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2024 Session

Budget Amendments - HB30 (Committee Approved)

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Expand Eligibility for Behavioral Health Loan Repayment Program

Item 271 #1h

Item 271 #1h

First Year - FY2025 Second Year - FY2026
Health and Human Resources
Department of Health FY2025 ($750,000) FY2026 ($750,000) GF

Language
Page 299, line 43, strike "$20,757,021" and insert "$20,007,021".
Page 299, line 43, strike "$20,757,021" and insert "$20,007,021".

Page 300, line 7, strike "$8,100,000" and "$8,100,000" and insert:

"$7,350,000" and "$7,350,000".

Page 300, line 11, after "adolescent psychiatrist, insert:

"child and adolescent psychiatry Fellows".

Page 300, line 20, strike "three" and insert "two".

Page 300, line 25, after "centers", insert:

"academic medical centers".

Page 300, strike lines 31 through 33 and insert:

"3. Of the amounts appropriated in C.1., $250,000 the first year and $250,000 the second year from the general fund shall be provided for awards for eligible mental health service professionals defined in § 54.1-2400.1 of the Code of Virginia who are not set forth in C.1. as Tier I or Tier II providers."



Explanation

(This amendment redirects a portion of the funding contained in the introduced budget which would have expanded the Behavioral Health Loan Repayment Program to serve eligible behavioral health professionals who are school-based. Together with actions contained in Chapter 1, 2023 Special Session I, the program will have $4.8 million more for loan repayments over the fiscal year 2023 appropriation. The amendment redirects $250,000 each year from the general fund to expand the program to include mental health professionals as defined in § 54.1-2400.1 who do not already qualify for the program. In addition, the amendment adds child and adolescent psychiatry Fellows to the list of Tier 1 providers eligible for the program, and adds academic medical centers as a preferred practice site. Child and adolescent psychiatry Fellows are licensed psychiatrists in other states, but it general takes six months or more to become licensed in Virginia. This change will help in efforts to recruit these practitioners to Virginia, with the goal of retaining them in Virginia's behavioral healthcare workforce. The amendment also replaces language contained in the introduced budget which proposed to change the minimum term of practice from two to three years, returning it to the original two-year requirement.)