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Crisis Care Centers Initiative

A countywide network of crisis care centers, the stabilization of mental health residential treatment, and a well-supported behavioral health workforce.

The Crisis Care Centers Initiative, approved by King County voters in April 2023, begins implementation in 2024 to create a countywide network of five crisis care centers, restore and expand mental health residential treatment beds, and strengthen the community behavioral health workforce.


The nine-year levy also aims to promote continuity of care by linking 988, mobile crisis teams, and other behavioral health resources to support people’s recovery. 

The Crisis Care Centers' Implementation Plan 

In partnership with councilmembers, cities, providers, workers, and community members, we are putting this plan in action to open the first crisis care center as soon as possible. Early investments this year will boost the county's existing crisis services ahead of the centers opening.

Read more: King County begins implementation of Crisis Care Centers Initiative 

Calendar of Events

What Communities Need to Know: September 18 at 1-2pm on Zoom

DCHS is hosting a virtual conversation with community members to talk about the CCC Initiative, next steps for establishing the five crisis care centers, and how community members can engage in the process locally. Please register to join us!

What Providers Need to Know:

DCHS hosted a briefing for providers on July 26, covering plans for procurement, including upcoming Requests for Proposals, funding opportunities and highlights from the implementation plan. 

Slides are available upon request. Please email: ccclevy@kingcounty.gov 

Watch the briefing here:

Behavioral Health Workforce

The Crisis Care Centers Initiative is investing to train more workers to help people with their mental health or drug and alcohol use. Here are resources and ways to get involved. 

Join our Workforce Development Learning Collaborative Meetings. The King County Behavioral Health Workforce Development (KCWD) Learning Collaborative provides a platform for attendees to convene and exchange current projects, best practices, and facilitate collaboration within the realm of behavioral health workforce projects. Please email bhrdworkforce@kingcounty.gov to register for the monthly meeting series!

Explore a job in behavioral health. Career resources include:

Funding Opportunities

Residential Treatment Capital Facility Request for Applications - Ongoing

A Request for Applications (RFA) is open to support organizations to make necessary capital improvements, repairs, renovations, and/or expansions in behavioral health treatment facilities located in King County. The goal of these investments is to improve access to and availability of behavioral health services by assisting with eligible capital costs. The open RFA closed for the first round on February 27, 2024 and will close quarterly thereafter until the Final Close Date of July 31, 2025.

Awards are expected to be made the month after each quarterly close date. For more information about this RFA or to apply, please visit this link.

Requests for Proposals Now Open to Behavioral Health Agencies to Support Their Workforce - Due October 16

Growing our behavioral health workforce and investing in the people who treat people is a key part of the Crisis Care Centers Initiative. This RFP released on August 12 will help stabilize King County’s network of behavioral health providers by making investments that help cover the cost of professional fees, training programs, development, clinical supervisor expansion, and also support the wellbeing of workers through activities that promote physical, mental, and emotional health. At least 25 percent of this investment will be used to increase the representativeness of community behavioral health workers within the network.

This RFP is open to all King County Integrated Care Network and Behavioral Health – Administrative Services Organizations (BH-ASO). This is a unique opportunity for our community behavioral health agencies to secure vital resources to support current staff and grow their teams to better serve and represent our diverse communities.

For full RFP details and to apply, visit: www.zoomgrants.com/zgf/ccclbhcp

About the Crisis Care Center Initiative

The Crisis Care Center Initiative will:

  • Create Five Crisis Care Centers: Distributed geographically across the county, the centers will provide walk-in behavioral health care access and the potential for short-term stays to help people stabilize, depending on needs, with one center specifically serving youth.
  • Preserve and Restore Mental Health Residential Treatment Beds: Prevent the loss of additional mental health residential treatment options and work to increase the availability of psychiatric residential treatment beds for longer-term stays with supports.
  • Invest in the Behavioral Health Workforce: Create career pathways through apprenticeship programming and access to higher education, credentialing, training, and wrap-around supports. It will also invest in equitable wages for the workforce at crisis care centers.

Check out these short videos to learn more:

Download a one-pager about How to Connect to Crisis Services Today

Community Survey

A new community survey is available in English, Spanish, Vietnamese, Ukranian, Russian, Korean, Punjabi, Chinese Traditional, Chinese Simplified and Amharic.

Please take 5 minutes to take it today, and share this link widely with friends, family, coworkers and neighbors across King County: https://forms.office.com/g/DWj1K1CfFf

We want to hear from as many different communities and voices as possible.We are still hosting conversations and presentations too, virtually and in-person. Please reach out to Idabelle Fosse, Community Liaison at: idfosse@kingcounty.gov to schedule a conversation or for graphics and materials to help share the survey.

Frequent questions

Right now, King County is without a walk-in behavioral health urgent care facility. Only one 46-bed behavioral health crisis facility is in operation for the entire county, and may only be accessed by a hospital diversion or a referral from first responders or mobile crisis teams. Residential treatment beds are going away, and the behavioral workforce is dwindling. The Crisis Care Centers Initiative will build out a more functioning and connective system that provides people with a care continuum, as with physical health.

The five Crisis Care Centers (CCC) will be distributed geographically across the county so that first responders, crisis response teams, families, and individuals have a place nearby to turn to in a crisis. King County will not unilaterally site facilities in the four regional zones identified in the levy.

Instead, King County will partner with cities and providers to identify opportunities to site the Crisis Care Centers. Key components of this process include procurement processes by which providers locate appropriate sites, as well as consultation with cities to identify potential sites, to ensure geographic distribution throughout the County as described in the ballot measure ordinance. The levy outlines support for centers through new construction, repurposing existing buildings, or a mix of both. The implementation plan includes more specifics on the siting process for the centers.


The levy ordinance provides for the possibility of incorporating within the Crisis Care Centers model renovation of existing buildings into crisis care facilities and complementing crisis facilities that currently exist, though few relevant facilities exist in King County today. The levy ordinance also provides for the potential to leverage other funding to accelerate accomplishment of the levy’s purposes or complement levy investments.


DCHS expects the crisis care centers and residential treatment facilities envisioned for this levy to be implemented in phases, seeking proposals for two Crisis Care Centers in 2025, one more facility annually in 2026, 2027, and 2028. Initial models anticipate having the first Crisis Care Center open in 2026, with the full suite of facilities expected to be operational by 2030.

New mental health residential facilities and crisis stabilization facility components of Crisis Care Centers are expected to be 16 beds each, to ensure that these facilities can receive federal Medicaid funding for relevant services they deliver. King County does not expect behavioral health walk-in facilities or 23-hour observation units to be subject to Medicaid’s 16-bed limit. Therefore, the capacity of each facility will vary based on provider proposals.

The ordinance requires at least one center specialize in serving persons younger than nineteen years old. In learning more from providers and community members, ensuring youth are served in home or similar settings where they can be surrounded by their support system is critical to their recovery. For context, 22 percent of King County’s population (or 1 in 5) is youth under 19, but only 4 percent of those assessed for involuntary treatment in 2022 were in this age group.

The specific treatment approach and age range for the youth crisis care center will be designed further in partnership with youth providers and based on state law and best clinical practices. According to RCW 71.34.530, a minor who is 13 years old or older may initiate an evaluation and treatment for outpatient and/or inpatient mental health services, substance use disorder (SUD) treatment, or withdrawal management without parental consent. The minor has the right to receive services in the least restrictive setting. A youth is admitted for inpatient treatment only if the professional in charge of the facility concurs with the need for treatment and the youth meets criteria for this level of care. Any minor 13 years old or older may receive outpatient mental health and/or SUD treatment without the consent of the minor's parent/guardian.


Specific details on referrals between centers will be developed in implementation planning, in partnership with provider operators, and dependent on state licensing restrictions. The Crisis Care Centers levy is designed to serve people in King County without geographic restrictions. The intention of the levy would be for youth who come to an adult-focused crisis care center to be connected with the youth-focused services they need.

Yes, Crisis Care Centers would accept any person with or without insurance. Each crisis care center facility would be able to provide screening and triage for anyone, even if the person ultimately needs a different type of care response.

The Crisis Care Centers will accept people with or without insurance. How costs and payment structures will look is dependent upon an approved implementation plan, and the selected provider.

If a person is exhibiting risk of harm to themselves or others because of a behavioral health crisis, law enforcement is authorized by state law to take them to an appropriate place for evaluation and treatment. Crisis Care Centers would provide an eligible crisis stabilization and 23-hour crisis relief center (if SB 5120 is enacted). The medical staff at the Crisis Care Center would make the determination as to whether or not the person needs to be referred to a Designated Crisis Responder (DCR) on site.

People will be able to stay for up to 14 days for short-term behavioral health treatment at a Crisis Care Center to stabilize. The centers will work to provide linkages to ongoing care. Additionally, the Crisis Care Centers are expected to have an urgent care walk-in clinic and a 23-hour treatment model for individuals who need shorter-term care.

The Crisis Care Centers would depend on connections to the overall community behavioral health system and other social service systems, and a key part of the crisis care center service would be evaluation of what ongoing treatment or other resources a person needs. A significant component of the Crisis Care Center model is to connect people to available treatment options, and other resources they may need to stabilize after their crisis stay.

King County is losing mental health residential capacity that is essential for people with severe and serious mental health conditions who need more intensive and longer-term supports over a longer-term stay to live supported in the community. Mental health residential beds also make it possible for people to discharge successfully from stays in local hospitals or state psychiatric care institutions.

Operations and services

The Executive’s implementation plan includes early investments in:

  1. expanding mobile crisis teams and other existing crisis services that promote access to behavioral health services for people experiencing or at risk of a behavioral health crisis

  2. providing early investments to preserve existing mental health residential facilities and

  3. investing in growing and retaining the behavioral health workforce to ensure a sufficient workforce is available.

Transportation is an eligible expense under the ballot measure ordinance. King County expects Crisis Care Centers providers to be responsible for providing or arranging for the transportation needs of their clients, especially between the different components of the crisis care center if its elements are not contiguous, and at discharge. The Crisis Care Centers model is designed to provide enough funding, and enough flexibility, to provide for these transportation needs.

Providing behavioral services and intervention when people are in an immediate crisis helps to prevent escalation. By investing in places for people to go in crisis, and long-term residential treatment, we can help people with intensive needs to get care and avoid legal system involvement, thereby supporting the overall health and safety of our communities. Many people recovering from serious behavioral health conditions need supportive services to successfully move out of homelessness, discharge from hospitals, avoid jails, and maintain stability in the community.

The centers are expected to be operated by community behavioral health care providers who have relationships with King County that include mechanisms for performance measurement and evaluation, as well as collaboration on data-informed implementation adjustments and improvements. The Crisis Care Centers levy’s implementation plan includes additional information about the levy’s performance measurement and evaluation approach. This will include reporting to the Council and the community annually about progress, expenditures, and who the levy is serving.

The Crisis Care Centers will provide another place for people to access treatment while in crisis instead of in jails or hospitals. By creating an accessible place for people entering into crisis to turn, the Crisis Care Centers will reduce the number of individuals who go deeper into crisis and risk harm to themselves or others.

The MIDD Behavioral Health Sales Tax Fund is a countywide 0.1% sales tax that funds initiatives to increase access to behavioral health services and support residents to connect to community and thrive in recovery. As required by state law, MIDD funds must be used for new and expanded mental health and substance use disorder services and may be used for therapeutic courts. Since 2008, MIDD has supported over 50 different high-quality programs and services to address mental health and substance use conditions for King County residents most in need. MIDD plays a critical role in King County’s strategy to increase access to behavioral health services. Like the CCC, MIDD is a local response to behavioral health needs unmet by inadequate funding from state and federal sources. MIDD is focused on keeping people out of costly and ineffective emergency response systems such as jails, emergency rooms, and hospitals, and instead helping people access care in their community.

MIDD generally does not invest in capital infrastructure. Instead, revenues are dedicated to a wide variety of smaller programs and services across the full spectrum of behavioral health care to impact five strategy areas that include Prevention and Early Intervention, Crisis Diversion, Recovery and Reentry, System Improvement, and Therapeutic Courts. The Crisis Care Centers Initiative, on the other hand, is targeted to make deep investments to preserve existing and create new facility capacity in specific areas of the behavioral health system where resources are most needed.


People experiencing homelessness who are in a behavioral health crisis can access care at the Crisis Care Centers. The Crisis Care Centers would be available to help people stabilize. The Levy also authorizes investments to support stabilization after discharge. However, the Crisis Care Centers levy is not part of the overarching strategy to address homelessness. The primary focus of the Crisis Care Centers levy is the creation of a crisis care treatment system, similar to physical health, that doesn’t currently exist.

Crisis Care Centers will admit people with a substance use disorder (SUD) and address their immediate crisis needs. If appropriate, the centers could refer people to SUD inpatient treatment, which has a much shorter duration than mental health residential treatment, or other community-based SUD services such as outpatient care or medication for opioid use disorders (MOUD) when needed. Such interventions each help people stabilize and further their recovery through community-based care.

Workforce

Staffing will be managed by the providers who will operate the centers. King County will support the retention and recruitment of staff at the centers by providing funding at a level sufficient to support equitable and competitive compensation for workers at the centers, and invest in systemwide workforce interventions such as apprenticeship programs and reducing costs for workers.

A multi-disciplinary team of behavioral health workers will staff the centers, consistent with state licensing requirements, including a combination of licensed/credentialed mental health and substance use disorder professionals as well as peer counselors working together on multidisciplinary teams. The County intends to invest in the community behavioral health workforce by providing funding for equitable wages and supporting wage competitiveness for the community behavioral health system by growing the pipeline through apprenticeship programing, and creating pathways for higher education, credentialing, and degrees.

Yes, peers are an essential part of the multi-disciplinary team and are a required part of the staffing model at the Crisis Care Centers in combination with clinicians. Peers with lived experience bring an important skill in connecting with a person and supporting them through shared experience.

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