While May is Mental Health Awareness Month, “awareness” is no longer enough for families in Alaska. As state policy director for the National Shattering Silence Coalition, I witness the “standard of neglect” daily.
My adult daughter, Angelia, developed schizophrenia (no dual diagnosis) in 2020. I became her guardian and caregiver in 2023, and we have exhausted every resource since then — leaving Angelia stuck at the Alaska Psychiatric Institute since October 2025. Approximately $2,500 per day (as cited in recent State of Alaska FY 2027 governor’s operating budget documents). This equates to roughly $75,000 per month; $525,000 since October 2025.
Let’s do better, Alaska!
This systemic abandonment is more than a moral failure; it is a $343 billion annual “neglect tax” on our economy through ER cycles, homelessness and jail cells. Alaska faces dangerously long ER boarding times and a critical shortage of psychiatric beds.
We must move from criminal containment to clinical accountability, with a national standard of care that replaces the “right to be sick” with the right to be well.
— Krista Schooley, Soldotna
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Anchorage Daily News
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Anchorage, Alaska, 99503
Letter: Moving from mental health awareness to accountability this May – Anchorage Daily News
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