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Divided Supreme Court allows Trump administration to begin enforcing ban on transgender service members; AZ hospitals could be required to ask patients about legal status; Taxing the wealthy to pay for Trump priorities wouldn't slow economic growth; and overdraft fees are here to stay, costing Texans thousands of dollars a year.

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Taxing millionaires could fund safety net programs, climate rollbacks raise national security concerns, India makes cross-border strikes in Kashmir, the Supreme Court backs transgender military ban, and government actions conflict with Indigenous land protections.

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Rural students who face hurdles going to college are getting noticed, Native Alaskans may want to live off the land but obstacles like climate change loom large, and the Cherokee language is being preserved by kids in North Carolina.

WA investments in school mental-health services slowly helping

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Thursday, April 24, 2025   

Washington has done well enacting some policies that improve school mental-health systems in the last year, while still falling short in other areas, according to a new report.

Natalie Gustafson, assistant director for Behavioral Health Department, northwest Washington Educational Service District 189, said the state has been making progress by implementing excused mental-health absences as well as alternatives to suspension.

"There's been initiatives to increase hours of training around social emotional learning, around trauma informed practices, around suicide prevention," she said.

Created by mental-health advocacy group Inseparable, the report shows investments in school-based mental-health supports across the country are having a positive impact on youths. But, there is still more to be done to quell the youth mental-health crisis, as data shows 1 in 6 young people experience a mental-health disorder each year.

Caitlin Hochul, vice president for public policy for the group Inseparable, said it recommends a three-tiered system of support, ranging from teaching mental health education to all students to one-on-one counseling, to more intensive attention for students who need it.

"So it's really helped to capture the full spectrum of kids from just giving them the resiliency and life skills that they need to helping those who need some additional supports," she explained.

Gustafson added that Washington schools still struggle to hire the staff they need, so they are getting creative by partnering with educational service districts and other organizations, as well as relying on grant money. Gustafson compares it to stitching together a patchwork quilt of programming and supports.

"And at the other end of the quilt, things are starting to unravel because we know we're, like, 'Oh, we have two more years of this grant and we have three more years of this grant,'" she continued.

Schools that promote student mental health can improve classroom behavior and peer relationships, according to the CDC, which are linked to academic success.

Disclosure: Inseparable contributes to our fund for reporting on Criminal Justice, Health Issues, Mental Health, Social Justice. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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