benefit equitably as the state recovers from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Reflecting on the ongoing lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Fiscal Year 2022 Senate Budget funds important public health initiatives, begins to address the critical lack of children and adolescent mental health services, continues our substantial investment in public schools, and provides support for our cities and towns, including their local boards of health,” said Senator Friedman, Vice Chair of the Senate Committee on Ways and Means. “After a robust debate, we passed a Senate budget that we should be proud of – a budget that invests in our state’s future and benefits residents across the Commonwealth, especially the most vulnerable amongst us. This is in large part due to the leadership of Senate President Spilka and the diligent work of Senate Ways and Means Chair Rodrigues in thoughtfully preparing this comprehensive budget.”
Senator Friedman was especially pleased to see several local and statewide initiatives she advocated for throughout the budget cycle included in the final Senate budget, including:
- $10 million for the Program of Assertive Community Treatment (PACT) Program for Children to provide grants to support the establishment of PACT programs for individuals under the age of 22 who have serious mental health conditions that are resistant to standard forms of treatment;
- $4 million for the continuation of an Emerging Adult Reentry grant program to reduce recidivism among individuals between 18 and 25 years of age who are returning to the community from state prisons and county correctional facilities;
- $3 million for a loan repayment program for child and adolescent psychiatrists for the purpose of enhancing recruitment and retention of child and adolescent psychiatrists at community mental health centers and community health centers throughout the Commonwealth;
- $1 million for the Middlesex County Restoration Center Commission to operationalize the restoration center to provide inpatient and outpatient behavioral health services to individuals in mental health or substance use disorder crisis and divert individuals with behavioral health conditions from arrest or unnecessary hospitalization;
- $1.5 million for the Mental Health Advocacy Program for Kids (MHAP for Kids) to provide evidence-, community-, and school-based interventions to improve the mental health of vulnerable youth and divert them from juvenile detention, inpatient, and emergency psychiatric hospitalizations; and
- $350,000 for the Bridge for Resilient Youth in Transition (BRYT) Programs to expand supports to address the needs of middle and high school students returning to school following extended physical health- or mental health-related absences;
- $175,000 for the Arlington Youth Counseling Center (AYCC) to provide much-needed services to support the social and emotional wellbeing of all Arlington’s youth and families;
- $100,000 to help English At Large in Woburn continue its work with English language tutoring and small group instruction for adult learners in Middlesex County;
- $100,000 for Food Link, Inc.