SAVE THE DATE!
Please join us
Thursday, May 3, from 5 - 8 PM
at Fondren after 5 in honor of Children's Mental Health Awareness Month.
We invite our fellow family-run organizations and non-profit and government partners to join us
in sharing information and
fun activities for children. Contact us
at 601-355-0915 or info@faams.org
for more information.
We thank Fondren After 5 for their support of and partnership in
Children's Mental Health
Awareness Month.
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Department of Justice Update
The Department of Justice is currently involved in a lawsuit against the State seeking to ensure that people with mental illness get services
in the most integrated setting appropriate to their needs.
A representative of the Department of Justice and an expert who has run a
mental health system and is retained by DOJ visited the state in February to learn about how people receiving services and their families experience our mental
health system.
Individuals who would like to speak with
the Department of Justice attorneys can do so by calling 1-844-664-0224 or emailing
Community.Mississippi@usdoj.gov
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FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP MEETINGS
Do you have a young child birth to five and feel concerned about how they are doing?
Visit our support group to get more information and talk to other families.
Contact us by calling in or texting your name and email address to:
Sheldon Smith
Lead Family Contact
601-919-6160
or by emailing your name and phone number to:
Sheldon Smith
Lead Family Contact
at ssmith@faams.org
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Are you the parent of a young child in JPS and would like them to have more support?
Ch
eck this out
!
Tools for Life
We are delighted to be launching a new partnership with Jackson Public Schools and its Tools for Life initiative.
Tools for Life is a social emotional learning program that provides practical strategies and tools that better enable children from age three to grade 8 to cope with their emotions. You can learn more about Tools for Life
here.
Our work will focus on partnering with families of younger children ages 3 to 8, both to help them learn more about Tools for Life and also support them if they
feel their children would benefit from additional help with social/emotional learning.
If you are a JPS parent and would like to learn more about this new partnership, please contact Tara Manning at 601-355-0915 or tmanning@faams.org.
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FAMILIES PARTNERING IN
THEIR CHILDREN'S CARE
We had a productive and exciting town hall meeting and networking day in Tupelo on February 23. Thank you to
all the families who came out and shared their thoughts about how to make health care and behavioral health services more responsive to the needs of our children.
We appreciate the
Arc of Northeast Mississippi, under the leadership of Cheryl Falzone, for hosting the event. As always, our own Henry Moore was an engaging and dynamic facilitator.
We also thank St. Andrew's Episcopal School for including us in its Wellness Fair on February 24, but even more for its commitment to recognizing behavioral health as part of health by having several mental health partners in attendance, including NAMI MS and Hinds Behavioral Health Services. We enjoyed visiting with Saint Andrew's families, faculty and students. It was a special treat to have Dr. George Penick, Head of School, stop by to visit.
If you would like Families as Allies to facilitate a town hall or be part of a community event in your area, contact Henry Moore at 601-355-0915 or hmoore@faams.org.
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GREAT DAYS AT THE CAPITOL
Mental Health and Wellness Day
February 15
Disability Awareness Day February 21
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CHILDREN'S CABINET UPDATE
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Last month, we told you about
House Bill (HB) 985, which establishes a Children's Cabinet made up of the heads of the state agencies that serve children as well as other appointments made by the governor, the lieutenant governor and the speaker of the house.
H.B. 985 died on the House floor, but could be resurrected.
The creation of a Children's Cabinet that includes a wide range of groups that care about children, families, and family run organizations and is
family driven
, could make a critical difference in the lives of our children.
However, we, along with other family organizations and grassroots groups, had several concerns with how
HB 985 proposed to develop a Children's Cabinet. Our biggest concern was that it did not define how the recommendations of the Children's Cabinet would be implemented and
how the cabinet would
get information from, hear the concerns of, and coordinate with families.
Furthermore, as described in the bill, at least four councils, some of which are federally mandated and all of which already had family representation, were to be eliminated, and their duties and powers transferred to the new cabinet,
which had no family representation. This could have put Mississippi at risk of losing federal funds and possibly facing even more lawsuits than it already does.
Over the upcoming weekend, legislators will meet in conference committees to resolve pending legislation.
That means that a committee of just three Senators and three Representatives could insert the language from
HB 985 into another bill about something else.
The House and Senate would then have an up or down vote on the bill without all of the Senators and Representatives realizing that, in addition to voting on the original subject of the bill, they are also voting for the
Children's Cabinet model that they previously voted against.
We urge policy makers and those working closely with them to not act in haste or secret but instead to work together with families and others who care about children over the next year to create a Cabinet that is responsive to our children, inclusive and compliant with federal mandates.
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FAMILIES AS ALLIES STANDS WITH PARKLAND STUDENTS
Our hearts broke last month as the news of the Parkland shooting unfolded. There are no words in the face of that kind of trauma and the unfathomable loss for families whose loved ones were killed. We are even
more sobered by the fact that it was just a few short years ago we wrote similar words after the shooting at
Sandy Hook.
While there are no words to address the grief and loss of
the students and their families, we encourage all of us to look at some ways we can support all students and make school safer for them.
- Listen to what the Parkland students and other young people, especially our own children, have
to say. They know what their world is like - we need to learn from them. Approach such conversations with the goal of increased understanding rather than absolute agreement.
- Learn about public health approaches to gun violence; this would also help decrease deaths by suicide.
- Rather than focus on which children do and do not have mental illnesses, support whole school behavior approaches that foster good mental health in all children from a young age. Here's one example of a school that has done so.
- Consider the use of individual gun violence
restraining orders when people are at risk for hurting themselves or others.
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ENDREW F: REAL HELP AND HOPE FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION
School issues, often related to special education, are by far the most common reason families contact us. That pattern is consistent with calls to family-run organizations across the country.
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), the federal law about Special Education,
can feel overwhelming to understand. Keep in mind that you don't have to know everything about IDEA to use it for your child's benefit.
In 2017, the United States Supreme Court ruled in its
landmark Endrew F. decision
that Individual Education Plans (IEPs) should be appropriately ambitious and allow children to make meaningful progress in school.
The online site
Understood.org recently
published an
advocacy toolkit b
ased
on the Endrew F. decision with step by step instructions on how
to use language from that decision to make your child's Individual Education Plan (IEP) as effective as possible.
Understood.org also provides a helpful overview of the Endrew F. case
here. As always, if we can support you in advocating for what you want for your child, please reach out to us.
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