MENTAL HEALTH & HOMELESS ADVOCACY

Policy Mission

Mental health is public health. We will treat homelessness as a housing and healthcare challenge, not a criminal one, and invest in the behavioral health infrastructure Ward 5 communities need and deserve.

Mental Health Policy Priorities

  • Advocate for expanded DBH (Dept. of Behavioral Health) outreach and crisis services in Ward 5
  • Support the establishment of a Ward 5 Community Mental Health Incubator offering walk-in counseling, peer support, and crisis stabilization
  • Push for trauma-informed mental health training for Ward 5 MPD officers, school staff, and community workers
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  • Support increased school-based mental health counselor ratios in all Ward 5 DC Public Schools
  • Fund after-school therapeutic programming in collaboration with DYRS for students and parents
  • Create partnerships with HBCU and university psychology programs for training clinics serving Ward 5 youth
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  • Support expansion of DC’s Mental Health Crisis Response (non-police) alternative response programs in Ward 5
  • Advocate for mobile crisis units deployable to Ward 5’s highest-need corridors, including Trinidad and Brentwood
  • Create a Crisis Response Incubator in Ward 5, providing services for residents during inclement events
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Homeless Advocacy Priorities

  • Advocate for the siting of new permanent supportive housing (PSH) units in Ward 5 in line with the DC Interagency Council on Homelessness (ICH) plan
  • Support evidence-based Housing First models that do not require treatment participation as a precondition for housing
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  • Partner with Pathways to Housing DC, SOME (So Others Might Eat), and other Ward 5-active providers
  • Support year-round low-barrier shelter access and oppose shelter closure policies during non-hypothermia seasons
  • Advocate for inspections of sites that house displaced residents with vouchers from District Funds
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  • Create a Ward 5 Employment Pipeline for individuals exiting homelessness linked to manufacturing, hospitality, and trades sectors
  • Advocate for fair chance hiring ordinances to support formerly incarcerated Ward 5 residents
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Service Need
Current Gap
Proposed Solution

Walk-in mental health counseling

No dedicated Ward 5 facility

Ward 5 Community Mental Health Hub

Youth school-based counselors

Understaffing in DCPS Ward 5 schools

Mandate increase in counselor-student ratio

Non-police crisis response

Limited coverage in Ward 5

Mobile crisis unit deployment expansion

Permanent supportive housing units

Waitlist backlog

New PSH units sited in Ward 5

Reentry employment pathways

Fragmented service delivery

Integrated employment pipeline program for skilled trades

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