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June 1, 2018 the Honorable Ed Hernandez Chair, Senate Health

June 1, 2018 the Honorable Ed Hernandez Chair, Senate Health

June 1, 2018

The Honorable Ed Hernandez Chair, Senate Health Committee State Capitol, Room 2080 Sacramento, CA 95814

RE: Assembly Bill 2018 (Maienschein) – SUPPORT As Amended April 5, 2018

Dear Senator Hernandez:

On behalf of the Rural County Representatives of (RCRC), I am pleased to offer our continued support for Assembly Bill 2018, authored by Assembly Member , relating to mental health workforce loan forgiveness. RCRC is an association of thirty-five rural California counties, and the RCRC Board of Directors is comprised of elected supervisors from each of those member counties.

Recently, the University of California, San Francisco, released a report of California’s behavioral health workforce. The report notes that the behavioral health workforce is critical to meeting California’s health care needs as one in six adults suffers from mental illness, and one in 14 children has a serious emotional disturbance. To increase the likelihood that better coverage for behavioral health services will yield better access to treatment, California needs an adequate supply of behavioral health workers who are distributed equitably across the State and who reflect the demographic characteristics of the State’s population. Additionally, the report found that 45 percent of psychiatrists and 37 percent of psychologists are over age 60 years, and are likely to retire or reduce their work hours within the next decade. In short, California will need even more trained behavioral health providers in the coming decade.

AB 2018 aims to increase the supply of behavioral health providers working in the public sector. Specifically, AB 2018 would amend current law for state loan repayment programs to allow trainees that meet certain criteria to be eligible for loan repayment during their training. According to state records, 23 of California’s 58 counties have fewer than one psychiatrist per 10,000 residents – with six counties having no psychiatrists at all.

The Honorable Ed Hernandez Assembly Bill 2018 June 1, 2018 Page 2

Addressing the psychiatric shortage involves addressing pipeline issues. There is a heavy burden of debt that psychiatry students shoulder; it is not unusual to find psychiatric residents in training with debt loads that exceed $200,000. Loan repayment and loan forgiveness programs are important tools in increasing interest in hard-to-fill practice sectors that are vital to the public interest.

For the above reasons, RCRC respectfully requests your ‘Aye’ vote when this measure is heard before your Committee.

Sincerely,

TRACY RHINE Legislative Advocate

cc: The Honorable Brian Maienschein, Member of the State Assembly The Honorable , Member of the State Assembly The Honorable , Member of the State Assembly The Honorable , Member of the State Assembly The Honorable , Member of the State Assembly Members of the Senate Health Committee Consultant, Senate Health Committee