A Unique Chance for Long-Term Care

A new homeless facility in Utah is committed to meeting diverse needs.

This post is Part 4 of a series. Part 1 can be found here, Part 2 can be found here, and Part 3 can be found here.

On July 24, 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to move those living in homeless encampments around the United States into treatment facilities with both mental health and substance use services (1).

This is my fourth and final article analyzing the executive order and how it is being implemented in Utah. I share facts about this new facility, as well as my personal experience, having lived outside for 13 months in 2006-2007 as a homeless person in Los Angeles, suffering from schizophrenia.

A National Unmet Need

One of the most tragic things I have encountered in the field of psychiatry over the years is the lack of care for many vulnerable people who are forgotten by our mental health system. Many experience a “revolving door” where they are either living on park benches or under bridges, transferred to hospitals for short periods of time when their psychosis becomes worse, and then picked up by police for petty crimes such as looking for food in trash cans. Then the cycle begins again, to go round and round, sometimes for decades.

Read the full piece at Psychology Today »

Stay Informed


Sign up to receive updates about our fight for policies at the state level that restore liberty through transparency and accountability in American governance.