In 2019 Engrossed Substitute House Bill 1355 established the Community and Technical Colleges Counselors Task Force (Task Force). The Task Force was required to address how community and technical colleges (CTCs) will meet the mental health needs of students and to examine three issues: minimum standards required for counselors, staffing ratios, and best practices. The Task Force's subcommittee on best practices recommended a list of eight strategies to improve student access to mental health services. Those strategies are:
The State Board for Community and Technical Colleges (SBCTC) must establish a pilot program to increase student access to mental health counseling and services. The SBCTC must provide grants to eight CTCs, half located outside the Puget Sound area, to implement one or more strategies to increase access to mental health counseling and services. The CTCs wishing to participate in the pilot program must apply. Applicants must: (1) show a commitment to further developing partnerships by engaging with external community providers; and (2) identify opportunities to expand on-campus mental health counseling and services. Applicants must also demonstrate plans to implement one or more of the eight strategies identified by the Task Force.
Applicants will be selected by the SBCTC, in consultation with a selection committee consisting of one CTC president, one CTC vice president for student services or student instruction, two CTC faculty counselors, and one CTC student. In addition, the selection committee may consult with representatives of the Department of Health and Forefront Suicide Prevention at the University of Washington.
Those colleges selected to participate in the pilot program that use grant funding to hire additional mental health counselors must hire counselors with graduate-level training.
Those CTCs selected to participate in the pilot program must submit a joint report to the Legislature by November 1, 2023, that includes the following:
The pilot program expires July 1, 2025.
The substitute bill adds a definition for the Puget Sound area, defined as Snohomish, King, Pierce, and Thurston counties. In addition, the colleges that use the grant funding from the pilot program to hire new counselors must hire counselors with graduate-level training. Applicants who wish to participate in the pilot program are required to show a commitment to further developing partnerships with external community providers and must identify opportunities to expand on-campus mental health counseling and services.
(In support) There is a mental health crisis and an increase in students reaching out for help. This is not new to the pandemic, and the pandemic did not create the crisis. However, factors like social isolation, loss, grief, and financial issues raises the demand for mental health services. Stress levels are high. Mental health counselors can help students by putting a name to their symptoms and feelings. This helps give students a sense of control. Students need more access to counselors and more multiculturally competent counselors.
The SBCTC is happy to administer the pilot program. The creation of a pilot program to implement the best strategies of the Task Force is aligned with the SBCTC's goals. The pilot program will help show the way for all of the community and technical colleges.
There are reservations regarding the selection criteria. Requiring applicants to have external partnerships risks giving additional resources to the most resourced schools rather than those in most need. There are some colleges with no counselors. Often community providers are overburdened and refer students back to the college. A recommendation is to have the pilot program fund the colleges with the lowest counseling ratios. This would allow colleges to increase staffing and to expand partnerships. In addition, completely outsourcing mental health services to community partners could be problematic. Students deserve to have counselors embedded in the college community who understand student issues. Overall, increased student access is supported and the pilot program is a step in the right direction. Impact most historically marginalized students.
(Opposed) None.