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From YouTube: 12-12-18 Drug and Alcohol Commission Part 1 of 2
Description
12-12-18 Drug and Alcohol Commission Part 1 of 2
A
D
The
presentation,
if
I
chair,
if
I,
can
go
over
to
your
packet,
because
you
also
wanted
to
do
some
planning
based
on
what
you've
done.
So
you
have
one
handout.
Well,
you
have
one
handout
that
has
all
the
members.
Yes,
then
you
have
or
your
survey
that
you
did
all
of
the
stakeholders
and
their
responses
and
six
questions
it's
on
one
page
and
the
ones
who
answered
with
a
scam
or
the
region
I'm
a
pillar
or
WestCare,
and
to
help
Department.
D
The
questions
are:
do
you
provide
drug
and
alcohol
services
each
one
answers
what
services
you
provide?
What
answer?
What
groups
do
you
serve
for
drug
and
alcohol
services?
You
have
their
answers.
What
do
you
consider
the
two,
the
three
priority
areas
for
treatment
and
prevention?
You
have
their
answers.
What
do
you
consider
the
most
important
action
needed
to
address
this
public
health
concern
and
you
have
the
agency's
answers
and
then
you
used
any
of
the
treatments,
thankful,
quiet
and
specifically
the
Commission
as
methadone
naloxone,
and
you
have
their
answers.
D
So
this
is
one
tool
that
you
all
didn't
develop.
You
have
a
second
tool
that
you
began,
perform
your
own
goals
and
objectives,
and
that
was
something
that
mr.
Thompson
work
done
primarily,
but
then
everybody
participated
as
well,
and
so
we
gave
you
the
answers
that
each
one's
different
goals
and
objectives
for
the
Commission
and
again
viewers
is
to
go
through
it
at
your
leisure
and
discuss
it.
You
also
updated
directory
of
services,
and
your
packet
is
only
the
table
of
contents.
D
Then
you
have
what
what
Samsa
the
partner
stage
of
the
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
considers
detoxification,
which
we
had
many
discussions
throughout
the
meeting:
medical
assisted
treatment,
services
versus
cold
detox,
which
ability
not
used
anymore,
but
this
has
the
standard
of
care.
The
federal
the
u.s.
subunit
is
about
the
health
services
administration
for
child.
This
is
this
is
what
they
considered
the
standard
of
care
for
detox
and
substance.
D
Use
it's
the
executive
summary,
so
you
don't
have
so
that's
your
packet
commission
members
that
you
have
have
the
agenda
for
today
was
for
you
to
discuss
these
these
items.
The
work
that
you've
done
develop
next
steps,
but
you
already
are
these
want
to
post
a
lot
of
it?
Is
your
weapon
created
a
webpage?
You
want
to
make
the
directory
one
user-friendly
and
I
think
also
the
great
steps,
because
we
need
to
get
this
out,
there's
information
out
and
then
you
have
the
presentations
and
concerns
and
gaps
from
from
the.
D
E
Know
maybe
we
should
at
least
we
do
have
RSVP
for
mr.
Thomson
and
from
the
other.
So
then,
maybe
switching
it
around
for
the
stakeholders
that
are
here
I
mean
the
presentation,
I
guess
once
the
ones
everybody
we
have
a
better
forum
Percy.
We
can
do
the
planning
on
everything
if
their
input,
rather
than
why.
A
C
H
I
Afternoon
my
name
is
Laura,
Kim
and
I
will
be
discussing
the
children's
unit
and
to
my
right
is
Miss
Mary
Lou
Bava,
who
is
the
assistant
program
administrator
and
to
my
further
right,
is
Miss
Gracie
that
who's
the
director
of
the
substance
program
there
at
border
Regional,
Health
Center.
So
thank
you
for
having
us
here,
I'd
like
to
start
and
let's
see
that
I
can
work.
This.
I
I
I
What
region
is
trying
to
adopt
a
new
vision
as
trauma-informed
care
center,
and
because
of
this,
our
vision
statement
says
that
we
pledge
to
provide
a
shared
culture
and
you're
asking
yourself.
What
does
that
mean?
We
want
to
provide
a
safe,
provide
healing,
accepting,
respectful,
diverse
and
empower
culture.
H
I
I
Usually
we'll
have
will
have
someone
to
there's
a
system
called
help
me
out
there
avail
and
that
becomes
activated.
Then
the
individual
could
be
seen
in
the
hospital,
and
this
could
be
the
weekends.
This
could
be
various
different
and
we
partner
very
closely
with
our
Lorado
Police
Department,
alongside
with
our
whip,
County
Sheriff's
Department,
to
help
to
render
aid
whenever
we're
undergoing
a
crisis
with
our
clients.
I
In
the
counts
unit,
we
have
service
access,
phonological
management
provisions
of
medication,
case
management.
We
have
rehabilitative
skills,
training
being
a
partner
support,
parent
support
groups,
crisis
intervention
services,
the
mobile
crisis,
outreach
team,
jail
diversion
and
our
intervention
settings
are
within
our
office.
We
go
to
the
community
and
they're
done
they're
conducted
in
this
school
as
well
as
in
the
in-home
based
interventions.
I
I
J
I
I
So
we
offer
that
as
well
and
transitional
services
when
they're
discharged
from
the
hospital
and
we
try
to
intervene
with
them
so
that
we
know
what
the
next
steps
are
to
make
sure
that
they're
taking
their
medication
to
make
sure
that
they're
they're
doing
well
and
to
follow
up
medication,
training
and
support
intensive
case
management
crisis
intervention.
It's
very
much
the
same,
but
it's
a
more
in
in
a
more
intense
level.
G
Afternoon
my
name
is
Riley
mama
and
I'm,
one
of
the
administrators
for
the
adults
unit,
so
I'll,
be
speaking
to
the
departments
and
the
services
that
we
provide
in
our
adult
unit.
All
of
these
services
are
provided
to
our
adults
that
are
18
and
over
and
they
have
to
be
voluntarily
coming
in
for
services.
Ok,
we
get
a
lot
of
different
questions
from
family
members
as
far
as
what
can
I
do
to
help
a
loved
one
going
through
a
crisis.
So
some
of
these
services
that
I'll
go
ahead
and
go
through
will
answer.
G
Some
of
those
questions
have
not,
please
feel
free
to.
Let
me
know
if
you
have
any
questions.
Ok,
when
someone
comes
into
our
services,
they
first
go
into
what
well
service
access
or
intake
department.
Is
that
means
they're
requesting
their
service
or
their
case
to
be
open
with
us
for
a
number
of
things
that
we
can
provide
our
services
that
we
can
provide?
They
come
in
on
that.
First
intervention
is
about
for
our
interview.
They
see
a
case
manager,
then
they
see
a
and
opha,
which
we
also
known
as
an
LPC.
G
They
are
determined
to
see
if
they
qualify
for
services.
We
have
a
priority
population
that
basically,
we
look
at
as
far
as
what
the
state
guidelines
gives
us
and
those
three
diagnoses
are
bipolar
disorder,
major
depressive
disorder
and
schizophrenia.
Now
these
group,
if
you're
diagnosed
with
one
of
these
three
more
than
likely
your
case,
will
be
opened
and
again
all
services
are
voluntary.
Once
our
case
is
opened,
then
they're
assigned
a
case
manager
they're
also
provided
some
of
the
services
are
here
on
on
the
screen.
G
Our
main
focus
is
to
educate
individuals
on
their
diagnosis,
any
medications
that
the
doctor
excuse
me
our
psychiatrist
has
provided
to
them
or
prescribed
to
them
through
case
management
services,
learning
what
your
diagnosis
is
learning,
how
to
cope
with
it,
how
to
live
a
productive
life
in
our
community
and
integrate
into
our
community
with
the
diagnosis
and
some
people
will
experience
symptoms
even
with
medications.
How
do
you
function
and
continue
to
function
in
our
community
in
a
positive
manner,
even
experiencing
some
of
these
things?
So
this
is
what
our
case
managers
do.
G
We
provide
services
in
at
a
rate
of
levels
from
level
of
care
zero
to
a
level
of
care
for
zero
being
police
in
towns,
which
is
a
client
who
is
more
independent,
will
come
into
the
doctor.
Maybe
once
every
three
months,
four
months,
depending
on
what
the
doctor
has
prescribed
and
our
level
of
care
for
also
known
as
our
act
team
is
our
most
intense
group.
G
They
get
seen
about
ten
hours
a
month
and
they
get
surfaced
is
at
least
once
or
twice
a
week,
and
it
can
be
in
the
clinic
or
in
vivo,
which
means
out
in
the
community.
We
provide
services
to
our
clients
in
their
homes.
We
take
them
out
into
our
actual
community
and
help
them
go
through,
maybe
an
anxiety
or
any
type
of
situation
or
symptoms
that
they
experience
while
being
out
in
the
community.
G
Our
goal
is
to
walk
the
walk
with
them
and
show
them
and
teach
them
how
to
overcome
some
of
those
obstacles
that
they're
experiencing,
while
they're
on
the
community
in
order
for
them
to
return
to
school
in
order
for
them
to
return
to
work.
Just
be
a
productive
citizen.
Okay
in
those
services,
we
also
provide
psychiatric
services.
Like
I
mentioned,
we
have
physicians
either
in
vivo
at
our
clinic
or
we
have
a
telemedicine,
which
is,
you
know
the
factory.
G
Now
we
have
a
lot
of
different
doctors
from
different
areas
of
this
States
or
possibly
even
out
of
the
states,
and
they
see
the
clients
just
like
they
would
any
person
in
front
of
them.
They
go
ahead
into
their
evaluation.
They
prescribe
the
medications
they
give
a
follow-up
appointment
and
again,
all
these
medication
and
psychotropic
medications
are
able
to
be
provided
by
a
pcp,
a
private
doctor,
but
most
of
the
time
our
clients
prefer
to
see
a
psychiatrist,
because
that
is
our
speciality.
Okay,
we
to
branch
out
to
our
PCP
is
in
the
community.
G
G
G
G
Thank
you
for
the
question
and
again
it's
just
our
daily
lingo
and
we
just
go
out
on
it,
but
yeah.
If
you
do
have
questions
please
let
me
know.
I
can
definitely
clarify
for
you
some
of
these
services
that
we
provide
once
you're
in
enrolled
client
in
one
of
our
levels
of
care
screenings
an
intake
is
at
the
beginning.
G
Then
our
diagnosis,
which
is
done
by
our
licensed
professional,
all
of
the
healing
arts,
who
gives
you
a
preliminary
diagnosis,
and
then
you
get
a
final
diagnosis
from
our
psychiatrist
time
unique
care
services
when
somebody
goes
into
the
hospital,
a
psychiatric
hospital
because
they
don't
have
been
fortunate.
Well,
we
have
a
branch
of
the
San
Antonio
State
Hospital
here,
but
that's
usually
always
full.
So
most
of
the
time
people
go
through
crisis
and
to
hospitalize
they
go
ahead.
G
They
get
treatment
out
of
Laredo,
so
our
community
cares
sort
of
a
founder
is
somebody
who
specializes
in
just
that
population?
Okay,
so
they
go
ahead
and
follow
through
with
them
it's
not.
They
get
put
in
the
hospital
we
wait
till
they
come
back
now.
We
walk
through
up
with
them
still
through
that,
and
then
we
transition
them
back
into
our
community.
G
Some
of
the
other
things
that
we
provide
counseling
services.
We
have
cognitive,
behavioral
therapy.
We
know
that
as
CBT
for
some
of
us
in
the
field
we
have
an
LPA
chair
or
like
super
critical
counselor
that
does
that
service
for
them,
and
that
is
a
special
population
that
you
have
to
qualify
for
jail
diversion
company
in
our
community.
That's,
of
course,
will
be
going
through
the
jail
system
or
the
criminal
justice
system.
We
can
still
provide
services
for
a
short
amount
of
time,
while
they're
in
there
or
they're
on
probation
parole.
G
We
have
specific
and
specialized
caseloads
for
these
individuals
as
well.
So
we
tried
to
target
as
many
populations
and
everybody
who
needs
our
services.
We
try
to
assist
them
as
much
as
that.
We
can,
of
course,
they're
all
there
there's
limitations
to
it
around
patient,
clinic,
better
known
as
OPC.
That's
where
our
doctors
are
at.
So
that's
where
they'll
see
it's
an
outpatient
service,
so
they
get
to
go
home.
They
come
back
when
they're
scheduled
to
see
the
doctor
case
managers,
whoever
they're
scheduled
to,
and
then
they
go
back
home.
G
G
I'm
not
being
the
crisis
intervention
miss
Laura,
Kim,
touched
on
the
crisis
number.
We
do
have
that
crisis
number
that
the
available
24
hour
seven
days
a
week,
holidays
middle
of
the
night.
We
do
work
in
farms
a
day
case
manager
will
be
dispatched
to
a
local
hospital
to
do
an
assessment.
If
it
is
requested
by
a
physician,
we
do
have
what's
called
an
apricot
team.
Our
mobile
crisis
outreach
team
who
will
go
out
into
the
community.
If
your
loved
one
is
experiencing
a
crisis,
they
can
go
out
to
the
home.
G
We
sometimes
ask
the
assistance
of
LPT
to
come
out
with
us.
Sometimes
if
we
see
that
the
fight
is
not
the
best
condition
for
us,
because
we
want
to
keep
everybody
safe,
we
go
in
and
ask
them
to
transport
them
to
their
local
emergency
rooms.
We
do
an
assessment,
we
establish
that
they
need
to
be
hospitalized
or
not,
and
then,
with
all
of
our
processes.
The
only
the
one
thing
I
do
want
to
convey
to
you
is
that,
along
the
way,
whichever
route
the
loved
ones
are
having
to
go
through,
we
don't
let
them
go.
G
We
don't
have
to
like
that.
We
don't,
you
know,
hold
our
hands
and
say
that's
it.
We
walk
along
with
them.
Okay,
so
if
ever
you
all
do
need
somebody
or
you
know
somebody
that
needs
our
help.
Please
feel
free
to
call
us
at
the
1-800
number
or
our
main
number
794
3,000
and
do
have
any
questions
as
far
as
the
adult
services
yeah.
Okay,
thank
you.
So
much.
B
G
Okay,
so
my
name
is
Gracie
Valentin
director
for
substance
use
services
there
at
border
region,
I,
currently
oversee
all
the
education
intervention
and
outpatient
treatment,
programs
that
have
to
do
with
any
kind
of
substance,
use
or
co-occurring
disorders.
So
the
very
first
one
there
is
the
education.
So
we
are
a
state
approved
DWI,
which
is
a
drug
DWI
driving,
while
intoxicated
and
the
do
EP,
which
is
the
drug
offender
education
program
for
the
state
of
Texas.
We
also
have
a
cognitive
life
skills.
That
is
something
that
is
very
new
to
border
region.
G
We
all
put
that
particular
component
to
17
of
different
counties,
and
so
with
that
is
it's
a
web-based
cognitive
behavioral
life
skills
program
that
the
individual
they're
going
to
log
on
and
take
an
array
of
services
from
that
shoplifting
substance
use
I
mean
there's
just
a
variety:
a
variety
of
curriculums
parents
and
domestic
violence
that
they
can
actually
take
online.
We're
able
to
review
the
curriculum
online
graded
online.
G
Everything
even
probation
officers
are
gonna
log
on
and
review
also
answers
if
they're
either
youth
they
may
be
taking
this
particular
course
they
have
to
actually
have
an
assault.
Coach
as
well
and
by
the
time
a
responsible
parent,
it
could
be
even
an
adult
sibling
anybody
that
will
be
able
to
go
through
the
course
with
them,
so
they
don't
do
it
alone.
The
other
thing
that
we
have
is
the
intervention
phase.
This
is
offered
to
all
the
consumers
they're
reporter
region.
If
they
are
identified.
G
As
someone
who
has
the
substance
use
disorder,
we
want
to
assess
for
their
at.
Do
they
need
to
talk
to
me
residential,
you
know:
are
they
better
fit,
maybe
for
outpatient,
so
we
sort
of
help
them
with
all
that
we
provide
them
an
array
of
options
and
then
they
sort
of
we
help
them
and
guide
them
to
sort
of
make
the
choices
that
they
want
to
make
to
be
able
to
get
these
services.
G
We're
very
fortunate
that
we
have
a
sign
there,
which
is
the
outreach
screening
assessment,
a
referral
to
the
Texas
tropical
behavioral
health
they're,
actually
located
in
house.
So
anytime
we
have
someone
that
needs
detox
and
residential
placement.
We
have
the
person
they'll
paint
it
on-site
to
be
able
to
screen
in
assess
and
if
they
don't
have
insurance
and
get
please
at
a
state-funded
facility
that
tobacco
station
a
cessation
program,
that's
also
offered
to
our
consumers
at
no
cost
they're
provided
with
individual
group.
G
Counseling
they're
also
provided
with
the
Los
Angeles
Apaches,
and
they
actually
get
monitored
every
week
call
the
CEO
of
the
month.
It's
a
monitor
that
they
checks
to
make
sure
that
their
levels
are
going
down
as
well,
and
that's
also
offered
to
them
at
no
cost.
We
also
have
the
outpatient
treatment
program,
and
these
are
for
individuals
that
may
be
getting
back
from
residential.
They
want
to
continue
some
form
of
treatment
or
individuals,
sometimes
that
do
not
want
to
go
to
detox
or
residential
or
they're,
just
a
better
fit
for
outpatient
treatment.
G
We
also
provide
them
with
individual
family
group
to
go
back
all
of
the
curriculums
that
we
utilize
in
these
particular
programs
are
all
evidence-based
programs
as
well,
so
we're
constantly
monitoring
air
quality
management
departments
constantly
monitoring
as
well
within
our
agency.
We
also
have
a
primary
care
clinic
that
all
our
clients
are
able
to
access
regardless
and
they
have
insurance
or
not.
So
we
have
a
family
nurse
practitioner
there.
They
at
lab
words
screenings
anything
and
everything,
as
you
guys
know,
with
behavioral
health,
mental
health
and
substance
use
or
morbid.
G
You
know
that
that's
one
of
those
things
that
we
have
to
constantly
be
thinking.
They
don't
just
come
with
mental
health
and
substance.
They
also
come
with
other
medical
care
care
needs
right,
and
so
we're
able
to
do
all
of
that
there
that
are
our
sites.
We
also
have
the
nutrition
and
healthy
living.
It's
an
amazing
program.
They
get
the
opportunity
to
do
a
community
garden
that
we're
out
there.
We
have
art
therapy
as
well.
We
have
yoga
classes
for
them.
We
have
a
nutritionist
that
actually
sits
with
them.
G
So,
for
example,
those
clients
that
may
not
only
have
the
substance,
the
mental
health,
but
they
may
also
be
diagnosed
with
diabetes
and
so
forth.
They
get
a
plan.
That's
designed
specifically
for
them.
We've
had
clients
that
were
on
incident
and
no
longer
having
to
take
any
kind
of
medications.
They've
been
able
to
change
the
way
they
eat
they
live
and
and
so
forth.
G
H
C
G
The
primary
care
right
now
we
are
very
fortunate:
we're
able
to
provide
that
service.
We
cart,
listen,
they
have
the
insurance
or
not,
but
I
will
tell
you
that
we
are
moving
into
the
component
of
having
a
low
cost
where
they'll
be,
but
a
pay.
You
know
five,
ten,
twenty
five
dollars
just
to
be
able
to
see
because
we're
actually
opening
it
up
to
the
public
as
well
now,
but
for
right
now
for
in-house
for
consumers
up
order
region,
we
see
them
at
no
cost.
G
H
G
We
have
the
South
Texas
charleen
healthcare
team
right
now
that
we
also
have
which
is
basically
a
mobile
medical
team
that
that's
up
there,
screening
and
assessing,
and
then
they
actually
prefer.
You
know
some
indigo
just
can't
make
it
into
our
agency.
We
have
a
mobile
unit,
that's
actually
out
in
the
community.
B
I
For
crisis
intervention
I
know
that
each
of
us
mentioned
the
M
cot
team,
which
is
the
mobile
crisis
every
to
our
crisis
hotline
being
available
in
all
counties.
So
it's
a
centralized
number.
The
one
863
1102
crisis,
respite
services,
there's
several
hospitalizations,
but
we
also
offer
that
as
well.
We
offer
crisis
intervention
training
at
no
cost
to
law
enforcement.
So
I
know
that
we've
conducted
probably
from
the
time
that
I've
been
there
about
two
or
three
classes
for
local
law
enforcement
and
the
different
counties
that
we
serve.
I
Then
we
offer
mental
health
first
aid
training
for
both
the
adult
and
youth
in
the
schools
and
the
university
again
at
no
cost,
and
basically
what
that
is
is
say:
I
we
don't
work
in
this
type
of
environment
and
I
have
a
loved
one
that
is
going
through
a
crisis
of
anxiety,
depression,
but
I
really
don't
know
who
to
turn
to
because
I
don't
know
who
border
region
is
so.
Therefore
we
go
out
there
and
educate
you.
I
F
G
H
F
G
H
G
Putting
a
particular
package
where
they're
linked
up
with
someone's
there
they're
not
going
to
leave
with
nothing.
Yes,
that's
one
of
the
things
that
follow
up.
Yes,
we
do,
if
you're
discharged
from
the
hospital,
but
you
don't
meet
the
criteria
that
we
have
for
those
who
make
their
disorders
we're
not
going
to
just
turn
you
away
we're
going
to
go
ahead
and
follow
through
with
this
for
a
while,
until
we
can
link
you
to
another
service.
H
G
H
G
Go
over
these
these
gaps
that
we
felt
were
important
to
just
sort
of
discuss.
Briefly,
the
very
first
one
was
to
develop
behavioral
health
partnerships
right
in
any
of
you
notice.
We
use
the
word
behavioral
health
constantly,
because
I
think
that's
effective
and
I'm
gonna
get
to
that
as
my
concerning
a
little
bit
later.
So
just
but
the
other
thing
is
building
on
each
agency,
strengths.
That's
another
thing
that
I
think
is
it's
great
for
us,
because
we
are
sometimes
we
duplicate
services,
or
sometimes
we
just
don't
know
what
other
agency
services,
and
so
that's.
G
Maybe
strength
based
I
think
employment
and
vocational
programs
is
so
important.
I
think
that's
one
of
the
things
that
we've
identified
our
agency
every
time.
Someone
is
discharged,
we
reassessed
and
on
our
reassessment
like
the
one
component
that
never
really
changes.
If
it
was
a
tattoo
of
a
tattoo
initially
struck
me,
they
don't
go
up
at
2:00
or
3:00.
So
I
know
that
that's
one
thing
that
we
need
to
get
I
guess
better
prepared
me
to
work
on
a
little
bit
more,
so
making
sure
that
we
have
strength,
placed
limit
of
vocational
programs,
integrative
care.
G
You
know
making
sure
that
we're
always
focusing
the
substance,
but
also
the
mental,
how
the
primary
care
component
also
the
medical
transitional
living.
I
think
we've
touched
on
some
of
these
during
the
the
means
that
we
tell
there's
a
detox
in
psychiatric
facilities,
and
we
don't
have
really
a
1-second
facility
here
in.
G
So
a
lot
of
times
when
we
do
get
individuals
we're
having
to
outsource
yeah
and
that
can
be
very,
very
expensive.
You
know
so
that
the
integrated
care
into
indigent
care
also
to
be
brighter
the
readily
available
for
clients,
but
I,
guess
I'm
gonna
just
skip
on
over
to
the
concern
that
guess
it's
a
stigma,
there's
a
definitely
waitlist
anytime.
We
cause
specially
for
C
funded
services,
there's
always
a
weight,
that's
I
think
funding
and
grant
opportunities.
Also,
you
know
it's
important.
G
We
can
also
develop
a
site
where
it's
an
easy
thing
where
all
these
different
types
of
grants
are
available
to
us
is
sometimes,
for
example,
the
city
in
the
radome.
We
know
about
certain
grants
that
may
be
great
for
Puerto
Rico
to
apply
for,
but
we
don't
know
about
it,
because
our
not
registered
with
that
particular
agency
right.
The
other
thing
is
in
that
the
lack
of
knowledge
I
think
it's
so
important
to
understand
that
there's
more
to
an
individual
than
their
addiction.
G
Sometimes
we
have
to
have
all
these
an
ayat
or
or
so
forth,
and
there's
way
more
to
an
individual.
Just
in
that,
and
then
of
course,
the
competing
of
services
I
think
I'm
most
I'm
talking
for
free,
because
it
becomes
our
conspiratorial.
That
old
certain
agency
just
is
that
we
started
need
to
get
away
that,
whether
they
always
think
they
all
work
together.
Matching
the
power
out
there
or
you
can
have,
because
we
do
have
a
lot
of
agencies
that
offer
amazing
services.
Then.
G
Just
work
together
and
plow
things
together.
It
would
be
so
much
easier
not
only
for
us,
but
the
imagine
that
the
quality
of
care
that
would
be
providing
these
individuals
and
then
the
last
thing
just
the
Platinum
are
proposing,
is
just
the
possibility
of
just
changing
the
name
from
drug
and
alcohol
commission
to
maybe
a
behavioral
health
Commission,
because
it
you
know,
look
at
your
cada
at
one
time
those
that
have
been
around
the
substance
you
spill.
It
was
Texas
Commission
of
alcohol
and
drug
abuse.
G
Then
they
changed
in
Maine
to
the
Department
of
State
Health
Services.
It's
constantly
evolving
and
I
think
it.
We
stick
with
the
name
of
drug
and
alcohol
commission,
we're
gonna
just
focus
on
dragonomicon
we're
gonna
totally
forget
about
that
mental
health
component,
which
a
lot
of
individuals
have
and
say
you
know
it's
just
an
proposing.
You
know,
maybe
a
change
to
thank
you.
J
And,
of
course
you
mentioned
it
already-
the
drug
and
alcohol
commission-
and
you
mentioned
there
so
substance,
abuse
and
alcohol
abuse
programs
and
outreach
programs
and
the
people
that
you
serve
is
there
a
a
success,
follow
up
and/or,
follow
up
on
person's
or
patients
or
consumers
that
you
were
a
service
and
they
not
visit
these
or
you
know,
actually
figure
out
if
these
people
were
actually
successful
successful
and
they
are
not
relapsing
to
habit
or
an
addiction.
And
for
that
you
know
it's
a
follow
up.
H
J
Of
that,
this
is
no
review,
identify
the
resources
that
are
exist,
and
then
you
get
the
public
then
take
advantage.
What
we
have
or
waiting.
Is
it
possible
that
you
like
the
next
meeting
or
follow-up
to
to
try
to
get
this
commission
as
to
how
many
people
as
being
service
and
substance
inaudible
accused?
So
we
can
get
an
idea
that
this
commission
was
built
already,
but
nonetheless
we're
gonna,
say
it's
already
in
place
or
you
can
do
anything
for
a
benefit
for
the
community.
So
we
can
restrain
think
those
yeah.
G
G
The
success
rate
is
dropped
because
you're
dealing
with
individuals
who
feel
a
little
bit
better
start
taking
medications,
and
then
they
go
a
safe
site.
So
I
know
that
there's
gaps,
there's
definitely
counts
so
I'm,
just
gonna
tell
you
that
those
results
would
not
be
as
common
see,
but
we
don't
give
up
like
to
think
that
constant
coming
back
or
constantly
reinvigorating
them
and
constantly
and
making
them,
and
you
know
and
identify
to
what
didn't
work
for
it.
Where
could
we
have
gone
wrong
when
we
prepare
for
our.
D
But
it's
pertinent
to
what
the
evidence-based
success
the
state
of
Texas
has
hired
a
state
opioid
response
director,
just
opie
70
million
now
26
from
Samsung
and
twenty-something
from
the
state
or
total
of
70
million.
They
need
to
get
this
out
yesterday
and
they're
gonna
be
looking
at.
Agencies
are
already
funded
and
scan
is
under
there.
D
So
you
will,
you
will
be
getting
more
funding
for
the
services
that
you
what
you
do,
but
they're
looking
and
communities
to
give
them
projects
that
show
success
and
that's
what
that
question
is
important
because
they
can't
get
it
fast
enough.
They're
gonna
contract
with
the
universities,
so
they
can
issue
the
contracts
quicker.
If
you.
J
D
Like
in
your
under
list
can
is
so
you're
gonna
get
more
money
to
do,
especially
the
task
force.
The
mobile
crisis
task,
for
these
are
some
things
that
they've
already
developed
as
they're
gonna
concentrate
on
the
other
is
impaired.
Isn't
here
who
rolled
out
a
naloxone
training
program
for
first
responders,
they've
already
set
up
about
12
categories,
that
this
is
where
they
want
to
put
the
money
fast,
no
deader
than
February,
so
you'll
have
enough
if
you
already
have
funding
from
them
and
it
scans
on
the
list.
D
D
It's
gonna
be
handled
in
the
university
now
with
the
state
because
the
state
can
can
give
out
monies
with
our
procurement
without
a
bid
without
a
proposal,
but
the
universities
can
so
and
madam
chair,
we
invited
her
to
come
today.
She
couldn't
will
come
probably
into
January
meeting
she's
a
friend
of
the
border,
because
she's
from
quarter
plus
the
corpus
is
not
the
border
but
she's
interested
in
seeing
because
she
knows
that
the
incidence
of
overdose
and
drug
use
on
the
border
is
high,
and
so
they
want
to
get
these
monies
out
quick,
the
fastest.
D
Our
current
contractors
like
scan
and
the
other
is
evidence-based
success
stories
in
in
one
of
the
categories,
and
so
we're
anxiously
looking
at
that,
because
I
think
the
the
crisis
mobile
task
force
that
you
all
have
is
one
of
those
categories
because
to
get
out
the
community
and
address
the
other
one
is
what
pillars
doing
the
training
for
naloxone
use
and
so
those
practices.
But
what
she
said
was
tell
me
your
success,
because
we're
gonna
invest
in
those
people
who
who
have
success.
D
Who
can
show
success,
and
so
that's
why
the
question
from
chief
daughters
was
very
appropriate
because
I
think
border
region
has
successes.
We
just
need
to
tell
the
story,
but
I
think
you
should
qualify
for
some
some
funding
and
I
liked
what
you
said
about
you
know
not
terrorizing
them
and
not
you
know,
partnering,
better
and
building
and
maximizing
resources,
which
is
what
the
Commission
wants
to
do
is
if
we've
only
got
this
much
of
resources
in
a
little.
How
do
we
maximize
and
then
what
are
the
gaps?
D
D
Madam
chair,
these
were
two
tools
you
all
develop,
one
of
golden
objectives
or
the
commission
and
the
other
one
is
you
serve
like
the
stakeholders
and
u-verse
border
region
state
some
of
what's
already
here
as
the
gaps
and
some
of
the
services.
So
you
wanted
an
opportunity
to
go
back
to
this
and
look
at
it
and
discuss
it
to
make
sure
that
the
Commission
was
heading
toward
how
do
we
fill
those
gaps,
otherwise
those
gaps
and
then
in
updating
some
materials
like
the
directory?
A
H
A
We
have
to
look
at
all
of
the
angles
before
we
even
try
to
service
together,
and
even
if
we
are,
if
there's
two
or
three
different
engines
is
doing
the
same
thing,
but
we're
not
aware
of
it,
because
we've
never
actually
tried
to
put
this
all
together,
then
maybe
we
can
go
through
the
weight
mixture
for
the
grants
and
change
some
of
it.
We
have
to
do
something
about
it,
and
especially
we've
been
given
the
test
of
the
opioid
crisis.
D
H
D
A
A
Well,
we
had
the
visit
from
sheriff
Wainwright
and
he
talked
about
that's
where
they
need
help
because
now
he's
being
they,
we
Webb
County
we're
being
sued
because
there's
already
been
two
deaths
there,
because
when
the
people
are
arrested
and
come
in
89,
meaning
detox
and
are
put
in
with
the
regular
population
and
are
not
being
watched
as
they
should
be.
If
they
had
said
yes,
I
am
hired
whatever
they're
on
and
so
now.
Because
of
those
several.
G
A
A
How
they
got
the
funding
the
grants
that
they
go
to
and
I'm
sure
the
city
could
work
with.
We
can't
work
with
any
of
the
agencies
right,
that's
all
right!
So
then
we
need
to
find
out
I
guess
from
other,
but
it
would
have
to
be
we're
very
unique
because
we
are
on
the
border
and
if
we
contact
say
hey
son
adorn
your,
what
are
the
others
it
it
wouldn't
have
people
really
what
we
need
to
see
they're
way,
bigger,
I,
guess
we
could
go
down
the
valley
and
contact
them
to
see.
B
We'd
also
talk
miss
depth.
You
also
talked
about
a
location,
you
know
the
blueprinting
and
all
that
stuff.
We
took
a
dip,
but
the
last
meeting,
no,
no
in
a
way
I
needed
a
location,
and
then
we
you
know
we
need
to
see
what
would
it
look
like.
You
know
it
would
need
to
be
open.
You
need
to
see
everybody,
you
can
see
everything.
B
A
D
Yeah,
madam
sure,
one
of
the
things
you
all
discussed
was
getting
the
mayor
and
he
was
going
to
try
to
come
and
the
judge
together,
because
the
city
cannot
address
substance
use
if
we
don't
have
a
detox
center
in
a
medically
assisted
treatment
center.
The
detox
center
I
think
the
way
out
already
and
and
LPD
knows
that
the
programs,
the
scan
and
pillar
and
others
they
are.
L
D
E
L
L
H
L
G
The
detox
needs
to
be
active,
gel
or
redness,
and
oh
girl
I
mean
just
have
you
talked
to
the
city
with
like
the
Loretto
Medical
Center,
a
doctor's
hospital,
because
I
do
know
that
I
mean
you
never
know,
I
want
to
show
you
get
a
waterbender
that
looks
very
emergency
when
they're,
probably
already
spending
money.
This
all
these
individuals.
G
E
Gosai's
I
think
you'd
be
able
to
address
this
question,
because
I
think
that
we've
been
going
back
and
forth
with
the
Hawaii
that
we
come
to
consensus,
that
a
detox
is
definitely
necessary
in
our
community,
but
when
it
comes
down
to
when
it
boils
down
to
it,
is
it
a
city,
county,
funded
or
grant
funded,
or
is
a
and
it's
a
agency
supported
like
how
WIC
the
detox?
What
is
the
responsibility
that
it
falls
on
the
city
in
the
county
and
therefore
I
think
that
that's
primary
like?
Where
do
we
start
off
me?
D
Getting
the
data
together,
we've
got
some
already,
but
finalizing
it
and
presenting
it
to
the
judge
to
the
city
manager,
because
you
have
to
compare
the
cost
of
what
is
happening
of
taking
PD
ensures
our
duty
to
arrest
someone
for
possession
or
or
being
under
the
influence
taking
them
to
LMC
or
okay.
Tell
you.
We've
had
the
discussion
both
with
doctors
and
LMC,
and
yes,
they
do
house
a
partnership.
They
have
with
border
region
and
yeah.
D
We
don't
in
rhesus,
absolutely
correctly
based
on
the
stat,
would
be
the
monies
to
present
to
the
judge
and
to
the
city
manager.
This
is
what
we
need:
a
15
bed
unit,
a
20
or
30
bed
unit,
I,
don't
think
ours
would
be
between
and
you
all
could,
between
15
and
35
I.
Don't
think
we
need
something
larger
than
that
at
this
point.
I
hope
we
never
do
yeah,
but
but
I
think,
and
that
has
a
cost
already.
D
We
worry:
we've
already
done
an
analysis
for
a
15
bed
unit
from
scratch,
you're
looking
at
five
minutes,
brick-and-mortar
and
staffing
in
operation
yeah,
and
that's
just
for
a
15
bed
unit,
and
that
was
based
with
we
serve
eight
other
cities
as
well
of
what
they're
doing
I
know
you
all
looked
at
and
we
had
a
presentation
of
using
an
old
deal,
detention
center,
but
it
doesn't
fit.
It
would
cost
more
to
retrofit
that.
H
E
Your
success
or
the
services
that
you
all
provide
in
the
community
rather
than
us,
giving
you
all
give
us
male
female
or
what
service
you're
providing
I
think
you
all
probably
already
have
something
in
place.
Is
that
correct?
The
scan
already
have
something
as
web
care
also
have
some,
what
form
of
measuring
success
or
for.
J
Well,
what's
good
next
step
right
now,
it's
in
the
dilemma,
our
grants
ending
in
October
28th
for
our
participants.
You
only
certainty
that
we
have
here
in
Toledo
for
permanent,
supportive
housing
for
the
homeless,
so
it's
ending
in
October
of
2019,
so
we're
in
a
transition
part
right
now
to
help
our
20
individuals
find
a
transition
in
children.
The.
J
E
L
E
L
E
Because
each
each
stakeholder
has
a
different
mission,
you
all
fall
into
different
categories.
So
you
all
are
your
the
success
of
your
organization
differently.
So
therefore,
you
are
providing
services
to
youth.
Then
the
statistics
of
how
many
youth
you
served
and
in
what
areas
you
serve
and
vice
men
again
with
adult
or
both
male
and
female
and
so
on
with
homeless,
and
then
we
have
the
mental
health.
So
that
said
in
mental
health
component,
so
whatever
areas
you
service,
then
just
get
us
a
number
of
what
your
what
your
needs
are
and
then
MS
Bella.
E
B
Thinking,
there's
seven
of
us
that
committee
members
could
we
just
maybe
try
to
narrow
down
the
seven
most
important
things
that
we
might
need
from
these
stakeholders,
or
maybe
each
take
a
stakeholder
and
go
out
and
get
this
information,
and
you
know
we
can
split
up,
make
little
mini
team,
so
we
talked
about
that.
But
that
way
you
know
we
can
find
our
art
top
things
that
we
we
need
to
present.
We
can
go
out
and
with
your
focus
and
finding
just
those
it'd
be
a
start.
E
That's
the
thing
that
I
do
see
that
we
have
a
lot
of
services,
so
the
most
importantly,
I
think.
What
we
need
to
look
into
is
is
what
are
you
doing
in
prevention
and
then
aspect
of
prevention?
What
are
you
doing
in
the
form
of
the
other
word
that
was
used?
Is
education,
intervention
and
I?
Guess
the
outpatient.
A
L
D
H
E
D
C
D
D
Talked
to
me
this
week
he
said
half
of
his
patients
have
an
addiction
issue,
and
so
he
said:
where
do
I
send
them,
so
we
gave
high
cable
the
link
to
the
directory.
So
truth,
these
are
all
depending
on,
but
they
needed
an
initial
assessment
to
treat.
But
that's
going
back
to
what
I
said
about
the
the
state
opioid
director
that
one
of
the
other
target
areas
is
training
the
physicians
to
recognizing
what
to
do.
I.
Think
it's
careful
there
at
the
extreme.
G
D
Definitely
we
need.
We
need
to
train
our
positions
because
in
different
aspects
one
many
of
them
are
refusing
to
treat
pain
because
of
the
potential.
But
all
you
gonna
do
is
I
got.
Physicians
were
20
years
ago,
were
prescribing
90,
hydrocodone
pills
for
pain
and
all
you
needed
was
the
wheat
worth
mm-hmm,
and
so
people
who
started
misusing
it
and
now
we're
the
country.
D
A
G
E
Then
that
way,
you're
again
we're
coming
from
or
breath,
yeah
I
guess
we're
all
coming
from
an
area
where
we
don't
know
or
understand
those
numbers,
but
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
understand
them
and
then
be
able
to
piece
them
together
to
funnel
them
into
the
resources
that
the
community
needs,
and
so
therefore,
whatever
you
have
then
we'll
find
out
okay.
So
why
does
scan
have
this?
And
why
doesn't
West
care
have
this?
E
Then
we
start
asking,
and
we
start
you
know
getting
more
information,
which
is
the
reason
why
we're
having
you
know
the
presentation
so
that
we
can
learn
more
and
know
what
you
have
any.
That
business
is
actually
very
good
in
regards
to
who
you
service
what
services
you
provide
and
what's
necessary,
because
we
can
tell
why,
at
the
glance
yeah
at
a
glance
what
and
who
is
doing
every
like
doing
what,
but
obviously
because.
D
Nobody
has
an
excellent
I'm
looking
at
them,
though,
share
it
with
the
different
stakeholders,
how
they
each
can
enhance
each
other.
But
getting
the
word
out
that
these
services,
you
know
mr.
Abdul,
presented
the
scan-
had
to
go
outside
of
the
Rio
because
they
weren't
using
some
of
the
services,
which
is
why
you
all
went
to
the
directory
but
I.
Think
and
that's
the
other
thing.
So
we
get
the
data
from
the
stakeholders,
so
we
can
have
a
presentation
to
to
the
judge
and
the
city
manager
moving
forth.
D
The
detox
now
letting
the
whole
community
know.
What's
there
already
and
we've
got
good
services
from
the
different
agencies.
Is
that
your
directory?
And
so
you
all
were
going
to
discuss
what
else
needs
to
be
done
with
it?
And
then
you
had
question
of
using
the
webpage
and
is
it
and
is
a
friendly
web
page
or
Facebook?
D
A
K
Of
course,
we
we
looked
at
whether
okay,
they
can
have
the
detox
which
is
medically
managed
or
they
can
use
medication
as
a
supermoon,
which
is
like
what
Anna
does,
which
is
what,
with
medication
in
that
good
princess
for
hopefully
a
juice
right
when
we
can
be
others,
but
so
then
they're
I
think
perhaps
the
data
it
will
be.
Regarding
you
know
those
kinds
that
have
those
disorders
that
are
substance:
users
that
are
in
that
real,
where
detox
is
needed,
and
then
perhaps
you
know
that
the
reproach
that
we
have
to
make
outside
of
that.
F
F
A
We
need
statistics
from
the
stakeholders
to
be
able
information
through
the
county
and
the
city
to
prove
what
it
is
that
is
needed
and
what
we
already
have.
So
we
don't
duplicate
even
more
and
present
this
by
January.
If
we
can
I
know,
we've
missed
the
budget,
the
budget
October
isn't
so
well.
We
could
at
least
get
the.
F
F
Another
type
of
detox
might
actually
be
more
preferred
with
the
community,
a
detox,
it's
open,
perhaps
for
those
clients
and
scan
or
other
agencies
that
that
know
they
need
to
help
and
want
the
detox
for
now
and
then
from
what
I
think
I
understood
from
maybe
from
the
from
cheap
Flores
and
from
the
dealer
is
that
there
there
might
be
a
way
to
get
certain
people
that
are
arrested.
C
F
If
they
agreed
to
go
to
the
cinema
there,
so
I
was
curious.
Maybe
we
should
have.
Maybe
we
should
have
a
presenter
or
two
just
telling
us,
Pro
or
or
cons
of
these
two
different
types
of
detoxes,
because
maybe
what
we
need
is
really
an
old
in
detox
for
now
and
then
maybe
later,
a
sort
of
a
lockdown.
The
detox
I'm
just
curious
want
to
throw
that
out
there
we're.
D
Sure
I
think
that
was
the
discussion
last
time.
Yes,
support
the
jail
system
with
individual
services
to
detox
there,
but
but
the
medical
assistant,
detox
treatment
center
has
to
be
the
programs
that
scan
he's
already
working
with
the
jail,
the
pillars
working
with
the
jail
to
go
in
already
and
provide
treatment
and
to
the
persons
in
jail.
Now
we
ever
do
develop
a
detox,
assisted
treatment,
detox
in
the
city,
then
someone
can
go
detox
there
and
then
go
back
as
well
and
so
there's
different
options.
But
right
now
we
don't
have
an
option.
F
Is
arrested,
yeah,
yeah,
I,
just
I
was
just
curious.
If
we
could
is
that
in
my
mind,
I'm
not
completely
convinced
because
of
what
I've
heard
the
last
meeting
I'm
not
gonna,
be
completely
convinced
that
the
lockdown
detox
might
be
the
way
to
go.
I
think,
maybe
maybe
an
open
type
of
detox
might
be.
Might.
C
F
Better
service
to
the
community
right
now,
if
we
can
get
people
that
are
arrested
to
agree
to
go
to
that,
if
they
leave
them
well,
there's
the
rest.
You
know
they.
Perhaps
we
could
at
our
next
meeting,
we
could
hear
from
Stan
and
they
could
do
a
presentation
on
on
the
on
the
parameters
of
the
detox
that
they're
suggesting
and
that
they
they
could
cover.
Maybe
we
can
invite
someone
from
the
jail
to
speak
about
how
we
could
work
a
program
where
someone
or
someone
were
arrested.
F
B
A
B
D
D
B
A
F
This
I
want
to
hear
from
police
station
that
this
is
possible,
that
they
could
I,
don't
know,
take
him
to
the
detox
center,
and
maybe
they
could
just
have
a
guard
stay
there
for
a
little
bit
to
make
sure
he's
detox
as
opposed
to
sending
them
to
the
hospital,
because
because
I
know
that
that
happens,
I
know
that
there
are
some
people
that
are
just
injured
in
some
way
they
have
to
get
medically
cleared
before
they
go
to
the
jail.
F
So
we
get
this
guy
I'm
assuming
this
is
how
it
would
happen,
the
officer
encrypted
for
long
cheap
tours.
Perhaps
the
officer
can
arrest
the
individual
who
is
higher
than
a
kite,
take
him
down
until
it
comes
to
the
ground,
and
then
you
know
at
that
point
in
time
he
can
give
them
a
choice.
Okay,
you
sign
this
document
where
you
agreed
to
be
in
this
detox
center
for
so
many
days
or
we
take
you
to
the
jail
I'm
thinking
that
might
work,
because.
L
B
B
E
E
You
know
I,
think
that's
to
their
discretion,
but
rather
for
justice
system
or
for
whatever
case,
if
they
might
have
been
picked
up
for,
but
I
feel
that
they
still
do
mean
something
and
so
at
the
jail.
There
is
a
medical
assessment
and
that
doing
the
medical
assessment.
Then
they
either
get
into
a
medical
tank
right,
a
medical
need
tank
or
they
go
into
the
regular
techs.
Is
that
correct.
L
A
K
E
E
Is
still
there
it's
just
having
to
Train,
possibly
the
staff
to
do
better,
I
guess
so,
maybe
perhaps
we
can
get
numbers
from
maybe
the
sheriff's
office
in
regards
to
how
many
people
on
a
monthly
basis
do
they
see
with
a
with
a
problem
what
they
need
and
then
going
from
there
and
do
they
or
do
a
habit
or
not.
Madam.
D
Chairman
is
where
these
the
thing
is.
It
is
an
excellent
point
and
it's
Canada's
right
tool.
We
do
need
to
assess
American
jail
already
has
the
medical
services,
but
they
here's
where
the
training
comes
in
I,
don't
think
they've
seen
addiction
as
a
health
issue,
I
mean
they
call
us
when
they
have
a
patient,
that's
coughing,
and
we
want
to
rule
out
that
he
has
TV,
and
so
we
go
immediately.
D
D
E
If
the
next
thing
would
be
from
there
is
find
out
whether
from
the
stakeholders
is
there
the
resource
of
allowing
an
employee
to
particularly
do
that
type
of
assessment
or
taking
care
of
these
individuals
while
they're
in
there.
For
the
meantime,
we
can
figure
out
that
there's
a
detox
coming
in
the
near
future,
or
you
know
hope
for
in
the
near
future,
but
right
now
we
need
to
I
guess
concentrate
on
that.
E
K
The
for
the
detox
I
know
that
it's
more
somebody
that's
specialized
with
detoxing,
usually
for
Charlie's
place,
or
somebody
I
mean
we.
We
link
them
directly.
They
do
the
interviews
directly
and,
of
course,
we
need
to
a
screening,
a
substitute
screen
where
we
can
look
at
history
last
time
of
use,
frequency
and
and
and
so
forth.
But
I
do
believe
that
there
is.
M
E
M
Of
these
things,
that
I
could
we
could
do
is
help
the
staff
that
was
at
the
jail
with
train,
getting
some
better
understanding
of
individuals
that
come
in
with
a
substance
use
disorder.
What
to
look
for
what
tools
they
can
use,
and
there
are
brief,
nothing,
nothing
major
like
an
assessment
type
of
deal,
something
that
a.
E
That's
what
I
was
asking
if
there's
anything,
any
support
that
you
can
provide
on
an
instance
just
so
we
can
start
getting
that,
because
I
think
judge,
Hale
had
or
no
judge.
My
Phoenix
at
the
last
meeting
had
a
really
good
program
already
in
place,
so
it
poorly
with
that
we
can
have
I
guess
the
success
of
individuals
who
are
going
through
all
these
different
different
tiers
and
are
able
to
get
rehabilitated
per
se.
E
E
That's
why
I
propose
that,
because
we
already
have
a
jail
facility
and
it's
already
in
existence,
and
we
see
and
I
think
we
can
work
with
them
closely
while
we
work
towards
because
the
challenges
right
now
with
funds
and
resources,
grants
or
whatever
completes
maybe
to
to
planet,
this
planning
of
that
I
think
everybody
have
a
really
good
idea
of
what
the
needs
are.
I
just
feel
like
you,
don't
have
to
spin
the
wheel
again,
you
just
possibly
do
to
to
lessen
the
problem
and
that
leads
with
the
jail.
Is
there
a
way.
G
To
find
out
what
the
job
is
currently
doing,
they,
for
example,
do
they
already
have
a
regimen
to
address
record
that
someone
may
need
to
touch
the
even
medication,
nothing
so
that
cold
turkey
so
critical
to
the
winter?
That's
why
I
think
you
know
the
program's
already
could
do
something
with
someone.
D
Doing
a
medical
assessment,
its
training,
the
medical
unit,
perhaps
no
one
would
position
of
charge
and
we've
had
discussions
again.
We
fed
up
with
TV.
We
have
to
Train
everybody
to
recognize
what
TV
is
so
now
they
screen,
and
then
they
call
us
that
this
may
be
we're.
Gonna
have
to
do
the
same
thing
with
with
addiction,
I'm
saying
a
screening
of
soul.
They
could
go
to
detox.
I
touched
its
training
business
back
there,
because
then
you
have
LPC
sets
can't
have
provided
it
and
other
agencies
as
well.
D
B
L
D
E
D
G
E
E
So
I
think
maybe
reviewing
the
the
previous
minutes
and
looking
at
where
we're
at
and
what
we
had
decided
and
what
our
goals
were,
because
I
think
we
really
narrowing
down
to
long
term
and
short
term
and
make
sure
that
we
are
than
that.
But
I
think
we
need
a
little
bit
a
little
bit
faster
and
I
think
the
jail
probably.
H
L
A
L
D
In
those
categories,
and
although
I'll
send
you
the
category
one
over
the
mobile
task
force,
the
other
one
is
this
woman,
and
then
they
want
to
try
new
things.
But
what
the
shirt
way
it
was
saying
putting
inmates
with
addiction
to
work.
That's
one
of
one
of
them.
These
are
all
pilots,
but
there's
evidence
that
it
could
work,
but
you'll
probably
be
contacted
and
will
probably
be
contacted.
Some
Thermage
because
of
your
current
contractor
they're,
just
gonna
increase
your
funding
because
they
need
to
get
it
out
fast
form.
D
A
L
We
find
here
so
with
the
detox,
we're
going
to
gather
statistics
and
they're
gonna
come
from
scan
and
image
month,
except
right,
well,
media
for
us
like
what
we
understand
is
the
number
of
people
that
we
serve
for
treatment,
they're
good
for
the
needs.
But
then
we
need
more
that
I'm
more
specific
to
people
that
come
to
you.
L
G
C
F
L
E
Pretty
talks,
but
what
we
have
to
fill
in
the
gaps
has
been
mentioned.
We
have
a
lot
of
stakeholders
and
they
all
are
duplicating
either
resources
or
services
rather,
and
you
all
can
work
together
and
then
we
want
to
know
where
the
detox
component
falls
in
and
what
the
need
is
that
we
can
present
that
we're
doing
several
things
within
that.
Let's
see.
E
L
Yeah,
because
we
can
give
your
numbers
right,
but
those
we
can
give
you
need
any.
If
you
want
follow-up,
then
also
you
can
look
at
out
from
then
that
would
be
different.
Then
we'll
have
to
play
sometime
look
at
the
different
programs
because
different
federal
grants,
for
example.
Yet
we
do
follow-ups
other
different.
L
L
K
A
E
Intervention
as
well
use
an
example,
Crimestoppers
has
a
way
of
measuring
how
well
we're
doing
or
how
bad
we're
doing.
Actually,
we
have
coming
to
any
calls
received
and
how
many
calls
we
followed
up
right
and
then
we
go
based
off
of
how
many
rewards
we
obtain
and
how
many
picked
up.
You
know
it's
a
a
cause
and
effect
as
to
what
happened.
What
was
he
you
know?
What
was
the
outcome
and
the
result
of
something
that
was
completed,
and
so
that's
what
in
essence,
what
we're
asking?