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Rosecrance had started serving children with behavior disorders and, by 1982, Rosecrance had formally changed its mission to offer adolescent addiction treatment.
1982 – In 1982, Jane Knitzer released her now famous study showing that two-thirds of all children with severe emotional disturbances were not receiving appropriate services.
1984 – In 1984 the United States Congress appropriated the first CASSP funds.
1986 – Congress passed the State Comprehensive Mental Health Services Plan Act: To develop community based services for adults and children.
Rosecrance expanded its offering in 1992 when it began treating adults at the 32-bed Evergreen Recovery Center in downtown Rockford.
1992 – In 1992 legislation was passed that initiated the Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration or SAMHSA as an agency.
1993 – In 1993 funding of communities began with four sites and an annual budget of $4.5 million dollars.
Since 1993 the Federal government has spent a cumulative amount of over $1.38 billion dollars on finding ways to improve services for children and families.
By the time now-Vice President of Quality and Planning Natalie Marchione joined Oakland Family Services in 1996, the agency had a lot of balls in the air and was examining ways to make services more cohesive.
In 1997 Rosecrance inaugurated its long-term teen recovery homes program, one of the few such programs in the nation.
One area where the agency’s three areas of focus blend together is the Project Recovery Intensive Services for Mothers (PRISM), which launched in 1998.
Project Recovery Intensive Services for Mothers (PRISM) Supervisor Erika Alexander sits at her desk in 2001.
The two organizations had worked together since 2003 to operate the area’s first transcranial magnetic stimulation clinic.
Established in 2003, Connections Counseling is Dane County’s largest behavioral health outpatient clinic.
Oakland Family Services’ former office in Farmington is pictured in 2003.
The progress continued into the new millennium when, in August 2004, Rosecrance opened a new $14 million, 78-bed campus to serve youth on University Drive in Rockford—The Griffin Williamson Adolescent Treatment Center.
Oakland Family Services’ office in Berkley is shown in 2008.
In fiscal year 2009 the budget for this program was $114 million.
By 2010, it had become clear that Rosecrance and the Janet Wattles Center had similar, somewhat parallel missions.
The program began in 2010 with funding from the Oakland County Community Mental Health Authority, which is now the Oakland Community Health Network.
The two organizations officially merged on September 1, 2011, forming the state’s most extensive and comprehensive provider of mental health services.
The first merger took place in July of 2016 with an organization called Community Elements.
Staff celebrate Children’s Mental Health Awareness Day in 2016 at Oakland Family Services’ Pontiac office.
Staff celebrate Children’s Mental Health Awareness Day in 2017 at Oakland Family Services’ Pontiac office.
Lo más destacado del 2017
The second merger took place in January of 2018 with an organization called Prairie Center.
Stephanie Noga, supervisor of Day One’s Berkley office, sits with a client in 2018.
Lo más destacado del 2018
In September of 2019, Jackson Recovery Centers became Rosecrance Jackson Centers.
Staff celebrate Children’s Mental Health Awareness Day in 2019 at Oakland Family Services’ Walled Lake office.
The next expansion came in late 2020 when Rosecrance acquired Connections Counseling in Madison, Wisconsin.
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