Loading...
Loading...
Browse all stories on DeepNewz
VisitWhat will be public opinion on involuntary commitments and Kendra's Law changes in NYC by end of 2025?
Majority support • 25%
Majority oppose • 25%
Evenly split • 25%
Unclear/Other • 25%
Public opinion polls from reputable sources like Gallup or Pew Research
Governor Hochul Proposes $1 Billion Plan to Address NYC Subway Violence and Mental Health, Including Involuntary Commitments and Kendra's Law Changes
Jan 3, 2025, 05:18 PM
New York Governor Kathy Hochul has announced a comprehensive plan to address the escalating violence and mental health crisis in the city's subway system. Hochul's strategy includes a $1 billion initiative to enhance mental health support, which involves restoring nearly 1,000 inpatient psychiatric beds, implementing discharge treatment plans, and having already transitioned 750 individuals into stable care. She also plans to increase security measures in the subways by deploying additional state police, MTA police, and National Guard members, and ensuring security cameras are installed in every subway car. Hochul is pushing for legislative changes to facilitate involuntary commitments for those at risk of harming themselves or others, and to amend Kendra's Law to improve assisted outpatient treatment. These efforts come in response to a series of violent incidents in the subway, which Hochul attributes to untreated mental illness. Mayor Eric Adams has expressed support for Hochul's plan, stating, 'Denying a person life-saving psychiatric care because their mental illness prevents them from recognizing their desperate need for it is an unacceptable abdication of our moral responsibility.' However, the New York Civil Liberties Union has raised concerns, arguing that simply locking more people away does not address the root of the problem.
View original story
No significant change • 25%
Uncertain • 25%
Less favorable • 25%
More favorable • 25%
Majority Support • 33%
Divided Opinion • 34%
Majority Oppose • 33%
Divided opinion • 25%
Majority support • 25%
Uncertain/No opinion • 25%
Majority opposition • 25%
Indifferent • 25%
Divided opinion • 25%
Mostly opposed • 25%
Mostly supportive • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Increase in support • 25%
Decrease in support • 25%
Divided opinion • 25%
Insufficient data • 25%
Increase in support • 25%
Decrease in support • 25%
No change in support • 25%
Decreased support • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Mixed opinions • 25%
Increased support • 25%
Majority support stricter policies • 25%
Other outcomes • 25%
Majority oppose stricter policies • 25%
Evenly divided opinion • 25%
Supportive • 25%
Indifferent • 25%
Opposed • 25%
Mixed • 25%
No Significant Change • 25%
Mostly Positive • 25%
Mostly Negative • 25%
Mixed • 25%
No Policy Changes • 25%
Increased Police Presence • 25%
Other Policy Changes • 25%
New Use of Force Guidelines • 25%
500 to 749 • 25%
1000 or more • 25%
Less than 500 • 25%
750 to 999 • 25%