An influx of inmates from county jails has created a public safety crisis at Anoka-Metro Regional Treatment Center, prompting the state to take the controversial step of limiting new admissions at Minnesota's second-largest psychiatric hospital.
After a surge in workplace injuries and assaults, state Human Services Commissioner Lucinda Jesson notified law enforcement officials that Anoka-Metro is restricting admissions from county jails under the so-called 48-hour rule, which requires certain inmates to be transferred to a state psychiatric facility within 48 hours after being committed by a state judge.
The emergency measure, disclosed in an April 24 memo obtained by the Star Tribune, pits the state's largest agency against the Minnesota Sheriffs' Association, which lobbied for the 48-hour rule so that mentally ill inmates could move quickly out of jails and has argued that any effort to impede admissions likely would violate state law.
The suspension is also the latest signal of deeper flaws in Minnesota's mental health system, which has suffered from a chronic, severe shortage of psychiatric beds.
The conditions at Anoka-Metro, a 175-bed facility that treats people with complex psychiatric conditions, have become so dire that at least one state legislator has suggested bringing in the National Guard to protect patients and staff. The idea is supported by the public sector employees' union local that represents workers at Anoka-Metro.
"We absolutely need to restore order," said state Sen. Chris Eaton, DFL-Brooklyn Center, a former employee at the facility. "Right now, [Anoka-Metro] doesn't have the training or the staffing to deal with the violent people coming through its doors."
'We are under stress'
Though safety has long been a concern at Anoka-Metro, state officials and hospital staff say the situation worsened considerably after the Legislature passed the 48-hour mandate in 2013. The mandate, while heralded by law enforcement officials, required facilities like Anoka-Metro to admit jail inmates ahead of hospital patients with psychiatric illnesses. Staff at Anoka-Metro say the rule has turned the hospital into a dumping ground for violent criminals.
"We are under stress," said Deputy Human Services Commissioner Anne Barry. "And that stress is the product of the sheer level of seriousness and level of need of the people who are coming to us."