DULUTH – A longtime residential juvenile justice and youth treatment facility in Duluth will close July 2, displacing 34 kids and 100 employees.
Closure of The Hills Youth and Family Services comes on the heels of last week's abrupt announcement that its new mental health treatment facility for high-risk adolescents — Cambia Hills of East Bethel — would close within days.
CEO Leslie Chaplin cites high fixed costs, the COVID-19 pandemic and state payments too low to continue operating.
"I did think it was fixable, and then it obviously wasn't," said Chaplin, who became chief executive of the Hills in March.
The East Bethel facility, which has struggled since opening during the start of the pandemic and has been cited by state regulators for licensing violations, did not receive a requested rate increase from the Minnesota Department of Human Services (DHS) to continue operations, Chaplin said, impacting the entire organization. DHS funds most of the care provided at Cambia Hills as private insurers generally do not cover most stays at the facility.
Losing the Duluth center is a blow for local families who need its mental health services and who will have to travel farther away from home to receive them, said Paula Stocke, deputy director of St. Louis County's public health and human services division. A handful of kids from St. Louis County are placed in The Hills' residential mental health program.
"We have complex behavioral health situations where it's not safe for kids to be at home," Stocke said, and already a shortage of available beds. The closure "puts pressure across the system for hospitals, schools, residential settings and, most importantly, children and their families who are at a crisis point," she said.
Space is also limited for juvenile correctional placements, said Ben Stromberg, head of public health and human services for the St. Louis County Attorney's Office.