[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 138 (Tuesday, September 13, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H5343-H5344]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Murphy) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MURPHY of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, over the weekend, The Denver
Post Editorial Board published a piece supporting the Helping Families
in Mental Health Crisis Act, H.R. 2646. Their endorsement joins 72
other papers, including The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post,
and the National Review.
I thank my colleagues from Colorado, Representative Mike Coffman and
Scott Tipton, who were both cosponsors of H.R. 2646. Their State,
unfortunately, is all too familiar with the realities of mental illness
and the tragedies that come along when there is no treatment for those
who suffer from it.
In Colorado, every 8 hours, one person dies by suicide. Their suicide
rate is one of the highest in the country. Sadly, Colorado has also
witnessed more mentally troubled mass killers than most, including
James Holmes, who, in 2012, took 12 innocent lives at a movie theater
in Aurora; and Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, who murdered 12 of their
fellow students, one teacher, and went on to take their own lives at
Columbine High School in 1999.
Mental health and the tragedies that occur before treatment are not
restricted to one State, however. The Denver Post recognizes this when
they report that ``more than 11 million adults suffer from a mental
illness, and almost half of them do not seek treatment or cannot find
it.''
[[Page H5344]]
Mr. Speaker, since the facts make it clear that major mental health
reform is needed for our entire Nation, reform must be a priority for
all elected Members of Congress on both sides of the Capitol, for we
represent the entire Nation.
The House heard the American people when we passed H.R. 2646 in July
with overwhelming, near unanimous bipartisan support. If the Senate
won't listen to the House, or me, maybe they should listen to The
Denver Post Editorial Board. They write:
``One of the best attempts to improve America's mental health crisis
in decades will stall if the U.S. Senate does not get its act together
before it goes on another month-long break. Freshly back from vacation,
senators should pass . . . Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act
. . . the bill sailed through the House with overwhelming bipartisan
support . . . its prospects in the Senate are murky . . . Congress is
tantalizingly close to accomplishing something that will address the
nation's deplorable treatment of the mentally ill. It should not fall
victim to the hyperpartisan gun debate.''
Mr. Speaker, if the Senate won't listen to The Denver Post, The Wall
Street Journal, or The Washington Post, will they listen to the voice
of the American people?
We have the daily addition of 118 lives lost to suicide. Since
September 1, it has been 1,400. Since the House passed the bill, over
8,000 people have died of suicide. There is also the daily addition of
959 families who join thousands mourning individuals with mental
illness who have lost their life in one form or another. Since we
passed the bill, the total lives lost is 65,212.
More lives will be lost if we do not fix this broken mental health
system that is so desperately in need of repair. It is time that the
Senate listen to the voices of the millions who are crying out for
help. And for today's new total of 959 more lives, tomorrow is too
late.
Millions of Americans are pleading with the Senate: do not go home at
the end of this month without passing a bill that the House can also
pass and get signed into law. The Helping Families in Mental Health
Crisis Act is just that law. We need the Senate to vote this week, not
another day. Where there is help, there is hope.
____________________