Santa Cruz County

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY—The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously approved a plan to purchase a mid-county building which, if it passes inspection, will house the County’s first residential mental crisis program for youth. 

The new Children’s Crisis Stabilization Unit and Short Term Residential Therapeutic Program will be located at 5300 Soquel Ave., a 20-year-old building on the campus of the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s headquarters and the only remaining property the county does not yet own at that location.

Health Services Agency Director Monica Morales said that the lack of such a facility locally means that children suffering from mental health crises must be placed in out-of-county facilities, away from their friends and families.

“That’s devastating not only for the youth,” Morales said. “It’s devastating for the families and even for the system we have here.”

Morales said the program’s bilingual staff and mid-county location will allow the county to better serve LatinX youth, which she said are often underrepresented. 

“This is such an amazing opportunity for us to really build the  system of behavioral health for our youth in our community,” Morales said. 

The program will include an eight-bed crisis stabilization unit—potentially offering 2,920 slots per year—as well as a 16-bed residential program inside the 30,000-square-foot building.

The purchase—in addition to inspecting, designing and preparing the building—is estimated to cost just over $15.2 million. That cost will be covered in its entirety by two grants that total more than $24.7 million. The remaining funds will go toward running the program.

County staff expect to close escrow by May, with the program estimated to begin about one year later.

“This is a critical need,” Supervisor Ryan Coonerty said. “We hear about this all the time from families in crisis.” 

Supervisor Zach Friend said that the program will help stop young people suffering from mental health issues from becoming embroiled in the criminal justice system.

“Having this facility will completely change the trajectory for a number of families in our community, unfortunately for a need that continues to grow,” Friend said. 

County Administrative Officer Carlos Palacios said that building a new facility—rather than purchasing an existing building—would double the cost for the County.

“If we were trying to build a building from the ground up, we would still be trying to raise funds,” he said.

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1 COMMENT

  1. Carlos is correct about new building cost. nonetheless, mental health for youth is seriously needed in our county. too many youth are on the streets and have no purpose or goals. many of them have narcotic induced addictions.
    we cannot ignore the problem. county supes, make sure this gets implemented as soon as possible.

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