. The Thrive program budgeted millions to create diversion centers, a place other than jail for officers to bring those experiencing a mental health crisis. Barzilay noted that the city balked at the unions request that participants in the program get a 12% bump in pay, offering 6% instead. Its revolutionary, Mr. de Blasio told CNNs Symone Sanders during a recent forum at Harvard University. Another Council member offered a comparison of what the programs budget might look like if it was used to address other NYC needs: On Monday, Island Councilman Joe Borelli (R-South Shore) joined the ranks of public officials demanding an accounting of how Thrives funding is spent. Few of those who dial the number agree to a follow-up call, making it hard to gauge its effectiveness. The NYPDs Mental Illness Response Breakdown, One Brooklyn Health Cyberattack Breached Patient Data, Prompts Class Action Suit, Mount Sinai Doctors Protest Lower Pay for West Side and Queens Hospitals, Bitter Pill: MTA Loses Suit to Recoup Millions Lost in Rx Fraud. But even taking the pandemic into consideration, the number of such calls is still well above the 127,283 logged in 2014 when de Blasio first proposed diversion centers. One, fromCity Hall, showed $594million in spending, but a second, from the Independent Budget Office, showed $816milion. Health Department employees now conduct the eight-hour classes daily at churches, schools and community centers. With a $250 million budget, I should already be sick of ThriveNYC, he said. At the same time, some initiatives failed to get started, while others placed unrealistic demands on already strained mental health services. Those moments often involve the police, and have led to confrontations where officers have been injured, and the person the officers came to help getting physically hurt or killed. America is in serious trouble, folks. Chirlane McCray, wife of New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, champions the ThriveNYC mental health program, but organizers cannot explain where its $850million budget has gone. Meanwhile, the same number either closed or were merged with other schools while under the initiative. But over the course of two years between 2016 and 2018, the hospital screened a little over 28,000 patients and just 570 were offered help, a fraction of the 12,000 to 15,000 who were estimated to need care.
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