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From YouTube: Drug and Alcohol Commission Meeting, 10/03/2018
Description
The City of Laredo Drug and Alcohol Commission Meeting of 10/03/2018 was held at the City of Laredo Heath Department Conference Room located at 2600 Cedar Ave.
A
B
My
name
is
people
Kevin
and
I'm,
a
board
member
for
area
once
again
start
driving
and
shows
my
Segway
into
the
board
and
I
I'm
deeper
for
this
opportunity
and
to
share
some
of
the
experiences
that
I've
had
with
our
organization
and
see
how
I
can
be
of
help
to
this
organization
and
vice
versa.
Thank.
A
D
I
am
the
risk
Bank
and
administrator
for
locale
I've
been
here
for
about
a
month
now,
I
was
retired
like
yourself.
No
that's
what
I'm
after
every
90
minutes
and
I
mean
evening
relating
I
was
involved
in
a
research
project
with
Washington
under
inadequate,
so
we
did
study
done
in
Cheney
and
some
sort
of
uses
related,
page,
several
pregnancy
rates,
etc.
So
I'm
aware,
the
mood
for
detox
center
also
talked
to
Tommy
Stevens
gentleman
common,
and
she
also
sees
the
need
for
detox
energy
of
the
CPS
cases.
D
A
Part
of
you,
that's
what
we
need.
We
thank
you
because
we
can.
We
can
recommend,
but
we
don't
know
much,
but
if
we
have
it
would
have
stakeholders
in
partnership
without
anyone
to
come
along
and
help
us
actually
put
this
into
a
thick.
Have
it
come
to
fruition,
which
is
what
we're
looking
forward
to
so.
Thank
you
very
much
and
we
continue.
E
F
F
G
F
The
medical
detox
separates
to
federal,
we
had
the
doctors
and
the
nurses,
round-the-clock
and
medication,
given
they
went
ahead
and
did
it
social
detox
and
they
ran
it
for
a
number
of
years.
But
when
I
watch
they're
out
two
thousand
three
years
old,
they
forgot
to
turn
in
the
grant
for
the
monies
and
they
only
could
run
it
through
one
more
year.
Afterwards
and.
F
F
Staccato
had
when
they
folded,
so
they
put
up
a
proposal
and
the
concept
was
why
don't
we
have
an
empty
building,
has
an
empty
building
at
the
old
doodle
probation
department?
Let's
go
ahead
and
do
that,
and
so
they
asked
me
it's
just
to
kind
of
look
around
say.
Well,
you
need
to
have
a
medical
detox
right.
You
know,
I
gave
them
some
numbers
with
different
populations
yeah,
because
the
county,
the
county
commissioners,
right
and
I
said
this
is
what
you
would
take,
because
you're
going
to
need
at
least
full
blessing
or
full-time
lVN's.
F
G
F
Lucky
to
break
even,
but
at
that
time
you
know,
I
said
this
is
how
much
it'll
take
just
to
run
it
first
year,
because
we,
the
idea,
was
a
credit
right
we
wanted
to.
We
were
we
need
a
year,
and
then
we
can
look
for
funding
and
the
big,
the
big
group
of
people
that
were
in
it
for
the
hospitals.
We
started
having
meetings
and
any
was
involved
in
setting
up
those
meetings.
We
had
rich
Raymond
involved
in
setting
up
the
meetings
and
we
got
in
the
city.
The
city
was
involved,
the
county
was
involved.
F
The
idea
of
the
county
was
going
to
put
some
money
into
the
facility
to
kind
of
renovate
it
and
they
they
eventually
voted
the
calculations
like
$500,000.
Would
they
eventually
use,
but
not
true,
that
we
thought
that
you
use
it
for
the
treatment
center?
So
that's
where
the
treatment
center
is
located,
but
they
didn't
use
it
for
that
building
and
everything
kind
of
fell
apart,
but
the
ones
that
really
wanted
to
buy
in
or
the
hospital's
the
hospitals
were
willing
to
put
in
whatever
needed
to
get
done
because
they're
getting
overwhelmed
in.
G
F
F
But
you
know
when
I
did
all
the
original
measurement,
the
Sequoias
data
you're
going
to
have
to
cut
down
a
lot
of
these
concrete
walls
to
make
it
adaptable
and
the
cost
may
be
more
than
what
was
9
or
10
years
ago.
And
so
you
know,
you
know,
and
things
are
more
expensive,
the
other
option.
You
know-
and
you
know
he
said
knows
this
one
better,
because
you
know
she
has
built
places.
F
But
it
is
a
rather
expensive
proposal.
Just
if
you
look
at
just
the
number
of
nurses,
you
know
I
know
even
from
what
I
was
looking
at
the
budget
that
I
gave
ten
years
ago.
Nurses
aren't
getting
paid,
but
they
got
ten
years
ago
so
and
you
have
to
compete
with
the
hospital.
What
reason
ain't
MHMR
and
ideally
you
want
to
have
psych
nurses
yeah,
so
you
have
different
options:
I,
don't
know
how
viable
the
option
is
anymore
of
doing
it
on
you
know
where
Dutch
al
that
originally
talked
about.
F
We
have
the
packet
sort
of
the
price
near
the
city.
They
you
know,
we
don't
have
money
and
then
everything
there
drops,
but
the
reality
is
that
we
have
a
lot
of
people
dying
every
single
day.
We
have
we've.
Always
had
an
opiate
crisis,
you
know
back
even
when
our
stopping
Henry
about
two
weeks
going.
So
it's
a
leper
you'll.
F
Have
you
only
had
lessons
because
mothers
of
the
scam
right
they
had
to
have
only
adolescent
detox
that
mistake
that
error
and
back
then
we
were
running
the
facility
based
on
what
I
remember
with
nine
percent
of
our
clients
that
went
into
the
detox
and
came
in
for
the
residential
protocol
scan.
They
were
all
ID
health
users.
These
are
kids
that
were
writing
their
own
users
and
then
was
12
who
had
hepatitis
C.
Let
the
pledge
be
okay,
and
so
this
is
a
problem.
F
That's
existed
for
a
long
time
and
over
the
years
that
your
own
addicts
have
got
me
under
and
younger
and
I
believe
there's
different
problems.
You
see
the
different
agencies,
whether
it's
pillar,
whether
it's
can
you
see
hovering
in
the
kids
coming
in
for
different
issues,
not
only
substance
use,
but
editions
of
this
isn't
really
a
community
effort.
I'm
just
here
to
provide
your
history.
I
don't
have
any
change.
F
Well,
you
know
you
all
are
the
ones
that
have
solution,
I'm
glad
to
be
invited.
I'm
always
be
happier
providing
my
thoughts,
but
I
think
there
are
many
people
that
many
agencies
are
capable
of
doing
this
here,
yeah
and
I.
Think
if
everybody
works
together,
then
we're
going
to
find
a
solution.
That's
beneficent!
F
Another
event
that
happened
from
some
private
somebody
that
had
come
in
I
believe
one
that
I
know
they
try
to
set
up
at
the
hospital
and
within
a
year
they
fail
and
the
it
was
the
same
problem
that
that
that
when
I
was
at
scan,
we
had,
which
is
people
a
lot
of
times,
think
this
better
game
services,
something
else
somewhere
else
or
they're
a
little
apprehensive.
But
for
me
integrator
because
of
cultural
issues.
F
In
fact,
at
the
point,
in
order
to
make
sure
that
the
program
at
scan
the
detox
was
completely
full
at
all
times,
so
that
we
could
draw
down
the
money
that
we
activ.
We
have
a
trip
to
the
capital
two
times
a
week
to
fill
up
the
beds.
When,
when
I
would
tell
this,
will
the
school
administrator
said,
you
know,
I
can't
go
to
one
of
your
schools
and
pick
up
all
these
people
in
fill
up
the
best,
but
they
had
a
policy
not
to
refer.
F
So
there
was
this
a
lot
of
the
issues
that
we're
going
on.
No
one
was
working
together
and
this
is
just
an
opportunity
for
everybody
to
come
together.
Do
something
good
to
the
community,
and
you
know
I've
been
in
the
field
over
thirty
years,
I'm
61
years
old.
It
is
what
it
is.
You
know
this
is
a
as
I
write
off
the
consent
that
I'm
working
with
a
lot
of
new
counselors
that
I'm
training
the
hopeful,
hopefully
that
they
will
pick
up
where
you
know
people
like
believes
and
I
first
started.
F
C
Chair
of
I
think
the
benefit
of
councilmember
viedma
kind
of
leverage,
the
divisions
that
either
for
eight
months
reading
has
done
a
lot
of
commitment
and
their
part
asking
the
question:
what
do
we
have?
What
do
we
need?
They
invite
the
stakeholders
and
the
providers,
but
you
can
comment
on
your
hand,
scan
West
care
I'm
on
top,
that's
Behavioral,
Health
pillar.
C
We
don't
have
overwhelming
me
and
then
there's
gaps
in
the
process
of
care,
but
we're
here
we're
bringing
them
to
here
because
they're,
the
ones
we've
seen
the
problem
on
the
health
side
and
the
public
health
concern.
It
is
in
the
burns
just
absolutely
correct.
We
gave
him
data
and
I
think
we,
the
Commission,
has
the
data.
Over
the
last
five
years
we
had
a
hundred
and
ninety
overdose
death.
G
C
C
Some
are
using
synthetic
opioids
retinal,
but
some
were
mixing
a
good,
not
some
overwhelmingly
they're,
mixing,
on
the
one
hand,
an
opioid
heroin
and
cocaine
and
they're
both
of
the
opposites
and
alcohol,
and
so
they
also
run
the
risk
of
other
cold
infections
of
the
privacy
of
those
be
HIV
other
st
ives
as
well.
So
the
commission,
you
all,
have
chosen
a
new
group
we
do
have.
The
newest
bedroom
is
the
designee
of
councilman
Travis.
C
So
what
the
others
to
join
the
group
where
they
have
are
talking
to
people
providing
services,
the
expert
and
finding
that
what
we
need,
which
was
one
of
the
reasons
why
white
jesse
was
here,
but
the
county,
the
judge
was
invited
to
because
it's
going
to
take
all
regardless
of
how
we
proceed
with
recommendation
of
the
Commission
to
you
all.
It's
going
to
take
almost
at
the
table
to
look
at
what
resources
we
have.
How
do
we
go
from
here?
C
C
Part
of
the
reason
why
we
invited
the
shirt
and
this
to
the
front
law
enforcement
side.
The
commission
members
heard
from
LP
team
not
on
the
serves,
what
what
are
the
issues
they're,
seeing
whether
their
thoughts
on
the
party?
What
is
needed
and
I
think
you'll,
hear
in
preliminary
discussions
that
dictates
an
additional
serious
problem.
Good.
F
I
meant
to
be
wondering
that
forgot
that
need
you
mention.
We
went
on.
I
move
the
model
that
that
I'm
I'm
talking
about
a
budget
battle
suit
long,
because
the
social
detox
model
won't
work
with
a
number
of
alcoholic.
We
have
it's
too
dangerous
to
put
an
alcoholic
in
a
social
detox
program,
and
so
we
have
to
be
thinking
along
medical
detox
about
maybe
having
a
standalone
facility.
That's
built
or
needs
of
everybody
putting
in
because
that's
where
you're
having
problems.
F
You
were
having
people
come
in
hand
with
all
these
issues,
and
then
we
have
like
we've
seen.
You
know
with
a
colocation
project
that
we
have
for
the
city,
we're
seeing
people
try
a
crane
conditions,
which
means
that
we
have
not
only
mental
health
issues
and
substance
use
issues.
But
we
have
people
that
actually
had
active
HIV,
so
you're
dealing
with
all
those
issues
and
we're
seeing
a
lot
of
ivy
in
our
community
because
of
HIV
because
of
IV
drug
use
and.
G
F
F
F
A
lot
of
education:
instead,
we
have
to
look
at
the
reality
to
you
know.
My
primary
case
was
win.
60
percent.
My
cases
are
women.
The
men
for
the
vigil
mare
with
Benton
County.
They
come
in
with
crabs.
Anchors
underline
it
is
a
problem
because
realities,
one
for
women
essentially
uses
children.
What
it's
about
sexual
reason
and
I'm
sure
that's
the
same
thing
that
happens
when
you
get
agency
the
same
thing
we
saw
that's.
F
That
need
the
services.
We
have
to
do
something
that
we
don't
forget
them
we're
talking
about
we're
talking
about
Deepa
and
you
know
we're
seeing
them
yeah.
A
lot
of
a
lot
of
men
need
this,
but
you
know
my
god:
we
have
to
have
a
make
sure
that
there's
a
sufficient
place
to
the
women,
because
we
have
a
lot
of
women
that
we
see
in
the
drug
court
program.
We
saw
a
lot
of
women
in
the
total
patient
project
that
needed
help,
and
so
we
have
to
consider
how
we
didn't
reach
the
women.
G
H
H
Residential
facility
for
a
trolly
community
of
users-
and
you
know,
work
with
amateur
mark
and,
and
so
this
is
something
that
continued,
but
even
to
me,
I've
been
out
of
the
field
for
so
long
that
talking
with
me
through
the
cellar
she
was,
you
know,
presence
of
a
lot
of
changes
of
modalities
of
treatment
and
so
I
think
that
what
you
are
doing
is
is
a
great
basis
for
us
to
know.
What
do
we
have
make
sure
that
we
had
took
care
even
if
there's
any
cash?
H
You
know
that
that
all
the
agencies
could
be
moralize,
that
we
can
get
all
those
resources
and
plan,
because,
ultimately,
that
the
province
funding,
right
and
and
I've
had
a
conversation
with
judge
Hale
about
that
facility.
So
clear
enough
from
Jesse
that
maybe
might
not
work.
I've
also
had
meetings
with
mr.
survivors
there's
an
area
adjacent
to
a
border
region
that
belongs
to
the
housing
authority
where
we
were
looking
at
for
has
a
trailer
and
what
is
the
current
length
weight
with
leaders?
H
You
know
I
forget,
but
that
might
be
a
possibility
and
I
guess
if
we
can
identify.
You
know
that
the
priorities
are
the
cash
or,
if
there's
other
modalities
like
I,
said
I
what
you
were
mentioning
that
might
be
a
little
bit
of
not
so
much
about
financial
burden
in
some
of
the
ways
that
that
the
facility
personnel
can
be
structured.
I,
don't
know
about
the
county.
H
I
know
that
there's
some
funds
for
emergency
medical
treatment
where
I
have
no
idea
percentage-wise
or
what
have
you
on
my
part
and
I
also
spoke
to
the
mayor
before
coming
here.
If
you
can't
come,
you
have
our
full
commitment
to
try
to
see
that
we
can
prioritize
and
when
the
work
in
conjunction
have
been
working,
Witcher
and
the
other
members
as
well,
and
this
issue
with
identified.
H
You
know
several,
you
know
problems
that
with
having
gaps
also
in
the
community
and
it's
it's
difficult
right
now,
as
as
as
far
as
what
they
have
to
endure.
I
I
kind
of
try
to
argue
whether
also
just
about
two
weeks
ago,
I
had
a
client
that
I
just
happened
to
pass
by
my
office
on
the
weekend
or
people
up
and
when
I
went
to
visit
that
young
man
in
jail
his
eyes
world
over
so
I
didn't
know.
H
There
was
a
to
word
for
the
reason
that
week,
for
perhaps
starting
of
schizophrenia
and
all
these
things
you
know
come
together
with
a
dual
diagnosis.
So
there's
I
think
those
two
issues
are:
are
you
know
very
important
because
I?
Currently,
we
also
have
our
Lord
of
police
officers
having
to
go
very
much
baby
state
I
haven't
seen
and
just
is
Leslie
a
sense
there
of
three
days
nerves
like
a
fourteen
day.
We
cannot
our
our
police
officers
are
so
we
it's
an
emergency.
I.
H
Alito
went
there
and
it
didn't
work
so
now.
I
might
have
time
because
many
years
to
gain
work
and
my
family
but
I
think
they're
more.
You
know
positive
results
that
we
have
that
wanting
to
promote
up
in
order
here
we
have
the
only
facility
for
adolescent
treatment
and
so
that
we
ourselves
become
more
familiar
as
within
and
let
your
vision
educate
everybody
so
that
we
can,
you
know,
do
the
best
with
the
resources
and,
of
course,
work
together,
and
thank
you
very
much
for
your
time
because
generating
a
big
priority
for
today
and.
F
I
could
actually
say
you
know
and
then,
following
you
and
I
have
been
there
go
staffing
through.
We,
you
know
at
the
drug
court,
where,
where
recommendations,
because
back
there
become
then
mean
residential
services,
I
can
guarantee
you
that
he
said
a
scam.
They
could
have
a
program
whether
you
have
fifteen,
but
that
lucky
nowhere.
F
F
So
they
could
actually
have
three
or
four
times
the
size,
because
that's
how
many
people
we
refer
every
week
out
of
town,
so
they
can
have
a
huge
program,
but
we
have
to
send
them
out
of
town,
and
you
know
they're
always
they're,
always
like
every
time
we're
making
a
probe
of
you
up.
If
you
have
so
many
people
from
even
are
waiting
this,
so
you
know
they
can
have
a
huge
facility
and
because
we
need
it
so
view.
G
F
They
could
the
need
to
be
mad,
so
the
idea
really
is
working
with.
Whatever
providers
are
here
in
town
lizards,
whether
it
is
scan
or
a
pillar
or
a
combination
of
all
of
them,
working
together
to
provide
the
services,
because
you
know
we
have-
we
have
enough
clients
coming
in
I
would
lose
the
provision
today
and
I
was
looking
at
the
ethical
problems
coming
in
and
I'll.
F
G
J
J
Well,
first
of
all,
I'm
sure
quiet
for
the
record.
This
is
the
commander
also
treviño
job
division
and
she
made
my
name
is
also
the
captain
over
here.
Is
the
captain
and
also
happens,
live
and
she's
with
mental
health
coordinator,
so
she
handles
a
lot
of
our
mental
health.
Okay,
oh
very
touchy
steps
out,
there's
a
crisis,
so
you
can
imagine.
Where
can
I
start?
You
know
we
we
have.
We
have
a
big
problem.
J
The
relative
recently
we
had
and
I
won't
mention
the
name
because
of
litigation,
but
recently
we
had
two
inmates:
dials
okay
and
this
inmate
them
exactly
what
you
said.
You
know
drug
addicts,
you
know
they.
They
have
TB
drug
doses,
they're
brought
them
through
the
inside
and
they
have
done.
You
know
step
into
our
jail.
So
once
they
do
that,
then
we
have
a
big
liability.
You
know
in
trying
to
you
know,
give
them
all
the
medical
attention
everything
that
we
can.
J
G
J
A
solution
is,
you
know,
it's
getting
the
facility
again
funding,
that's
a
solution,
but
you
know
we
have.
We
have
a
big
problem
because
of
just
confirmed
to
just
out
time,
I
get
my
numbers
correct,
but
about
eighty-five.
Ninety
percent
of
the
people
that
step
into
our
jail
have
a
mental
or
drug
problem.
You
know
so
you
can
imagine.
You
know
that.
That's
what
we'll
deal
with
right
now
we
have
in
observation
in
detox.
J
We
have
about
eight
and
one
time,
one
given
time
and
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong,
guys
that
are
there
every
day,
I'm
not
so
we
have
eight.
That
are
an
observation.
That
means
that
there
are
a
detox
there
there
there
you
know.
That's
you
know
the
first
three
or
four
days
of
the
most
dangerous,
as
you
all
know
that
and
to
us
it's
a
big
liability,
you
know
and
trying
to
keep
them
safe
and
trying
to
keep
them
from
dying
on
us.
You
know
we're
not
we're,
not
a
hospital.
J
J
Sometimes
when
they're
facing
kept
up,
the
murder
and
murder
sometimes
would
keep
a
little
bit
longer
because
of
the
state
and
the
attorneys
trying
to
get
the
coordinate.
You
know
straighten
out
as
far
as
Tina
get
ready
for
court,
but
you
know
we.
We
have
a
big
issue
with
that.
It's
something
that
we
have
always
struggled
with.
You
know
they
have
always
said
that
the
sheriff
the
most
important
job
that
he
has
you
know
you're
running
until
that's
when
we
have
more
problems,
any
any
jail.
So
you
can,
you
can
think
about
it.
J
Any
gel
in
the
state
of
Texas.
The
gel
is
the
biggest
problem
that
I
serve
has.
Of
course
we
have
other
responsibilities
that
we
have
to
deal
with,
but
that
one
brings
a
lot
of
problems
because
of
my
ability
and
someone
dies
on
it.
They
said
they
serve
to
take
care
of
them.
You
know
when
you
know
that
they're
detoxing
they're
dying
on
us,
they're,
sick
and
then
when
they
don't
tell
us
that
they
have
an
illness,
because
we
ask
them
that's
common
practice.
J
We
ask
them
what
the
problems
is,
what
kind
of
medical
problems
have
and
they
don't
tell
you,
but
then
how
you're
going
to
know.
So
you
know
that's
that's
what
happens.
So
it's
a
very,
very
serious
situation
that
we
have
and
you
know
but
can
attest
to
that.
I.
Don't
know
if
my
commander
wants
to
say
if
you
were
something
that
I
didn't
tell.
G
K
He
I
got
here
14
years
ago,
when
it
was
a.
It
was
like,
as
the
rows
are
becoming
more
potent
and
said
that
these
inmates
come
in
and
they
don't.
You
tell
us
what
their
health
issues
is
so
detox
in
itself.
It's
a
pilot
stage.
The
body
goes
through
that,
and
these
guys
are
playing
Russian
roulette
there
they're
just
hoping
they
can
get
through
it
this
time,
some
of
them,
don't
they
diamonds
and
it's
something
that
we
can't
prevent
and
one
we
need
a
new
facility.
K
C
J
What
I
want
everybody
to
understand
that
that
you
know
we
do
ask,
and
we
very
much
you
know
what
they
you
know:
I
want
to
make
sure
that
I
cleared
that
up,
because
I
mean
we
were.
You
know
we
have
to
ask
them
by
law
and
is
there
anything
wrong
with
what
coming
illness
to
play?
They
choose
not
to
tell.
K
Us
we
send
them
for
medical
clearances
when
you
understand
when
they
come
in
they're
high,
so
everything's
fine,
three
things
a
car,
it's
not
so
that,
second
or
third
day
that
you
know
they
start
reacting.
You
start
going
to
seizures.
You
know
the
diarrhea
and
all
that
going
up,
and
by
that
time
there
are
we're
responsible
for
them.
J
No
radio,
no
little
burritos
a
unique
this
like
any
other
border
city
heroin,
is
very
potent
it's.
It
doesn't
get
breakdown
like
it
does
in
other
cities.
You
know
by
the
time
it
gets
to
Houston
Dallas
San
Antonio
they
what
we
call
slang
they
step
on
it.
In
other
words,
they
break
it
down
and
make
it
less
potent,
so
they
can
be
able
to
shoot
more
and
anything
and
so
on.
So
on
burrito.
You
know
the
heroin
that
they're
using
this
very
content
and
it's
it's
very
deadly.
J
We've
had
inmate
correcting
about
a
week
ago
where
we
released
one
and
a
few
days
later
he
died.
You
know
because
they
go
up
there
and
they
in
debt
and
they
die
and
well
they.
You
know,
that's
one
of
the
sophistic
that
you
said
so.
You
know
I
mean
it's
it's
just
the
way
it
is.
You
know
we
play
it.
You
know
every
day
you
know
because
of
you
know
they
come
in
and
they
were
able
to
save
their
life.
They
go
out
and
then
they
come.
C
Back
see
also
I
mean
I
know
that
one
of
them,
one
of
you
mentioned
about
them,
come
of
overdoses,
some
of
them.
They
would
really
talks
and
they
made
it
and
they
got
a
jail.
I
mean
they
go
out
there
and
do
and
they're
used
to
using
the
same
amount
of
job
they
were
using
when
they
were
hooked
on
it
and
they
go
out
there
and
they
try
it
again.
That's
been
over
themself,
that's.
F
What
you
have
like
that
I
think
it's
likely
a
33%
chance
of
someone
after
they
get
out
of
residential.
Yes,
then
they
can
overdose
another.
One
thing
that
wasn't
mentioned
is,
and
we've
been
talking
about
it
all
year-
is
the
fentanyl
I
have
clients
that
themselves.
People
you
know
are
using.
We
have
that
situation,
you're
mentioning
you're.
F
F
We
were
talking
about
getting
the
dingo
credited
that
they
would
do
the
triage,
those
that
would
be
stabilized,
it
could
be
stabilized,
eventually,
f,
go
and
we'll
doctor's
orders
and
they're
the
ones
we
need
detox
that
we
brought
in
but
n
we
figured
okay,
we'll
have
16
16
bags,
that's
what
we
looked
at
the
semester
where
the
county
said
this
tables
people
in
sport
at
that
time,
16
beds,
and
we
multiply
that
by
X
amount.
We
came
out
to
do
whatever
that
is
16
x
times.
F
F
By
the
way,
when
we
saw
a
spike
in
DWI
cases
that
in
this
last
three
year
cycle
and
we
had
the
drug
program
wallet's-
and
you
know
we're
seeing
you
know-
42
percent
of
our
clients
with
all
the
qualities
of
floor
monitors
from
here-
and
those
are
people
who
leave
would
take
it
from
jail,
yeah
kind
of
the
tail
result.
The
votes
are
really
serious
cases
worried
about
that
and.
A
G
C
J
Pilot
the
commander
end
of
that,
but
I
know
that
we
had
scanned
every
day
they're
there
every
day
matter
of
fact,
when
I
walk
in
I
see
someone
different,
but
who
that
you
know
so
it's
people
from
scan.
So,
yes,
we
do
have
something
going
every
day.
You
know
we
have
our
doctors,
whatever
the
service
telemedicine,
that
we
can
lose
them
any
cable,
the
border
region
just
about
every
every
day.
She.
G
J
Them
to
manage
a
commission
as
we
go
under
them,
and
then
this
guys
have
to
do
an
investigation
to
find
out
what
happened
and
sure
enough.
You
know
I'm
like
wait
a
minute.
You
mean
to
tell
me
that
these
people
didn't
get
treatment
so
as
soon
as
they
go,
they're
like
no,
they
got
treatment.
Here's
all
the
records
because
we.
K
H
K
Would
be
under
digit
the
court
level
you
know,
and
maybe
when
the
judge
gives
the
court
order,
you
know
for
the
repeat
offenders
to
say:
hey
you're
going
to
be
released,
but
these
are
the
conditions.
I
don't
know.
It's
comedy
do
that
they
order
a
certain
class
in
a
certain
places,
the
general
order
as
a
condition
of
probation
of
the
condition
of
the
sentence.
So
there
would
be
you
know
with.
L
K
M
J
M
L
In
Henderson,
Texas
right
now
and
she'll
be
out
in
probably
December
and
that's.
My
worry
I
obviously
concerned
about
deep
thoughts
and
we
knew
detox.
But
when
a
parent,
like
myself,
has
had
a
recurring
issue
with
their
child,
like
you
know,
twelve
times
point
going
back
and
she
started
in
269
she's
24.
L
G
L
L
Don't
know,
but
you
see
it
in
the
attitude
so
you're
still
listening
to
the
same
music
and
you're
still,
you
know
having
that
same
type
of
attitude,
I'm
wondering
well,
maybe
they
do
need
that
type
of
other
counseling
and
it's
just
not
of
a
facility
where
our
city
is
paying
them
to
take
her
to
get
cured,
but
it's
just
a
money-making
facility
for
them
and
they're
not
really
getting
the
right
counseling.
So
who
knows,
and
if
we
can
do
that
here,
we
can
keep
them
here.
L
Keep
the
money
here
and
find
a
way
to
get
a
lockdown
facility,
because
eventually
they
will
you
know,
I
saw
I,
saw
it
happening
when
they
should
send
her
into
love.
Of
course,
you
got
into
a
situation
over
there
with
a
guard,
fired
the
guard
and
sent
her
back
here
to
get
in
jail,
so
I
mean
there's
just
it's
a
very
complicated
issue.
You
know
it's
from
all
social
economic.
You
know
background
and
what
gets
to
me
is
that
a
lot
of
these
people
and
women,
when
their
parents
don't
give
them
any
more
money.
G
G
N
L
L
Hire
them
they're,
not
reliable,
booster
hire
them,
and
so
we
can
catch
them
early
on
and
I
can
almost
detail
the
time
when
it
happened
and
after
happened
after
a
rape,
so
I
wasn't
aware
she
was
late.
You
know
when
she
was
that
young
but
I
think
that's
when
you
see
a
lot
of
that
happening
and
when
you
go
in
and
then
I
switched
her
from
school
from
something
to
United,
then
she
started
meeting
people
there
where
they
were
giving
her.
L
You
know
lady
Tom
purses
giving
money,
and
this
isn't
you
know
when
they're
young
and
so
that's
how
they
start.
And
then
the
judge
says:
hey
me
better,
because
she
was
fed
up
speaking
and
so
to
go
with
with
this
guy,
and
then
they
get
him
to
the
bull
dance
at
private
parties,
and
you
know-
and
they
have
that
fact,
when
age
and
they
start
getting.
You
know
people
like
that
involved
with
the
rabbit
hole
you
go
down.
I
got
a
cylinder
down
in
your
loss.
You
don't
know
how
deep
II
went
in
you
know.
L
E
F
To
treat
concurring
aggressively
and
one
of
my
pet
peeves
and
I
I've
had
many
arguments
for
the
vigil
are
I
about
the
need
to
provide
more
comprehensive
services.
We
do
not
have
we
have,
but
two-and-a-half
private
practitioners
or
psychiatrist
into
how
we
were
doing
that
telemedicine.
We
have
is
a
MHMR,
but
they
have
a
party
population.
The
best
program
that
I
haven't
worked
in
was
a
federal
probation,
cooperated
for
nine
years
and
federal
probation
paid
for
all
the
mental
health.
Counseling
and
Paul
was
like
psychiatric
work
at
all
the
medication.
F
O
O
O
G
P
A
A
That
is,
everyone
has
a
stake
and
what's
happening
everyone
in
here
about
a
matter
of
one
as
a
major
obstacle,
and
until
we
get
to
approach
someone
or
ask
someone
to
write
a
grant
to
help
us
with
this,
I
foresee
that
this
is
going
to
be
difficult
to
get
the
amount
of
money
and
for
all
of
these
lVN's
and
our
ends
and
everybody
else.
Doctors
and
everybody
else
needed
it's
going
to
be
married
for
and
built
and.
L
Built
well
Colonel,
I've
talked
to
for
the
Martin
limonada
and
I
talked
to
also
one
of
them
experienced
and
they
they
were
happy
because
I
was
telling
them
there's
nothing
here.
Can
you
help
me
do
it?
They
said
well,
just
get
your
fun
with
you,
free
in
and
we'll
help
you
because
there's
nothing
like
that.
So
they're
actually
looking
for
something
real
and
mean
it
to
help
so
I,
don't
know
if
those
we
put
in
there.
L
C
F
K
F
I
N
I
I
F
G
I
G
F
Time,
I
look
for
a
grant.
You
know
especially
to
the
drug
court
buttons,
for
whether
it
was
a
city
Laredo.
You
know
we
have
been.
You
can
do
the
troll
now
for
over
seven
hands,
which
is
injectable
naltrexone
and
that
works
really
well
and
now
Medicaid.
Let's
take
that.
So
that
is
really
the
wave
the
future,
but
you
know
we're
looking
at
wanting
to
detox,
but
there
probably
won't
be
any
monies
available.
I,
don't
see
it.
The
idea
really
is
okay.
F
O
F
That
will
bite
in
are
the
hospital
they
will
always
buy
it
in
the
big
s,
will
do
it,
whether
the
city
and
the
county
don't
put
anything
into
it.
It's
not
gonna
happen.
Is
that
simple?
You
know
because
scan
is
doing
all
they
can.
They
they
Amal,
probably
at
least
seven
eight
nine
grams
and
I.
You
know
the
city
does
what
they
can
to
alert
us,
what
they
can,
but
it's
still
not
enough.
I
mean
every
single
program,
I'm
sure
runs
at
100%
capacity
and.
H
G
F
Time
we
had
meetings
and
I.
Think
dr.
Bell
is
part
of
that
group.
The
last
group
standing
was
the
hospitals.
Everybody
else
backed
out
the
county,
the
city
big,
backed
out
the
Capitol,
because
they
had
other
terms
of
the
priorities.
At
that
time
you
know
I'm,
you
know
you
know
he
looked
back
six
seven
eight
years
ago,
whatever
was
going
on
to
the
city
whatever's
put
on
the
copy
those
other
priorities.
F
This
has
to
be
part
of
a
budget,
that's
annual
in
the
city
in
the
county
and
not
you
know
we
can
be
talking
like
this.
I
mean
how
many
times
that
we
have
this
meeting
to
sum
up,
we've
had
there
you
know
years
and
years
ago
we
have
this
meet,
you
know
and
we're
doing
the
same
thing
over
and
over
and
over
again,
and
it's
all
talk
and
no
action
and.
G
F
The
city,
the
county,
understand
that
they
have
to
put
their
money
in
and
that
it
will
help
their
community
in
many
different
ways
and
save
money.
Then
you
know
it
has
to
be
handled.
It
can't
just
be,
and
you
have
to
find
a
budget
for
it
and
the
hospital
will
buy
it
because
it's
gonna
save
your
money.
You
know
and-
and
we
will
all
get
better,
but
you
can't
count
on
Sam's
anymore.
Our
Tech's
DSHS
live
on
Maui
dick
Jeff.
There's
they're
not
going
to
give
us
some
money
for
this.
F
It's
not
the
old
days
and
they're
doing
a
lot
of
Monday,
there's
eight.
What
how
many
was
18
hundred
million
for
medically
assisted
treatment
that
they
and
everything
is
now
for
full
current
disorders,
all
the
graphs.
Now
you
have
three
co-occurring
disorders,
so
it
can't
just
be
LCDs.
You
have
to
have
healthy
sees
everything
in
the
last
gate.
C
C
Erica
that
the
Commission
has
to
come
out
with
a
report,
never
in
the
nation's
and
you've
been
in
the
fact-finding
mode
and
then
the
next
remote
job
I
think
this
time
that
they
don't
effectiveness
in
updating
what
services
are
here
and
getting
that
out.
It
is
a
better
already
an
accomplishment,
but.
G
C
Jesse's
right
and
that
now
everybody
who
is
involved
from
from
the
commission
members
to
the
providers
to
the
stakeholders
getting
together
to
say
that's.
Why
is
your
your
item
of
what
for
the
next
steps?
And
yes,
you
can't
it
can't
just
be
one
end
in
the
city
in
the
county
is
probably
invited.
The
judge's
office
have
to
be
part
of
it.
Yet
I've
been
in
meetings
with
the
mayor
and
with
just
in
the
past,
with
the
hospitals,
where
we
already
have
two
good
vested
CEOs
who
wanted
to
community
good.
A
H
So
as
there
is
a
small
percentage
but
its
attacks
in
that
way,
it's
all
the
time
it's
going
to
have
the
money
in
another
and
for
treatment,
so
we
will
have
to
build
the
case
of
the
evidence
and
statistics
so
that
the
community
can
be
informed
in
an
order
of
us
having
a
family
members
and
friends,
and
so
if
they
reach
this
level
of
an
epidemic.
First
of
all,
we
need
to
educate
the
people
that
is
I'm
not
voting
for
adding
these
many
district.
Then
they
will.
H
K
If
you
do
your
math
reliability
having
two
guards
four
inmates
that
have
to
go
in
there
yeah
the
hospital
bills,
and
we
have
to
pay
first
they're
like
what
do
you
want
somebody
bags
on
us
there's
options
to
come
along
with
it,
the
traveling
back
and
forth
the
mileage
one
to
San,
Antonio
back
and
forth,
to
give
them
the
money,
so
they
can
treat
our
community
I.
Think
when
you
put
all
that
money
together
shoulder
to
shoulder
the
voters.
F
I
had
I
made
reservations,
sta
min
number
years
ago,
so
him
how
much
just
you
usually
do
the
troll
state
of
community
to
about
a
five
hundred
sixty
five
thousand
over
the
period
and
it's
a
the
community
in
jail
and
different
things.
So
that
is
the
way
to
the
future,
but
you
know,
and
I
am
going
to
go
and
really
ask
the
expert
he'll
talk
to
you
settle
because
I
consider
the
expertness
correct
me.
My
mom
show
them
you.
F
F
I
F
And
the
reimbursement,
and
then
you
have
insurances
and
you
can
have
contracts
with
different
counties
like
the
counties
that
we're
sending
people
to
out
of
town.
So
you
can
have
all
that.
So
eventually
you
have
an
extra
pot
of
money,
I,
remember
Rick
or
our
director
working
he
with
a
huge
audience
joke
of
because
you're
like
mr.
Drysdale
everybody.
Every
time
you
have
a
chip.
Client
comes
in
and
he
goes.
Your
eyes
are
turned
in
dollar
bill,
because
you
know
we
could
make
extra.
F
Money
so
I
believe
that
if
we
have
an
initial
investment
and
we
have
a
sound
entity
that
can
manage
it,
we're
good
the
Denver
to
be
able
to
bring
in
some
money
not
just
to
Medicaid
but
their
insurance
to
contract.
We
had
a
lot
of
extra
revenue
not
only
at
the
Florida
State
Center,
but
at
scam
by
contracting,
with
different
counties
and
different
things.
Because
of
you
have
it.
People
are
going
to
come
in
and
it'll
it'll
work,
but
it's
a
it's
a
long
process.
Well,.
G
I
I
H
F
Is
so
you
know
the
Veterans
Court
program
that
the
additional
has
you
know
we
have
all
in-house
counselors,
the
doctors
are
from
the
VA
and
we
have
we
need
somewhere.
We
can
send
it
all
the
VA
clinic.
So
that's
not
as
much
of
a
problem
as
what
we
handle
the
drug
court
and
and
where
we
do
have
a
problem
is-
and
this
is
we
have
so
many
clients
in
the
drug
court
program
to
have
personality
disorders
and.
G
F
L
F
It
but
I
really
believe
that
if
you've
got
the
seed
money
in
you,
you
know
whatever
agency
or
agency,
and
this
is
a
thought
that
you
know
we've
had
for
years
that
that
there's
enough
for
all
the
agencies
to
come
together
and
work
together
as
one
team
and
and
I
think
it'd
be
successful.
You
know
whether
you
have
scan
and
pillar
and
WestCare
everybody
can
pull
into
resources
and
get
it
done,
because
there's
not
going
to
be
that
the
these
grants
are
pulled
in
this
this
money.
F
G
H
This
is
part
of
the
root
of
the
term
where
we
have
such
a
big
concentration
of
poverty,
because
you
laid
out
remember
agent,
you
have
to
be
employed,
but
if
you
know
how
to
scale
also,
where
were
you
going
to
get
so
depressed
from
the
past,
I
mean
ask
you
and
they
offered
money
for
genital
it
anymore.
So
if
you
have
time
you
know
such
as
a
musician.
H
So
if
we
can
look
at
what
Melissa's
company
does
to
start
the
rehabilitation
when
they're
in
jail
understand,
you
know
the
prosecutor
might
take
months,
but
if
we're
least
activities,
training
and
vocational
skills-
and
you
know
trying
to
get
him
this
skill
so
when
it
comes
out
I
mean
so
before.
Let's
say
we
have
all
stuff
that
I
think
the
stuff
I'm
not
that
will
integrate
it
because
we
have
people
that
might
serve
state
time
and
then
they
go
with
the
Federals.
And
you
know
they
have
double
conviction
for
concurrent
record.
H
But
let's
say,
for
example,
they
went
to
a
dealer,
they
have
been
to
the
penitentiary
and
they
are
welders.
They
were
trying
to
be
welders,
but
they
come
out
and
they
don't
know
how
to
start
their
own
business.
So
if
we're
able
to
empower
them
to
be
able
to
provide
for
the
companies,
learn
how
to
do
that,
I
think
Baker
has
a
program
like
that.
Those
are
some
of
the
things
that
we
could
in
the
literary
decade.
There
would
build
something.
Let's
start
targeting.
G
H
F
Dr.
Pinhas
property
and
I
told
them
no.
No,
no.
My
marker
baby's
been
trying
to
sell
it
since
the
1988,
no
mine,
but
they
went
and
they
hired
a
consultant
from
out
of
town.
They
were
going
to
do
this
and
there
were
an
included
vocational
program.
There
I
mean
the
plan
looked
nice,
but
I
pull
the
see
us.
This
is
really
unbelievable.
I
said
it's
not
going
to
happen.
You
know
not
especially
not
in
that
facility
as
good,
and
so
that
was
one
of
the
attempts
to
do.
F
K
You
look
that
I
honestly.
Thank
you.
It
can
become
a
round
robin
here
if
we,
if
the
courts
could
involve
like
judge
Hale
them
where
they
sentence
them
to
actually
have
to
go
to
the
detox
to
have
to
go
to
rehab.
Well,
the
community
get
paid
back
after
that.
If
they
also
put
part
as
a
work
program.
Thank
you.
Gonna
do
100
hours
so
that
wasn't
given
to
them
for
free
they're,
gonna
work
for
it
as
well,
and
the
government
you
could
put
them
in
city
parks.
G
K
K
H
I
was
passing
by
metal
on
Saturday
and
I
saw
this
man
like
working
with
socks,
honey
with
the
thing
from
the
residents
from
the
hospital,
and
he
was
just
you
know,
with
his
charts
no
belt
and
it
was
falling
down
and
he
had
some
cuts
on
his
face.
So
he
kept
on
talking
and
I
was
like.
You
know.
Hopefully
me
like
make
sure
what's
happening,
but
I
didn't
follow
men
today,
as
I'm
driving
to
my
office.
You
know
the
welcoming
back
to
Laredo
you're,
exposing
himself
again
guys
and
I've.
H
G
F
Didn't
good
thing
here
that
I
believe
that
you
know
I
need,
because
that's
of
the
homeless
population
I
believe
that
scan
just
got
funded
for
five
years
for
homeless.
The
right
does
that,
but
right
so
we've
got
some
money
there
to
take
care
of
that
that
we
did
not
have
in
the
community
forums.
I
am.
H
C
For
us
at
the
jail
window,
with
some
of
them
come
with
mental
health
issues
like
we
mentioned
them
possum,
we
had
a
few
officers
that
get
assaulted
by
them,
and
what
do
we
do
when
we
have
the
charges?
We
know
that
just
not
for
them
that
needs
to
be
someone.
Hospital
I
mean
help.
So
if
I
had
the
charges
to
them
is
they
must
aim
while
they're
in
jail,
yeah
and.
D
G
F
Well,
I
can
tell
you
what
what
is
gonna
help
in
the
future
because
scan
to
stuff
the
mental
health
awareness
treatment
grants
where
they're
going
to
go
out
and
I
believe
that
their
charge
will
be
to
go
in
and
trained
police
officers
first
responders
to
be
able
to
mental
health
issues,
and
then
former
crisis
a
crisis
number
right
yeah
and
make
any
now
we're
just
talking
about
that.
Two
weeks
ago,
yeah.
F
Going
to
be
a
big
help,
because
you
know
I
have
unfortunately
lost
clients
the
to
some
things,
because
they
will
not
understood
to
have
a
mental
illness.
And
it's
a
shame
because
you
all
have
to
protect
yourselves.
And
you
know
you
know
you
don't
know.
What's
going
on
anything
off
your
family
things,
you
know,
but
it's
hard
to
make
those
decisions
so
now
to
take
a
decision.
K
C
F
I
It's
going
to
be
the
instructor
for
the
program
is
sandy
coordinator
and
she's
got
a
doctor
and
professional
counseling
right
now,
she's
in
Dallas,
getting
trained
so
she'll
complete
the
training
this
week
and
then
we'll
start
moving
out
to
offer
the
services.
First
we
have
to
get
the
first
responders
trained
and
then
we're
going
to
from
them.
We
need
to
pull
the
crisis
team
together.
There
is
it's
totally
volunteer
basis,
so
that's
gonna
be
our
process
for
it.
I
So
as
soon
as
sandy
comes
back,
probably
the
latter
part
of
this
month,
we'll
start
reaching
out
to
different
agencies
offering
the
trainings
and
then
we'll
the
crisis
team
and
there's
always
you
know,
people
that
are
very
interested
in
being
you
know
part
of
the
crisis
team.
You
know
we've
already
even.
I
Agency
we've
got
some
staff
that
are
LPC
counselors
that
are
ready.
You
know
to
be
part
of
it,
so
I'm
hoping
we
can
get
some
from
law
enforcement
or
the
fire
department
from
the
Sheriff's
Office
to
be
part
of
the
team,
and
then
the
United
said
it's
a
comprehensive
training.
They're
gonna
have
to
go
through.
So
that's
the
other
thing.
We're
gonna
have
to
work
with
law
enforcement
because
they
are
going
to
have
to
spare
their
staff
to
go
through
the
training
that
we'll
be
providing
and
we
can
accommodate
all
the
different
agencies.
I
You
know
we
have
to
dirty
in
the
morning
just
two
or
three
hours
or
late
in
the
evenings
and
split
it
over
weeks.
Will
you
know,
will
do
it,
but
hopefully
we
can
get
staff
trained
so
that
they
are
that
our
first
responders
so
they're
more
aware
of
the
mental
health
issues
and
how
to
work
with
these
individuals
and
not
to
trigger
them
and
make
the
situation
worse,
but
to
intervene
and
calm.
The
situation
down
would.
I
Can't
be,
the
only
thing
is
they're
gonna
have
to
go
through
the
whole
training
and
get
certified.
It
has
a
certification
process,
it's
an
evidence-based
practice
so
and
that's
not
we're
having
one
instructor
trained
right
now,
one
person
that
will
be
training
in
the
community
and
this
will
be
going
on
for
the
next
three
years.
It's
a
three-year
grant,
so
that's,
basically
what
she
will
be
doing
will
be
training
and
putting
crisis
teams
together.
You
know,
like
the
shirts
department,
might
want
to
have
their
own
crisis
team
just
in
the
jail.
I
You
know
they
might
want
to
have
one
crisis
team
per
shift.
That's
funny!
You
know
we'll
work
to
what
meets
their
needs.
The
police
department
might
want
to
set
it
up
a
little
bit
different.
You
know
they
might
just
want
the
police
officers
that
say
work
on
the
weekends
in
the
night
shift.
You
know
the
deal
more
with
these
situations
will
assist
them
and
put
in
their
crisis
team.
The
same
way
with
the
EMT
from
the
fire
department
will
work
with
them
also
and
see
how
they
want
to
put
their
crisis
teams
together
and
and.
H
M
A
G
C
G
C
G
C
H
H
One
of
the
ideas
was
to
have
a
boss
or
a
double
decker,
inter
to
keep
training
to
the
parents,
because
it's
usually
the
discuss
that
we're
gearing
up
to
single
moms,
a
lot
of
it
has
to
do
with
is
so.
The
parents
can
learn
how
to
you
know,
model
the
behavior,
their
expectations
for
scarce
or
financial.
You
know
education
is.
M
H
H
A
C
G
C
And
they
updated
the
directory
and
then
you
or
that
we
now
have
two
master
level
of
interns
that
are
going
to
do.
The
second
part
of
that
directory.
That's
going
to
include
the
detox
and
rehabilitation
facilities
that
the
radio
has
been
working
with
feeding
area
like
from
the
valley
to
corpus
to
San,
Antonio
and
they're,
going
to
focus
on
cost.
C
C
So
definitely
we
don't
have
that
part
of
the
directory.
The
second
part
of
that
is
a
rendering
on
that
and
then
the
other
information
at
one
minute
share,
and
so
you
need
to
try
to
have
this
prepared
for
the
next
meeting.
So
he
does
have
the
the
original
proposal
for
the
triage
center.
When
they
were
at
the
table.
You
guys
have
that
he
is
going
to
be
working
on
the
Easter,
be
modifying
and
updating
like
saying
a
budget,
because
back
then
the
compliment.
C
G
C
And
and
the
inaudible?
Yes,
yes,
absolutely
in
a
lot
of
yourself,
Joe
I-
think
we
don't
have
them
for
500
hours
each.
So
it
will
be
utilizing
that
time
for
them.
But
if
you
also
did
mention
to
let
the
Commission
know
that
that
West
guarantees
to
come
to
the
table
and
do
what
needs
to
be
done
to
to
bring
that
to
fruition.
Thank
You.
F
Well,
it's
no
I
think,
that's
you
better!
Look
at
it!
You're
talking
about
there's
a
difference
between
the
adolescent
detox
that
might
have
really
bring
it
up.
You
know
other
than
that
scan
at
it,
and
that
was
the
only
one
that
the
state
has
ever
had.
I
wanted
to
focus
on
the
history
of
the
of
the
adult
detox,
which
is
what
we're
really
talking
about.
So
you
know
all
I
can
tell
you
from
the
heddle.
Doesn't
detox
is
that
it
costs
a
lot
of
money
and
we've
barely
made
it.
F
You
know,
we've
been
very
broke,
inna
right
and
that
will
give
a
lot
of
support
from
anywhere
and
with
a
different
contract
source
can
was
able
to
get
you
know,
but
there's
certain
things
that
always
have
to
be
done.
You
gotta
have
doctors,
you
have
to
get
medical
protocols,
you
have
to
have
the
nurses
and
all
that,
but
no
I
was
talking
more
about
the
history
of
the
adults,
I
that
I
excite
away
from
the
adolescent
stuff,
because
that
really
is
it's
totally
different.
F
You
know
it
was
part
of
a
residential
treatment
program
that
we
needed
to
have
a
detox.
Well,
we
went,
we
went
after
the
state,
we
went
up
back
then
he
said:
listen
I
to
the
Commission
on
top
drug
abuse
and
told
them.
You
know
that
rate
of
had
the
highest
rate
of
adolescent
and
elk
users
in
the
state
of
Texas,
based
on
the
data
that
we
were
getting.
So
you
know
when
I,
when
I
left
the
scan
in
the
back
in
2002.
F
That
was
a
statistic
you
know
and
we
act
those
problems
we
had
to
testify
and
then
Henry
put
a
writer
on
a
bill
that
forced
the
detox
to
be
built
all
right,
and
we
were
fortunate
enough
that
we
were
able
to
keep
it
running
up
until
he
moved.
He
moved
along,
but
I
mean
now.
I
didn't
mention
that,
because
that
Lilly
doesn't
go
with
this,
the
idea
is
yes,
you
have
that
doctors
and
nurses
I,
you
know
I,
don't
have
any
nurses,
we
have
it.
The
deer
unit
I
got
leaders
Luanne
over
here.
F
I
G
G
G
I
I
K
F
I
F
Always
a
problem,
you
know
and
and
there's
a
lot
of
us
here-
that
you
know
people
in
private
practice.
I
said
big,
wonder
you
know
you
guys
have
been
here
for
a
long
time.
I
got
that
they
come
in
my
office.
I
go!
Oh,
you
have
a
psychiatrist
here,
yo
yeah
we've
been
here,
we
don't
advertise,
but
you
know,
and
and
so
there's
a
lot
of
services
that
are
underutilized,
and
so
yes
I
did
forget
that
little
piece
of
history,
where,
where
Louisville
has
its
place,
st.
Joseph's,
it
was
close.
P
P
I'm
just
curious:
we
can,
you
may
not
know
the
answer
to
the
to
the
dock,
but
ballpark
clear
how
many
up?
What
kind
of
facilities
medical
lockdown
facility
locked
out
a
little
part,
how
many
beds
we
need
to
be
available
to
have
one
or
two
but
still
vacant
when
you're,
at
full
capacity.
When
we
wouldn't
talk
about
our
society,
because
I.
F
F
F
I
Way
the
standard
start
you
you
need
to
do
you
need
to
just
start
with
12.
It's
because
that's
the
most
effective
good
you're
gonna
have
to
have
the
same
amount
of
staffing,
whether
you
have
12,
where
you
have
40.
So
when
it
comes
to
having
the
doctor
as
a
medical
director
having
a
physician
assistant
or
a
nurse
practitioner,
that's
going
to
be
able
to
go
into
admissions
and
having
your
RN,
so
you're
gonna
have
to
find
a
number
between
12
and
30
or
40
or
whatever
number
you.
I
F
Were
going
by
based
on
the
side
of
what
they
were
looking
at
and
so
the
one
side
was
12
1016,
which
size
was
20.
They
wanted
to
want
to
maximize
it.
You
know
I
said
well,
let's
go
for
whatever
we
can.
Maybe
we
can
get
this
facility,
because
at
that
time
I
thought
the
county
was
going
to
enrich
the
facility.
Now
we're
looking
at
10
years
later,
I,
don't
big
inconvenience,
you
been
there,
people
there
know,
but
there's
no
way
it
can
be
your
burgers.
F
Maybe
10
years
are
going
good,
but
not
now-
and
so
so
you
know
are
thinking
okay
well,
do
we
do
this
20
people
tip
and
you
want
to
spend
as
much
money,
buddy
cells
right
at
certain
point
in
time
you
have
to
look
for
your
staffing
patterns
because
of
your
name,
but
when
I'm
talking
about
seven
to
ten
nurses,
I'm
talking
about
like
twelve
who
would
talk
and
when
I'm
talking
about
the
the
staffing.
Does
that
mean
that
I
gave
you
the
four
full-time
lb
into
three
lVN's?
F
C
F
F
G
F
J
F
G
F
F
No
was
it
had
a
mansion
and
it
had
a
pool
house,
and
it
happened
all
these
different
play,
plus
of
the
places
that
he
would
rent
to
to
all
of
the
people
that
needed
things
just,
but
it's
a
beautiful
piece
of
land,
but
but
now
he's
botrytis
Alexis
1988.
He
threatens
the
lives
of
each
of
our
four.
The
facilities
in
Iran
inhalers
a
news
program.
It
was
elastic,
it
wouldn't
last.
H
K
F
Are
people
mean
this
is
a
little
bit?
It
would
be
typically
three
or
four
days
of
detox
three
days
of
extra
stabilization
under
their
deep
stabilize
right
and
you
would
move
out
so
so
when
we
were
getting
the
numbers
of
how
many
people
could
be
seen
a
year
and
said.
Well,
we
have
12
that
they're
sixteen
doctor
20
here
the
number
you
just
multiply
multiply
it
right,
but
yeah
because
yeah
you
know
did
they
depend
on
also
non
substance
of
their
use,
and
you
know
what
they're,
what
they're
using
them
so
you're.
F
Well,
you
know
what
it
could
be
because
they
have
so
many
people
might
need
it.
Okay,
we
we
can
hardly
get
in
Charlie's
place.
You
can
hardly
get
back
right
the
new
week.
We
can't
get
a
bet
because
they're
going
to
see
specialized
emails,
first,
they're
gonna
see
IV
Air,
Arm
users,
and
so
then
you
have
someone
that
has
a
serious
cocaine,
addiction
they're
not
going
to
get
in
or
an
alcoholic.
You
know,
and
so
it's
very
different
are
seeing
these.
G
C
F
Well,
what
we
do
is
like,
for
example,
we
have
make
a
lot
of
referrals
as
far
as
in
the
drug
court.
When
I
say
we
Ward
you
in
drug
court.
We
make
a
lot
of
referrals
to
send
me
that
at
the
same
time,
we
would
work
with
them
to
see
they
wanted
the
vivitrol
Chuck
okay
and
then
we
give
them
on
them
to
the
trial.
Either
they
got
better.
B
C
House,
the
homeless,
chronically
homeless,
they
come
with
mental
health
issues.
My
time
with
drug
substance,
abuse
and
I
had
that
problem
exactly
what
she
said
it
does.
It
takes
like
two
to
three
weeks
just
to
give
them
a
Dean
time.
It
takes
probably
another
two
months
before
this
is
like
every
court
I
probably
were
lifetime
entirely
sound,
so
no
time
without
a
charge
placer
it's
chronic
your
work,
so
don't
get
the
business.
This
is
the
problem.
C
F
P
I'm,
just
trying
to
figure
out
comedy
facility
that
we
would
need
to
recommend
to
the
city
of
accounting,
the
hospitals
and
everything
and
when
I'm
theorizing
here
is,
if
we
had
a
facility
of
24
beds,
I
know
that
the
cost
is
probably
outrageous,
but
I'm
not
think
about
that.
Right
now,
I'm
just
curious.
We
have
a
facility
of
24
beds,
the
Metropole
say:
if
that
was
our
detox
center,
then
I'm
guessing
we
do.
We
wouldn't
have
drops
of
a
scenario
full
of
these
detox
banana
juice.
Is
that
true?
No,
our.
B
K
But
well
the
sad
part
about
this.
They
come
to
do
crabbing
right.
How
would
you
house
them
and
a
rehab
facility
out
there.
P
G
P
P
Lose
you
if
the
town
center
took
that
potential
liability
off
of
your
on
your
hands,
or
at
least
lessened
it.
The
terrified,
be
interested
and
in
donating
some
soldiers
or
cement
up
some
some
Betty's
to
watch
this
place
and
make
it
a
lockdown
facility.
These
can
hold
our
economy,
so
that
may
reveal
either
need
to
send
these
deputies
to
resit
at
a
hospital
or
they
need
to
need-
and
you
may
even
have
I
guess
it,
but
I
would
leave,
definitely
not
need
everything.
Also.
K
Know
they
believe
me
if
the
workload
so
they
can
concentrate
on
it.
Then
we
still
haven't
meet
the
state
array
shuttle
1
to
48.
So
we
can't
just
grab
that
officer
and
say
we
don't
get
the
details
that
split
them
over
here.
We
still
gotta
move
the
whole
facility,
the
population
right,
but
it
wouldn't
repeat
the
liability
of
one
dying
on
us
or
you
know
getting
seriously
injured
or
problems
are.
F
E
F
F
F
F
I
F
C
They
turn
on
that
yeah
and
on
your
question
for
sure
I
mean
if,
if
the
city
kits
kids
built
for
sure
you're
getting
security
with
this
I
mean
they're
at
the
Joe
they're
detoxing.
But
you
know
some:
they
belong
to
other
gang
members.
A
we
know
that
we
can
make
them
out.
Yet,
oh
that's,
gonna,
be
that's
gonna,
be
another
challenge
to
them.
For.
F
Sure
you're
gonna
need
security,
but
I
think
you
know
well
I
think.
The
thing
that
does
need
to
be
clarified
is
that
you
know
my
thought
was
we're
looking
to
do
a
detox
in
the
community,
which
is
that
exactly
we're
a
non-profit
or
Troopa
nonprofits
run
it
that
could
be
licensed
by
jail
or
car.
That
would
be
done
where
everybody
comes
in
voluntarily.
We
can't
have
a
lockdown.
You
know
we
would
be
that's
a
whole
different
story
and
you
have
to
choose
what
are
we
headed?
F
N
G
C
Have
some
information
is
sure
I'm
sure
that
mr.
deeper
will
probably
share
there
anything
here,
I,
don't
know
if
you're
aware,
but
our
facility
has
is
changing
locations.
Our
participants
have
already
moved
so.
The
only
offices
that
are
left
is
just
thymus
and
myself,
so
we're
so
they're
waiting
for
our
corporate
Amulek.
But,
however,
he
has
had
conversations
with
Catholic
Charities
on
upon
leasing,
disability
and
they
that
building
is
set
up
as
a
single
room
occupancy.
C
Facilities
so
now
it
really
would
be
worth
considering
as
a
possible
site
for
it
trucks
because
they
have
I
mean
with
just
a
minor
upgrades
like
camera
installations.
You
know
they
have
offices
there
already
they
have
two
of
maybe
like
duplexes
is
like
oh,
but
it's
like
too
bitter.
So
it's
really
like
four
bedrooms
are
for
life
on
24-hour
staff
or
something
I
think
that
you
and
the
Sun
it's
all
blobstore
and
solid.
C
G
G
I
G
I
Them
yesyes
on
your
shoulders,
the
one
that
we
usually
did
the
analysis,
and
you
know
it
was
that
we
you
have
to
have
them
in
an
open
area.
So
the
thing
you
do
do
12.
You
know
you
will
move
somehow
once
you've
got
to
symbolize
that
to
the
first
three
of
days
they
can
move
on
into.
You
know
semi-private
roads,
but
the
first
three
days
you
have
to
keep
them
where
you're
able
to
observe
them.
C
F
I
mean-
and
that
might
be
all
well
and
good
for
residential.
But
what
do
you
know
it's
talking
about
and
I
guess
that's
of
one
thing:
there
was
a
nurse's
station
that
the
adolescent
beam,
toxin
and
multi
times
you
have
this
open
area.
The
nurse's
station
have
a
has
a
Plexiglas
window
that
you
know
you
can
look
into
the
open
area
see
what's
going
on,
the
nurses
are
they're
able
to
to
handle
it.
When
we
were
talking
about
really
we're
gonna
do
with
a
county.
That's
the
way
who's
going.
F
Area
where
the
nurses
could
just
look
at
everything,
and
so
we're
talking
about
knocking
down
every
single
one
of
the
walls,
so
we
could
create
that
open
space,
and
so
that
would
be
the
type
of
operation
you
can't
do
it
in
a
in
a
hospital
setting
just
like
with
a
closed.
No,
no,
you
can't
do
it
have
to
be
like
kind.
P
F
That
cloud
and
every
judge
he'll
have
the
idea
was
to
triage
somebody.
The
believes
would
bring
them
in
if,
if
somebody
was
ready
to
go
out
or
they
hadn't
really
committed
a
crime
because
they'll
say
there
were
all
those
urges,
you
know
it
toxicated
after
they
were
stabilized
and
leave
those
that
were
arrested.
If
they
weren't
violent
offenders,
then
they
would,
they
would
stay
in
they'd,
be
magistrate
or
something
whenever
they
can
stay
there.
F
K
F
P
F
Have
people
waiting
there
to
go
to
residential
treatment?
You
don't
have
a
month
two
months,
appointments
or
month,
whatever
yeah
I
mean
you
know,
I
mean
you
know
now,
I
think
the
county
has
a
an
extra
judges
can
magistrate
that
I
write,
I
heard
on
one
so
I
mean
make
it
do
something
like
that
and
but
you
know
that's
in
the
future.
The
first
thing
is
the
only
decide,
but
it's
going
to
be
where
it,
where
it's
going
to
be,
how
it's
gonna
be,
and
then
you
know
we
go
from
there.
F
Those
are
things
that
we
can
figure
out.
I
will
let
you
know
later,
but
they
have
a
say,
okay.
Well,
we
got
to
make
sure
okay,
this
is
detox
in
the
community.
Is
I'm
going
to
be
a
lockdown
and
it
is
the
new
medical
unit.
This
was
what
it's
been
a
need,
we're
going
to
start
off
with
12
140.
Then
we
can't
do
40,
obviously,
but
we
could
start
off
with
a
small
number.
You
know
and
see
how
successful
it
is
and
then
build
from
that
when
we
started
but
I
use
this
program.
F
K
L
K
C
I
mean
the
way
I
see
an
immediate
arrest
system
and
it's
a
violent
offense.
They
can
lifting
they're
gonna
have
to
come
to
jail
because
then
you're
gonna
put
the
facility
in
jeopardy.
The
nurse
Innes
and
yes
just
alone
I
mean
us
there.
We
have
a
close
to
six
forty
fifty
office
working
ship
and
I'm,
talking
like
on
the
floors
everywhere,
administration
and
I've
never
seen
me
have
full
body
there.
C
K
P
And
I
was
just
curious
that
a
commander
phone
say:
you
know
the
jail
of
the
the
sheriff's
office
at
one
time
proposed
this,
this
new
jail
to
be
built
with.
How
do
you
do
you
think
we
had
in
stock
center?
We
built
the
peacock
Center
and
one
do
you
think
that,
though
I
guess
could
be
built
in
in
a
similar
place
and
maybe
could
be
built
in
a
way
that
perhaps
could
do
could
be
added
on
to
in
the
future,
or
is
that
just
I'm.
K
Just
curious
as
possible
I
mean
with
the
land
the
way
we
have
projected
it
at
the
way.
So
we
have
now
it
was
so
we
can
be
what
is
yet
usable
for
the
next
generation
we're
just
going
to
have
pods
after
that,
so
as
a
population
or
a
no
groom,
I'm
hotter,
yet
it
wouldn't
it
wouldn't
carry
the
burden
of
the
hunters.
They
don't
want
to
carry
the
burden
of
that
one
patil.
So.
P
B
B
K
The
right
geographically
art
art
I
mean
it
was
to
get
it
out
of
the
city
and
figure
it
out
the
population
we're
trying
to
go
out
there
and
where
it
wouldn't
be
around
the
citizens.
So
you
put
something
out
there.
I
mean
it'll,
be
usable,
especially
by
us
I'm.
Just
us
alone.
You
don't
want
to
use
a
probable
uses.
Yeah.
You.
G
F
Know
I
think
that
it's
this
sort
of
stated
you
all
need
to
have
a
detox
and
it
needs
to
be
locked
down
and
I
think
that
it
serve
as
saying
do
you
also
do
something
if
you're
doing
a
new
jail,
but
that
doesn't
take
away
from
the
community
needs
to
do
something
on
profits?
So
you
know
let
the
jail
part
be
in
a
jail
part,
and
you
know
everybody
can
get
together
figure
out
how
it's
going
to
be
funded.
But
you
know
it
doesn't.
C
Matter,
parent
interest
of
time,
we'll
we'll
click
this
together
the
two
models
and
ribbon
with
his
last
thing
that
clarifies
that
it
is
two
issues
and
one
of
the
things
you
all
wanted.
The
Commission
is
within
the
jail,
but
fear
lockdown
and
part
of
having
services.
Yes,
I.
Think
the
urgency
which
I
see
is
the
community
detox
because
there's
nowhere
else
to
go
for
that
and
support
the
programs
that
are
here
and
that's.