Thursday, June 26, 2025

Fix the Mental Health Crisis: Cyberbullying, Care, & Community Action

 

America’s Mental Health Crisis: What Must Change

Mental health across our nation is in alarming decline. Teen and young adult suicide rates have surged, with youth aged 10–24 facing a 56% rise in suicides over the past decade en.wikipedia.org+1kff.org+1. In 2023, over 46,000 lives were lost to gun-related deaths—including more than 27,000 suicides—often driven by underlying mental health issues publichealth.jhu.edu. Adding to this burden, exposure to gun violence—through personal experience or media—dramatically increases stress and suicidal thinking, especially in marginalized communities psychiatrictimes.com+6theguardian.com+6kff.org+6.


💻 Cyberbullying: A Silent Crisis

Our schools and online spaces are failing our kids. While nearly every state requires bullying policies in schools, laws follow, but lack enforcement and only rarely apply to off-campus digital harassmentstopbullying.gov+4cyberbullying.org+4findlaw.com+4. Heartbreakingly, cyberbullying has led to teenage suicides—remember Ryan Halligan, who was tormented until he took his own life from online attacks findlaw.com+2en.wikipedia.org+2theverge.com+2. It's time for Congress to enact comprehensive cyberbullying and online-harassment laws—including criminal accountability for platforms that ignore complaints leading to tragic outcomes.


🏛️ A Bipartisan Plan to Revive Mental Health Care

  1. Rebuild Psychiatric Facilities
    The deinstitutionalization of the 1960s left hundreds of thousands without care—many ending up homeless or incarcerated en.wikipedia.orgen.wikipedia.org. We must reinvest in modern psychiatric hospitals, while properly staffed and community-linked, to ensure intensive care when early intervention fails.

  2. Expand Community-Based & Crisis Services
    Mobile Crisis Teams (like CAHOOTS and STAR) have proven effective at de-escalating mental health emergencies en.wikipedia.org. Federal matching grants should support 24/7 mental health response teams statewide, helping communities across District 1.

  3. Boost Research, Telehealth & Training
    We need robust investment in research on trauma, loneliness, youth mental health, and the mental-health impacts of exposure to violence. Expand telehealth and mental health apps to reach underserved populations , and integrate mental health literacy into school curriculums to demystify conditions early and reduce stigma.


💬 Why This Matters

Our mental health is not just a personal matter—it’s a community imperative. Preventing suicide, reducing violence, and supporting recovery depends on a fully funded, proactive system. By combining strong anti-harassment laws, institutional care, crisis response, education, and research, we can reduce suffering and heal a nation in distress.


✅ Call to Action

Join me in championing a comprehensive mental health and anti-bullying legislative agenda—one that holds platforms and institutions accountable and ensures no one is left to struggle alone.

How SC District 1 Holds Government Accountable: Our Plan for Transparent Spending Audits

 Every dollar our government spends is your money—so we should audit it thoroughly, hold public hearings on waste, and demand transparency. Here's how we do it:


1. Multiple Auditing Agencies

I propose mandating multi-agency audits (GAO, Inspectors General, independent auditors) for every major federal, state, and local program. This ensures checks and balances, reduces the chance of oversight failure, and uncovers both duplication and fraud early.


2. Congressional Oversight Committees & Public Hearings

Once audits identify potential waste, Congress will form oversight committees to review findings. We’ll convene public hearings, bringing in officials, grant recipients, and on-the-ground staff to explain how funds were spent. They’ll have to either justify continued funding or return the money—not hide behind closed doors.


3. Strict Record-Keeping Requirements

All agencies will be required to retain full documentation—receipts, contracts, invoices, and financial records—for at least 10 years after project completion. This goes beyond IRS norms (7 years), ensuring long-term accountability and traceability.


4. Real-Time Tracking & Public Access

Building on the Transparency Act, we’ll launch a central tracking portal so any taxpayer—or media outlet—can see how funds are used. Unauthorized delays or withheld data will be met with financial and legal consequences.


5. Outcomes That Matter

  • Find and eliminate waste before it becomes entrenched bureaucratic leaks.

  • Empower citizens to participate in oversight—by watching hearings, submitting questions, or flagging issues.

  • Rebuild trust in government by showing, not just telling, that we’re accountable.

This isn't just good governance—it's people-powered oversight. Let's reclaim your tax dollars by making government work with complete transparency, rigorous oversight, and public control.