Politics & Government
Trump Budget Would Mean Jail for Many Requiring Mental Health Care
By cutting hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding for mental health care and substance abuse treatment, President Trump’s budget would send more people to jail who don’t belong there.
President Donald Trump is trying to keep his promise to end the “American carnage” of crime and drugs. His proposed budget would allocate hundreds of millions of dollars to swelling the ranks of federal prosecutors, who Attorney General Jeff Sessions ordered last month to pursue the most severe penalties possible.
But that’s not where the “law and order” ends.
By cutting hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding for mental health care and substance abuse treatment, the budget would also send more people to jail who don’t belong there.
Eleven million people pass through America’s jails each year, many of them suffering from mental illness or addiction. Decades of cuts in social services and treatment have turned the criminal justice system into a de facto mental health system. Chicago’s Cook County Jail, where one-third of prisoners suffer from illnesses like bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, has been called “the country’s largest mental hospital.”
Combined with Trumpcare’s proposed cuts to Medicaid—the nation’s largest funder of mental health and substance abuse treatment—Trump’s budget would mean even more of society’s most vulnerable would end up behind bars.
Overcrowding, understaffing and budget cuts across the criminal justice system have resulted in dangerous conditions for prisoners and workers. Between 25 and 40 percentof all mentally ill Americans will be jailed or incarcerated at some point in their lives. An estimated 65 percent of the jail population has substance abuse disorders. Correctional officers report serious psychological distress at a rate about twice that of the general public.
We simply must stop sending so many people to jail and prison. Governments at all levels must dramatically reduce sentences and invest in alternatives to incarceration, like pre-trial diversion programs—as long as they aren’t for-profit. We should stop asking correctional officers, nurses and doctors to serve as America’s front line on mental health and substance abuse.
A well-funded, effective and humane mental health system, would go a long way towards reducing prison and jail populations, while treating mental illness with compassion and support.
Society’s most vulnerable deserve treatment and care, not less public investment – and certainly not a jail cell.
This feature is crossposted from the Huffington Post.
-
Column - State of InequalityMay 21, 2026In California Governor’s Race, Xavier Becerra Walks Away From Single-Payer
-
Latest NewsApril 28, 2026A May Day Push to ‘Shut It Down’ Takes Shape Across the Country
-
Deadly Dust: The Silicosis EpidemicMay 6, 2026California Could Be the First State to Ban Quartz Countertops
-
The SlickApril 29, 2026With Promises of Money, Controversial Gas Pipeline on Navajo Nation Passes First Hurdle
-
Latest NewsApril 27, 2026As the U.S. Spends Billions Fighting Iran, War-Driven Inflation Hits Working Families Hard
-
Latest NewsMay 1, 2026In One of L.A.’s Food Deserts, ‘Hands That Harmed Are Now Hands That Heal’
-
Column - State of InequalityApril 30, 2026Don’t Call It Upward Mobility If People Still Can’t Afford to Live
-
Latest NewsMay 5, 2026Fire Recovery Could Wipe Out Altadena’s Affordable Rentals

