$1.3M federal grant allows treatment for jailed Clark County women

Wendy Doolittle, CEO of McKinley Hall, and Greta Mayer, CEO of the Mental Health Recovery Board of Clark, Greene & Madison Counties, are shown in Mayer's Springfield office Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2023. Their agencies and others have partnered with the city of Springfield on a $1.3 million federal grant to treat drug-addicted women in the Clark County Jail. BILL LACKEY/STAFF

Credit: Bill Lackey

Credit: Bill Lackey

Wendy Doolittle, CEO of McKinley Hall, and Greta Mayer, CEO of the Mental Health Recovery Board of Clark, Greene & Madison Counties, are shown in Mayer's Springfield office Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2023. Their agencies and others have partnered with the city of Springfield on a $1.3 million federal grant to treat drug-addicted women in the Clark County Jail. BILL LACKEY/STAFF

A new federally funded grant of $1.3 million over three years will enable women incarcerated in the Clark County Jail to receive treatment for addiction issues while they are still imprisoned.

On Tuesday night before their meeting, Springfield city commissioners learned about a new program being funded by the U.S. Department of Justice. Partnering on the grant application were the city of Springfield, Clark County, the Mental Health Recovery Board of Clark, Greene & Madison Counties and McKinley Hall.

Mental Health Recovery Board of Clark, Greene & Madison Counties CEO Greta Mayer praised the partnership of public and private entities in jointly pursuing the three-year grant to improve services, support and outcomes for women struggling with addiction.

“This will enable us to implement an evidence-based programs to help residents of the jail while incarcerated to get treatment and better care and greater access to recovery services and housing support after release from jail,” she said.

McKinley Hall CEO Wendy Doolittle told commissioners the new program will mirror an already existing program offered for incarcerated men.

“We’ve been able to provide services to men in the Clark County Jail and transition them to outpatient services, but we haven’t had the opportunity to match that for women,” Doolittle said. “This grant allows us to go to the jail and provide intensive services and medication to help them transition out into recovery housing and intensive treatment and case management.”

Under the program, participants receive assessments and begin treatment services while still incarcerated. They work with a case manager who helps with their transition back into the community upon release. Assistance with housing is part of the plan of care. Once released, they are offered a full continuum of treatment options.

Doolittle said the program helps prep people before they leave the jail to focus on improving their life circumstances and learning recovery skills.

Doolittle also indicated that Pinnacle, the only methadone certified recovery housing facility locally, has committed to providing housing for five women upon release from jail, further extending treatment during recovery.

Efforts to stem drug addiction locally are increasingly turning toward a broad continuum of services available to address the issue.

Doolittle said this new program is a complement to the Drug Court interventions Clark County’s family and youth courts implemented in 2021, offering offenders with substance-abuse related charges treatment services, screening, and supervision.

McKinley Hall offers outpatient and a men’s inpatient program as well as recovery house support. Medication-assisted treatment for those struggling addiction have been offered by McKinley Hall since 2005.

McKinley Hall outreach programs include a syringe exchange program and training and free kit distribution for naloxone for emergency use in an overdose. The organization also has an opioid response team providing immediate follow-up and treatment services following an overdose.

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