Suffrage; restore to April Pace-Brooks of Coahoma County.
Arkansas HB 1998 would create a mental health act to train and certify peer-support members, build a statewide first-responder peer network, and require annual reporting.
Arkansas HB 1998 would create a mental health act to train and certify peer-support members, build a statewide first-responder peer network, and require annual reporting.
Note: the source document contains mixed material from more than one jurisdiction and more than one draft of “HB 1998.” The primary bill text below is from an Arkansas draft titled the “James McFerron Mental Health, Wellness, and Resiliency Act.” The document also contains an unrelated Illinois line-item appropriation (an $2 appropriation to the Illinois Department of Public Health) and a mismatched bill title about restoring suffrage to an individual. This summary focuses on the Arkansas act text and then notes the procedural status and source inconsistencies.
HB 1998, as drafted for Arkansas, would create the “James McFerron Mental Health, Wellness, and Resiliency Act.” Its stated purpose is to improve access to mental health, leadership, wellness, and resiliency training and services for first responders across the state, increase peer-to-peer support capacity, and promote holistic wellness among first responders and their communities.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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