Mental Health Training Component of the New York SAVE Act (2022-MS-1)

Issued Date
June 08, 2022

[read complete report - pdf]

We also released 20 letter reports to the following School Districts: Belleville-Henderson Central School [pdf]Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Central School District [pdf]Canandaigua City School District [pdf]Coxsackie-Athens Central School District [pdf]Crown Point Central School District [pdf]Dover Union Free School District [pdf]Eden Central School District [pdf]Goshen Central School District [pdf]Greenport Union Free School District [pdf]Harborfields Central School District [pdf]Livonia Central School District [pdf]Malone Central School District [pdf]Port Washington Union Free School District [pdf]Rye Neck Union Free School District [pdf]Schalmont Central School District [pdf]Seaford Union Free School District [pdf]Unadilla Valley Central School District [pdf]Waverly Central School District [pdf]Wellsville Central School District [pdf]West Genesee Central School District [pdf]

Audit Objective

Determine whether the school districts (Districts) used resources to provide the mental health component of the New York Safe Schools Against Violence in Education Act (SAVE Act) training requirement to staff.

Key Findings

The 20 Districts we examined did not provide mental health training to all staff for the 2020-21 school year by September 15, 2020, as required by New York State Education Department (SED) regulations.

In addition, trainings offered by the Districts lacked sufficient content to ensure that staff were, at a minimum, trained on recommended mental health components such as the 10 mental health warning signs, or “whom to turn to” and “how to access crisis support and services.”

  • Six of 20 Districts (30 percent) either did not offer training or offered training that did not include any of the 12 recommended mental health components.
  • Fourteen of 20 Districts (70 percent) included at least one of the 12 recommended mental health components.

Key Recommendation

Provide mental health training to all staff and ensure it is completed by September 15, as required by SED regulations. Such training should address recognition of the 10 warning signs, whom to turn to for assistance, and how to access appropriate services.