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Construction of new psychiatric facility to
get underway

(December 2007 Issue)

By Phyllis Hanlon

Since February 2003 when then-Governor Mitt Romney proposed closing Worcester State Hospital, the fate of a new state psychiatric facility has engendered a firestorm of discussion. Pleas to keep that site and Westborough State Hospital open clashed with state officials who sought closure of the facilities. In March 2003, the Department of Mental Health (DMH) settled the issue. The Department investigated the issue and released a 31-page report that suggested reducing the total number of adult inpatient beds in the state from 900 to 740 and constructing a new hospital to replace both the current facilities in Westborough and Worcester State.

Five years after the initial proposition, the Commonwealth hopes to launch the first phase in the construction of a new state psychiatric facility.

Once the decision to construct a new, state-of-the-art building with an environment more conducive to patient care and staff morale was made, a location had to be determined. After much debate, several public hearings and a straw poll, the Department of Mental Health Inpatient Facility Feasibility Commission decided to build the new facility on the campus of the current Worcester State Hospital.

According to Alison Goodwin, communications manager for the Executive Office of Health and Human Services, "DMH is on schedule to construct a new state psychiatric hospital in Central Massachusetts and consolidate continuing care inpatient services provided at Worcester State Hospital and Westborough State Hospital into the new facility." She adds that the two existing hospitals will eventually be closed.

Although DMH initially suggested an adult inpatient bed capacity at 740, the anticipated number is slightly less than half that estimate. "The new facility will have a 320-bed capacity: 260 adult beds and 60 adolescent beds," Goodwin says.

Efforts to secure funding for the new construction have also dragged on for years. However, Goodwin indicates that the fiscal aspect of the project has finally earned the green light. "The Capitol Bond Bill was passed in April 2007, which the governor signed; the funds were included in the bill," she says, adding that projected costs of the new facility remain at $278 million.

According to Goodwin, demolition on the site for the project is scheduled to begin the first part of January 2008.