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Alabama Taps $203M Federal Funds for Rural Mental Health Boost

National Desk
May 3, 2026
MONTGOMERY — Alabama has unlocked $203,404,327 in first-year funding from the federal Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP), announced Governor Kay Ivey in December 2025. Administered by the Alabama Department of Economic Community Affairs (ADECA), the five-year initiative draws from a $50 billion congressional fund established in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, providing $10 billion annually through fiscal year 2030. The program addresses critical gaps in the state's 58 rural counties, home to 1.6 million Alabamians, amid some of the nation's highest rural hospital closure risks.[2][3] Central to the effort is the Mental Health Initiative, featuring two phases to expand access in underserved areas. Phase one launches school-based tele-mental health programs in rural districts, connecting students and families to services via remote consultations. Phase two funds the conversion of existing Community Mental Health Centers into Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics (CCBHCs), which offer comprehensive care for mental health and substance use disorders regardless of ability to pay. A handful of CCBHCs already operate in Alabama, with plans to scale up using RHTP grants.[1][3] The broader ARHTP encompasses 11 initiatives, including EMS treat-in-place pilots to handle low-acuity calls on-site with tele-support, reducing ER overcrowding, and community medicine efforts like mobile wellness units. ADECA will soon publish rules and applications for providers. With initial awards confirmed, the program positions Alabama to redesign rural health systems, prioritizing behavioral health in counties like those in the Black Belt and Wiregrass regions.[2][3][4] Lawmakers and health advocates hail the funding as a lifeline for rural Alabama, where mental health provider shortages exacerbate statewide crises. The Alabama Legislature's fiscal oversight, including FY27 budget presentations from the Alabama Department of Mental Health, aligns with these federal dollars to sustain long-term improvements.[7]

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