
About Us
The Vermont Association for Mental Health is a citizen’s organization working to promote mental health and mental health services.
We are primarily supported by 1,000 members who represent a broad spectrum of Vermonters.
What We DoFor more than 70 years, the Vermont Association for Mental Health has worked to promote “mental wellness” in Vermont. Since 1981 when VAMH hired its current director, Ken Libertoff, Ph. D., the organization has expanded its vision and increased production in areas ranging from public educational activities, conferences and seminars, to provision of referral services and the dissemination of timely and relevant published materials. More dramatically, the Association has made a concentrated effort to become a true citizen’s voice, a public and pronounced voice, on all critical mental and behavioral health issues.
VAMH has worked hard to become an active player and public voice in the creation and implementation of movies and in the promotion of advocacy efforts. For the past decade and a half, the Association has engaged in many important legislative initiatives that have emanated in and around the Vermont State House. They include the promotion of funding support for self-help programs for consumers and parents, access to quality community-based services for Vermont citizens, a reduction in reliance on the Vermont State Hospital and expanded funding for all major components of public mental health systems. The expansion of children’s mental health services has always been an important priority with dramatic improvement since the mid-1980’s. In more recent years, the Association has assumed a leadership role in health care reform efforts, particularly in the field of mental health.
In 1994, VAMH successfully promoted one of the first mental health managed care regulatory bills in the country, when Vermont passed the Mental Health Utilization Review bill. This measure mandated that all mental health utilization review agents be registered with the state, created a responsive grievance procedure for consumers and practitioners and established an independent review panel composed of seven mental health practitioners who are empowered to make final decisions on unresolved grievances appeals.
After more than a decade-long civil rights battle to end discriminatory practices against consumers seeking mental health treatment in the commercial insurance marketplace, the Vermont Association for Mental Health, beginning in the fall of 1996, successfully led a campaign to establish parity between physical and mental health benefits, including substance abuse. On June 10, 1997, when Governor Howard Dean signed the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Parity Bill, Vermont’s law became the new national standard for equal treatment of both the brain and the body. The passage of the bill means that beginning in 1998, insurance plans in Vermont no longer have arbitrary lifetime limits, high deductibles or co-payments, or arbitrary day limits on outpatient or hospital visits. The Vermont Association for Mental Health’s Parity Coalition composed of consumers, parents, family members, practitioners, advocacy groups and concerned citizens all worked cooperatively to craft and promote this historic, comprehensive bill.
Although Vermont’s Parity Bill clearly extended for coverage both mental health and substance abuse, the Association continued to monitor and evaluate barriers to access to treatment. In 2008, the VAMH helped craft the Senate Bill 114 which was crafted to address problems in the world of managed care, with a focus on insurance companies that subcontracted mental health and substance abuse treatment to separate management entities. The bill, S.114, set a much higher standard of expectation for work by managed care companies within behavioral health care and also provided the state regulatory agency, the Vermont Healthcare Administration, with enhanced expectations for both oversight and performance standards.
In 2008, the Vermont Association for Mental Health tackled another legislative matter which was germane not only to Vermont, but to the nation as a whole. The bill, S.48, sets a new national standard for transparency and disclosure between the pharmaceutical industry and the Vermont medical profession. In particular, it was designed to create a new “environment” within field of mental health and substance abuse treatment. S.48 bans most gifts, including all free meals, categorizing them as unnecessary as part of an educational information sharing process between drug companies and physicians. The bill also establishes a transparent and public online reporting website which will be available to all Vermont’s citizens. This legislation was reviewed in the New York Times and the New England Journal of Medicine.
In addition to these other activities, for over four decades, VAMH has administered and operated Camp Daybreak (www.campdaybreak.com) the state’s only special residential camp project designed to serve young Vermont children who are coping with serious mental health problems. The camp not only provides campers with a safe and secure summer camp environment, but it affords nearly 45 high school age volunteers with a remarkable experience. These volunteers serve as Big Brothers and Big Sisters to the campers, working one-on-one with the young children who range in age from 8 to 11 years. For parents, Camp Daybreak represents an important time of respite during the long summer months. With financial backing from many diverse sources, not the least of which are individual contributors, state agencies and the Turrell Fund, the Camp is recognized as a special state resource.
With the passage of Vermont’s parity law, the Association has become engaged in improving social policy and social services for Vermonters who cope with alcohol and drug addictions. In 1998, the Association was selected to be the host agency for the Friends of Recovery-VT project, (www.friendsofrecoveryvt.org) an effort to build a statewide coalition of people in recovery from drug and alcohol addiction and its effect. Sarah Munro is leading this project. We are now working to improve treatment, prevention and recovery services in Vermont as a key player in a broad coalition effort.
Who and Where We AreThe Vermont Association for Mental Health resides at 43 State Street, 2nd floor, in the heart of Montpelier. Ken Libertoff, Ph. D., is the Executive Director, Jimmy Fordham is Office Manager, and Patty McCarthy is Director of Friends of Recovery VT Initiative, which is also administered by the Vermont Association for Mental Health. No one would confuse the VAMH with a large bureaucracy.
In order for the Vermont Association for Mental Health to grow and expand, we invite you to join one thousand other folks who are loyal VAMH. Working together, we can and will make Vermont a state of mental health!
Vermont Association of Mental Health Board of Directors:
Peter Albert, Board President
L. James L. Rivers, Treasurer
Gary De Carolis, Secretary
Peter Lee
Jill Olson
Paul Dupre
Bard Hill
Todd Mandell



