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MI House approves blueprint for mental health courts

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — The Michigan House has unanimously approved legislation to create in law special courts that serve people with mental illness.
More than a dozen counties already have mental health courts that let charges be dismissed or reduced so offenders get treatment instead of jail. But bills OK'd Thursday and headed to the Senate would create them in statute and form a blueprint for how they should work.
The agency that oversees Michigan's court system recently praised the performance of the special courts.
A study of 10 mental health courts around Michigan found a lower level of repeat offenders. Participants also had better opportunities for work, education and treatment.
The bills would bar violent offenders from mental health courts. Open government groups are concerned that the proceedings would be secret.

Hans Ahlström is the host of several programs including the daily musical variety show Weekday, the mostly straight ahead jazz show Night Studio, the self explanatory Blues Today, and the eclectic Sound Spectrum. You can also hear Hans as the local host of NPR's All Things Considered news magazine. He also helps manage Public Radio 90's web content, interviews local and visiting writers and artists, works with NMU student interns, and writes the occasional news story.