Mental Health Ribbons Meet Resistance

Highlands Current Audio Stories

Mar 29 2024 • 5 mins

Beacon council to consider alternatives, plus meeting decorum A group of mental health advocates will be unable to tie ribbons on lampposts along Beacon's Main Street to recognize May as Mental Health Awareness Month. Doing so violates the city code, which prohibits posting flyers, stickers or other items on city buildings, trees or lampposts and utility poles unless authorized. That was news to the Mid-Hudson chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), which hung the white ribbons in Beacon from 2014 to 2022. Representatives from the organization asked the City Council during its March 18 meeting for permission to tie ribbons and place lawn signs as part of its promotion this year. Doing so reminds passersby of the importance of mental health and helps reduce the stigma around asking for help, said George Czornyj, executive director of the Mid-Hudson chapter. The nonprofit said volunteers would remove the items by the end of May. Following NAMI's presentation, City Administrator Chris White objected, saying the city has undertaken a multi-year campaign to clean up its lampposts. There was no further discussion that night, but during the March 25 workshop several council members said they hoped the city could compromise with NAMI. White said on March 25 that, since his hire in 2021, cleaning up visual clutter on Main Street has become one of his signature issues. "We have removed - and this is no exaggeration - thousands of flyers, lawn signs, stickers and other things," he said. The city has already repainted half of the decorative lampposts on Main Street and is about to paint the other half, White said. Sixty traffic signs have been replaced because stickers made them illegible. At the city's request, Royal Carting also empties Main Street trash cans six days a week instead of four. Three years ago, when he permitted NAMI to hang ribbons, White said he was less familiar with the city code, plus "there was no reason to stop it because the poles were full of everything." Council Member Jeff Domanski said he appreciates the efforts to clean up Main Street, "but with a public health issue like this one, drawing as much physical attention as you can to it is essential." Domanski, Dan Aymar-Blair and Paloma Wake said they would contact NAMI to see if the group would consider an alternative method of getting its message out. "It's important to elevate this, to normalize talking about it," Aymar-Blair said. White noted that Beacon spends $80,000 each year to have a behavioral health specialist work with its police department and in 2022 gave NAMI a $3,400 grant for its peer-to-peer counseling program. "I'm glad to do real action that supports mental health," he said. "Thirty years ago, you had no other way to get the word out. We have so many ways to communicate now that don't involve putting visual litter all over Main Street." White also said he would have to allow other groups to post their materials if he permits NAMI, "so I've just said 'no,' and your [city] code supports that." Domanski argued that there's a distinction between mental health and other issues. But "the moment you start making distinctions, you've already violated the law," said Mayor Lee Kyriacou. Czornyj said Wednesday (March 27) that he is open to working with the city on an alternative. "We want this to be a win-win for all," he said. Meeting decorum The City Council hasn't changed its rules on decorum at meetings, but said it may enforce the rules more strictly. The council was flooded with public comments in recent weeks as it considered a resolution calling for a cease-fire in Gaza. The March 4 meeting began with a 3-hour public comment session that grew heated at times, including when a woman from Wallkill began shouting at the council after she went over the three minutes allowed for each speaker and White unplugged the microphone. Council Member Pam Wetherbee acknowledged on March 25 that many people came from outside Beacon for the ...

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