In In The News

…The situation has become critical, with shortages of mental health professionals occurring at a local, state and nationwide level, with districts in rural areas most vulnerable to these shortages, according to Gardner.

The first factor contributing to these shortages in rural areas is funding.

“When you’re in a small district you still have to pay overhead costs,” said Alexandra Stamm, the education policy analyst at the Michigan League of Public Policy. “You still have to pay for your principal, your superintendent, but you don’t have the larger number of students to make up for that with a bigger per-pupil amount” to spend.

Read more at Spartan Newsroom.