Let Your Voice Be Heard

A "NO" vote on Prop 1E means a vote of confidence towards helping those who need it the most.

http://www.noprop1e.com/

No on Prop 1E

Don’t Cut Mental Health Care!



The Legislature’s budget deal requires voters
to consider several different ballot measures
at the May 19 special election. One that
deserves a “no” vote is Proposition 1E.
Proposition 1E changes Proposition 63, a
voter initiative passed in November 2004.
Prop. 63 added a 1% tax surcharge to annual
income over $1 million, and required all
proceeds to go to new and expanded mental
health programs for children and adults.
Prop. 63 is working. Over 200,000 people are
now enrolled in mental health services who
were not receiving treatment before 2004.
But Prop. 1E cuts a half-billion dollars from
Prop. 63 programs. These cuts will cause
immediate and lasting damage.
Prop. 1E will limit treatments and services
for people living with mental illness. Future
services are at even greater risk.
Vote NO on Prop. 1E Because:
• IT’S UNNECESSARY. Legislators have already raised taxes and cut services. The money Prop. 1E takes from Prop. 63 amounts to less than 00.25% of the state budget.
• IT CUTS MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT. Prop. 63 programs now help 200,000
people, including 50,000 children, who had no mental health services before it passed.
But Prop. 1E foolishly cuts these programs by hundreds of millions of dollars.
• IT COSTS US MORE. The costs of untreated mental illness are higher across the board.
People who never get care, or who lose their care, will drop out of school, lose their
jobs and homes, and cost us more in hospitalizations, homelessness and criminal justice.
• THE FIRST CUT IS A BAD PRECEDENT. Prop. 1E began as a budget proposal from
some state legislators to permanently redirect all Prop. 63 funds away from voterapproved
mental health programs. The proposal was watered down to a 2-year raid –
this time. If voters approve it, legislators will surely come back for more next time.
• IT JEOPARDIZES FEDERAL FUNDS. Prop. 1E could threaten millions of dollars in
federal assistance that now helps pay for mental health services.
• 1E HAS NO ACCOUNTABILITY FOR SPENDING. Unlike Prop. 63, which has strict
audits and accountability requirements, Prop. 1E puts hundreds of millions of dollars
into the General Fund, where the Legislature can spend it without restrictions.
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
NO ON PROP. 1E
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Don’t Cut Mental Health Care!
No on Prop. 1E, sponsored by Mental Health Organizations • FPPC ID# 1316221
1127 11th St., #925 • Sacramento, CA 95814 • (916) 557-1166 • fax: (916) 447-2350 • www.NoProp1E.com
Contribution Form
We need your help to win on May 19! Please be as generous as possible!
[ ] YES! I/we want to help defeat Prop. 1E, which cuts almost $500 million from Mental
Health Services Act programs.
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No on Prop. 1E
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Participating in the Mental Health Services Act (MHSA)

NAMI California is establishing an “Expert Pool” to help us make sure that our NAMI voice is expressed and reflected in MHSA policies and programs as they are developed. Family Members & Consumers Wanted!
http://www.namicalifornia.org/document-detail.aspx?page=homepage&tabb=hometabb&part=mhsaupdates&lang=ENG&idno=1335

Yes on 63

http://digital.library.ucla.edu/websites/2004_996_009/index.htm%20