FERGUS FALLS — Dawn Saxton’s son is not supposed to be in the Otter Tail County jail.
Court officials agree that Gavin, who has schizophrenia, should be in a secure treatment facility after a delusion-spurred attack on his roommate. But like hundreds of Minnesotans with mental illness waiting to enter a state treatment program, including about 50 in jail, there’s nowhere for him to go.
So the 27-year-old has spent about 100 days in a holding cell.
“This isn’t OK. This is a terrible system,” said Saxton, who has contacted all of her elected officials. “I feel like it falls on deaf ears.”
Last year, the state suspended a decade-old mandate that inmates be transferred within 48 hours after they are civilly committed. Lawsuits were mounting as Minnesota repeatedly failed to meet that deadline, so state lawmakers temporarily altered the law and asked a task force to find fixes.
In a new report, the task force outlines reforms, but Minnesota has limited money available for the sweeping changes.
In the meantime, Gavin and others with mental illness remain stranded in poorly equipped jails where staff struggle to meet their needs and handle dangerous outbursts.
”We cannot be a hospital,” said Cass County Sheriff Bryan Welk, who served on the task force. “They don’t belong in jail. This is about patient care, treating people like people.”