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Some residents say ‘small, conservative town’ isn’t the right fit for behavioral health facility

Colville community members rally last Monday before going to Colville Planning Commission meeting later that evening to discuss their disapproval of behavioral health facilities in the community.
Photo courtesy Nicole Wells
Colville community member Nicole Wells shot this photo of residents rallying last Monday before going to Colville Planning Commission meeting later that evening to discuss their disapproval of behavioral health facilities in the community.

Colville’s Planning Commission has recommended the city council to pass a 6-month moratorium on behavioral health facility applications in Stevens County, last Monday, after community members hold rallies against facilities in the area.

Over a 100 residents showed up to the planning commissioners meeting that evening, with 30 people sharing statements opposing the facilities.

“They need to pass (a 6-month moratorium) immediately,” said Nicole Wells, Colville resident.

Wells, alongside other community members, held a second rally at 5 p.m. last Monday in downtown Colville, where they had guest speakers, including a former nurse, local business owners and ex-addicts, before attending the planning commission meeting at 6 p.m., and expressed their disapproval of behavioral health facilities in the area.

The Washington State Department of Commerce recently announced $48.5 million in grants for 17 projects, with Northeast Washington Alliance Counseling Services receiving $2 million for a crisis stabilization facility in Colville.

Stevens County is one of 10 counties to receive a grant to construct new behavioral health facilities. The funds will be used to purchase and renovate a building into a 14-bed crisis stabilization facility.

“The people in these rural communities, we believe in accountability and personal responsibility, and one thing that really came out at our rally and came out at the meeting, is that’s not what the community wants,” Wells said.

“They would rather see something like Union Gospel Mission, where you know they're helping people get away from drugs, not prescribe them another legal opiate, which is what's also happening in these harm reduction programs.”

Alongside the behavioral health facilities, harm reduction programs have also been part of the strategy to prevent overdoses and substance misuse. Through these efforts, they distribute naloxone, connect individuals to overdose education and counseling and promote connections to care facilities.

Although from personal experience, Michael Roque doesn't see this being effective and believes programs like these could bring in a "drug culture" to the community.

Roque, ex-fentanyl and cocaine addict, said he went to rehab for two weeks in June in Tacoma and felt that even after those two weeks, he was afraid he'd go back to using.

That's when he decided to check himself into U Turn For Christ, a faith-based program, for two months.

"That was enough to transform me, one and done – I'm completely sober," Roque said. "I don't even desire to do that anymore, which that was a big thing for me, is I always desired. It was always on my mind. Now it's not — That to me is a miracle. It saved my life."

He said the biggest difference for him between rehab and the faith-based program was their approaches.

He said that while he was in rehab, they'll give you drugs throughout the day, such as Suboxone and pain relievers, and give you the "freedom to do whatever you want," whereas at faith-based programs, they will cut off any of those drugs and will take them out to volunteer at nonprofit organizations.

"Not only are you now conditioning your body to get stronger, but you're learning to help others and to be an asset to your community," Roque said.

Roque added that by putting the behavioral health facilities in Colville and across the state in other smaller towns, it would bring people from those bigger cities into these communities and cause issues that weren't there before.

This includes high crime rates, homeless people on the streets and companies shutting down.

"What they're doing is they're forcing a small town, a conservative town, that doesn't have these issues, to now take on the weight of these big towns that have these issues," Roque said.

However, David Nielsen, executive director of Northeast Washington Alliance Counseling Services, said community members are misunderstanding the situation.

Nielsen said other than the grant they received for their crisis stabilization facility, there aren't behavioral health facilities being built in the area.

Through the grant they've received from the Washington State Department of Commerce, Nielsen said their intent is to purchase a building that would replace a house they already have right next to the main outpatient behavioral health facility.

The house, Nielsen said, has been used for the past 23 years in case someone were to have a mental health crisis and they are trying to keep them out of the inpatient psychiatric hospital.

"In the current house, we have a capacity for 11 individuals, and in the new facility, we're going up to 12 individuals," Nielsen said.

"People are saying that we're expanding services and we're bringing in dangerous people, but all we're doing is the same thing that we've done for the past 23 years."

He said residents are also becoming concerned because the city has drafted guidelines for future behavioral health facilities.

"There's no plans for any other behavioral health facility to come in, but people are concerned about it because the city is working on these zoning rules in case at some point in the future, five or 10 or 20 years from now, some other facility tries to come in the city is just trying to be prepared for that," Nielsen said.

Erin Ferrier, Colville resident who supports future behavioral health facilities in the area, said it could cause more issues in the future, such as needed rezoning for additional housing options during a severe housing crisis.

"We live in an historically underserved area. Our population is growing and continues to grow so as the population increases, so does the need for services," Ferrier said.

Residents of Chewelah filled their town hall meeting with 150 concerned citizens in 2023 after learning about the proposed behavioral health wing at Chewelah facility, Quail Hollow.

Quail Hollow Owners Kenton Cox and Sharee Kromei, had secured $1.6 million in grant funding to construct the wing, located across from the high school, with many residents largely opposing it.

The city stepped in and passed an emergency moratorium in early February last year to re-evaluate the situation.

And in August of this year, Brandon Pellett, executive director of Sycamore Glen at Quail Hollow, told the Chewelah Independent they worked with Washington state to change the direction of the project after recognizing the concerns from the community.

The unit will now be an assisted living facility.

"This unit will support people with dementia, Alzheimer’s and other diseases related to cognitive decline," Pellett told The Independent.

Wells has encouraged community members to show up to the Colville Planning Commission meeting Tuesday, Nov. 12 at 6 p.m. to continue to speak out against the behavioral health facilities.

She said that by getting a 6-month moratorium, it'll give the city more time to do research and understand how this could affect their community and Stevens County.

"We don't think that we don't need programs, but we want something that pushes abstinence and not just facilitating it and making it easy on them to stay on drugs," Wells said.

Nielsen said he isn't opposed in having a six-month or year-long moratorium so the city has time to get feedback about where the zone behavioral health facilities in the future, but said there isn't anything to worry about.

"There are no behavioral health facilities that are scheduled," Nielsen said. "And we've already got the conditional-use permit so the moratorium doesn't affect what we're doing."

Monica Carrillo-Casas joined SPR in July 2024 as a rural reporter through the WSU College of Communication’s Murrow Fellows program. Monica focuses on rural issues in northeast Washington for both the Spokesman-Review and SPR.

Before joining SPR’s news team, Monica Carrillo-Casas was the Hispanic life and affairs reporter at the Times-News in Twin Falls, Idaho. Carrillo-Casas interned and worked as a part-time reporter at the Moscow-Pullman Daily News, through Voces Internship of Idaho, where she covered the University of Idaho tragic quadruple homicide. She was also one of 16 students chosen for the 2023 POLITICO Journalism Institute — a selective 10-day program for undergraduate and graduate students that offers training and workshops to sharpen reporting skills.