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News

Florida Lawmakers Diverge on Behavioral Health Funding in Budget Negotiations

By Matthias Binder May 14, 2026
Budget conference: Senate, House disagree on behavioral health system spending
Budget conference: Senate, House disagree on behavioral health system spending - Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
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Budget conference: Senate, House disagree on behavioral health system spending

Contents
Core Differences in Treatment Capacity FundingComparison of Senate and House OffersAdditional Areas of DivergencePressing Needs Behind the Budget DebateOutlook for the Remaining Negotiations

Budget conference: Senate, House disagree on behavioral health system spending – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)

Tallahassee negotiations over Florida’s health care spending for the 2026-27 fiscal year have produced sharply contrasting proposals from the Senate and House on support for the state’s behavioral health system. The two chambers differ most visibly on the scale of new investments in treatment capacity and crisis services, even as both sides acknowledge long-standing shortfalls in psychiatric beds and related programs. These gaps in the opening offers set the stage for further bargaining that is scheduled to continue through May 29.

Core Differences in Treatment Capacity Funding

The House opened with a proposal of nearly $115 million to support an Institution for Mental Diseases Medicaid waiver, an amount the Senate has not matched in its counteroffer. That waiver, if approved by federal officials, would allow Medicaid to cover care in larger psychiatric facilities that current rules largely exclude. The Senate’s reluctance to commit comparable funds appears tied to the pending status of Florida’s application with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

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Funding for mental health treatment beds also shows a clear split. The House has offered nearly $46 million for bed-capacity maintenance, while the Senate has proposed $16.5 million. Both amounts fall well below the $78.6 million allocated last year and the $95.4 million previously requested by the Department of Children and Families.

Comparison of Senate and House Offers

Category House Proposal Senate Proposal
IMD Medicaid Waiver $114.9 million None
Mental Health Bed Maintenance $46 million $16.5 million
988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline $7 million $9.6 million
Opioid Treatment and Recovery $32.8 million More than $33 million
Opioid Prevention $13.4 million $14.4 million
Central Receiving Facilities Grants $3.2 million $10.4 million

Additional Areas of Divergence

The Senate has included $1.1 million for opioid-related technology and research, more than twice the House figure. It has also set aside $4.25 million for cost-of-living adjustments for mental health contracted agencies, a line the House left blank. In contrast, the House has proposed higher initial funding for certain central receiving facilities, though the Senate’s offer of $10.4 million exceeds the House amount of $3.2 million.

Both chambers have aligned on a few items, including $15 million to redesign the Statewide Inpatient Psychiatric Program and $1 million for a crisis stabilization unit in Citrus County. These shared priorities stand out amid the broader pattern of differing allocations.

Pressing Needs Behind the Budget Debate

Florida’s behavioral health system operates under significant pressure. The Department of Children and Families maintains just over 3,000 psychiatric beds statewide, with occupancy rates near 98 percent. A state-commissioned analysis released in January 2025 projected the need for at least 1,602 additional forensic beds within five years simply to keep pace with current demand. Reaching a more sustainable 85 percent occupancy rate would require more than 2,000 new beds.

Delays in transferring individuals deemed incompetent to stand trial have drawn repeated attention. As of last August, 772 such defendants waited beyond the state’s 15-day legal deadline, with average waits reaching 121 days. Past underfunding of bed capacity has been linked to preventable deaths and other serious incidents in mental health facilities, according to a March report by Disability Rights Florida.

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Outlook for the Remaining Negotiations

The House’s large IMD waiver request remains contingent on federal approval that has not yet been granted. That uncertainty may continue to shape Senate positions as talks advance. Budget conferees will need to reconcile these differences while addressing the documented gaps in treatment access and oversight that have persisted for years. The outcome will determine how quickly Florida can expand capacity and reduce reliance on emergency rooms and jails for behavioral health crises.

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