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Advocacy Works

We’re always looking at what comes next, but we know it’s important to celebrate our accomplishments, too.

 

We are proud of our advocates for helping drive these policy advocacy wins:

2016: Lead architect of and advocacy organization behind Ricky’s Law to create a crisis treatment system for youth and adults with life-threatening addiction, one of the largest single investments in addiction treatment in state history.

2017: Successfully advocated for $26 million in state funding to extend inpatient substance use disorder treatment stays beyond 15 days for clients receiving Medicaid.

2018: Helped pass HB 1524, to allow Criminal Justice Treatment Account funds to be used to fund recovery support services, including housing.

2019: Lead architects of and advocacy org behind two major pieces of legislation, HB 1528 and HB 1907. HB 1528 massively expands the quality and quantity of recovery housing in WA. This is critical for people discharging from treatment and correctional settings, who are frequently released to homelessness. The WRA also secured $1 million of operating budget funds for recovery housing vouchers and $1 million in capital budget funds for recovery housing facility improvements. HB 1907 tears down two major barriers to people in recovery entering the behavioral health workforce as certified peer counselors–(1) it removes employment prohibitions for crimes common among people with a history of addiction and (2) it disallows mandatory enrollment in a punitive and discriminatory addiction monitoring program for people who are already in long-term recovery.

2020: Lead architects and advocacy org behind HB 2642. The WRA took on the insurance lobby and was able to secure unanimous passage of this legislation to allow same day access to detox and inpatient addiction treatment. The bill prohibits both commercial and Medicaid health carriers from requiring burdensome pre-authorization requirements for inpatient care, which delay treatment by weeks or months. The bill recognizes that if we fail to provide people treatment when they’re ready for help, we may never have a second chance and that when we do provide people with access to quality care in their window of willingness, people recover.

2021: The WRA helped pass SB 5195 which makes strides to address the epidemic of opioid overdoses here in Washington by increasing immediate access to naloxone, a life-saving overdose reversal drug, to decrease the risk of long-term health effects of overdose and overdose fatalities. Additionally, the WRA re-imagined a behavioral health system that better responds to crisis and were successful when HB 1477 passed; it was the response system using 988 as a mechanism for mobile crisis responders. It includes funding crisis response adequately through a telecom fee similar to how we fund our current 911 services. A response system that centers the needs of people in crisis is a system that will save lives.

2022: The WRA helped pass a Medicaid reimbursement rate increase that allows community behavioral health agencies to retain and recruit more experienced providers by increasing their pay. Additionally, the WRA contributed to HB 1905, which reduced homelessness for youth discharging from publicly funded care, and HB 1860, which prevented homelessness for people discharging from inpatient behavioral health settings.

2023: The WRA supported several successful pro-recovery policy wins, including the King County Crisis Care Levy, SB 5555, aka the Peer Bill (one of our 2023 support items). We also advocated for increasing funds for recovery support services at RAD 2023, and following this, the legislature approved the largest behavioral health expenditure in the state's history.

2024: The WRA advocated for HB 2319, which would expand access to inpatient substance use disorder (SUD) treatment and treatment medications. This legislation was included in its entirety in SB 6228, a bill that passed and increased the time between insurance utilization reviews for SUD treatment. The WRA also helped pass SB 5804, which expands naloxone (opioid overdose reversal medication) access in all public schools regardless of the student population size, and SB 5660, which creates a work group to find better ways of implementing mental health advance directives. 

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