A Victory for People with Psychiatric Labels 
in our state!
January 25th, 2007 by Alison Hymes
http://hymes.wordpress.com/
Senate Bill 808, which would have established a program of outpatient 
commitment throughout Virginia with so few protections that almost anyone who 
ever had a psychiatric diagnosis and disagreed with their psychiatrist’s 
treatment plan could be forced to take drugs in their own home, was passed by 
indefinitely in the Courts of Justice Committee late yesterday. This bill had 
less protections of people’s rights than any existing outpatient commitment bill 
in the country and did not even require that the person subject to forced 
psychiatric drugging be found to be a danger to self or others nor that they be 
found to lack capacity to make their own treatment decisions, a right that folks 
in state hospitals retain. Without any extra money into the public mental health 
systerm, this bill would not only have deprived us of our basic civil rights, 
subjected many to the dangerous side effects of psychotropic drugs without their 
informed consent and made people with psychiatric labels into third class 
citizens, it would have turned our public mental health system into a force 
based system as people ordered into treatment would go to the head of long 
waiting lists for treatment ahead of all those who are voluntarily seeking 
treatment and waiting for months all over our state. If only 2 people per 
Community Services Board in the state were put into PACT through this bill, it 
would cost an extra 2 million dollars a year minimum from a mental health system 
that has endured cuts not just to the muscle but to the bone and has no where 
left to cut services for voluntary clients. We are grateful to the members of 
the Courts of Justice who saw these issues clearly and prevented a very harmful 
bill from going forward.