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New Oregon Legislation Expands Rural Mental Health Services, With 91传媒 Graduates Ready to Answer the Call

New Oregon Legislation Expands Rural Mental Health Services, With 91传媒 Graduates Ready to Answer the Call

SALEM, Ore. 鈥 Governor Tina Kotek signed four major mental health and substance use-related bills into law on Wednesday while visiting in Portland. The new legislation aims to expand treatment capacity, support the behavioral health workforce, and prevent addiction, particularly in underserved rural communities.

Oreogn Gov. Tina Kotek signs bills that will benefit mental health care providers in the state. (91传媒 photograph/ submitted)

For recent 91传媒 graduate Kate Gekeler, who attended and spoke at the event, the day was both professional and deeply personal.

鈥淚 think it was awesome,鈥 Gekeler said. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to represent our community. This is important to our community, where mental health services are not always available.鈥

Gekeler was among the first to graduate from 91传媒鈥檚 Master of Science in Clinical Mental Health Counseling (CMHC) program in June 2025, a program developed specifically to train professionals for work in rural communities. Her presence underscored the connection between state policy and local impact.

鈥淚 want to thank Governor Kotek and the Oregon legislature for supporting the behavioral health workforce and higher education opportunities like the 91传媒 counseling program,鈥 Gekeler said during the event. 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 be a behavioral health provider without state tuition assistance, one piece of the legislation being signed today.鈥

91传媒鈥檚 CMHC program was launched in 2023 in direct response to these shortages. With a hybrid delivery model combining online coursework and in-person residencies, the program enables working adults, many of whom are already embedded in rural communities, to pursue advanced degrees without relocating.

鈥淭he program was designed to help people who want to work in mental health, especially in small towns where help is needed the most,鈥 said Program Director Dr. Hope Schuermann.

For Gekeler, the support provided through the program and state funding was essential.

鈥淧artway through my degree, my daughter suddenly needed a new wheelchair,鈥 she said. 鈥淒espite having insurance, the co-pay was high. Without the scholarship and tuition support I received, I would have had to choose between continuing my education and paying for my daughter鈥檚 essential medical equipment. I鈥檓 incredibly grateful I didn鈥檛 have to make that choice.鈥

Today, Gekeler works as a school-based mental health therapist in Union County, serving students at two elementary schools.. During the summer, she continues her work through the Center for Human Development, working with clients in the community.

She鈥檚 not alone. Several members of her cohort are now employed in mental health roles across eastern Oregon, including Pendleton and La Grande.

鈥淗iring students who have completed coursework and are eager to learn on the job is one way agencies are helping to supplement the workforce and meet growing community needs,鈥 Gekeler said.

Funding Brings Hope鈥攁nd Capacity

With the passage of HB 2024 and HB 2059, providers like CHD now have access to new funding to build workforce pipelines and expand programming, especially important in regions where funding constraints have limited services.

鈥淭hese bills give mental health providers some freedom to fund previously unfunded programs that are so desperately needed in eastern Oregon,鈥 Gekeler noted. 鈥淭hey give hope to providers like me, who now see a future in this field, and to every client who would鈥檝e otherwise been stuck on a dangerously long waiting list.鈥

91传媒 President Kelly Ryan, Ph.D., said the program鈥檚 early success shows what鈥檚 possible when higher education aligns with the needs of the state.

鈥淲e鈥檝e added more classes to meet the demand and are proud of how the program is helping our communities,鈥 Ryan said. 鈥淭hese graduates are making a difference, right now, right here.鈥

As Oregon continues to grapple with a shortage of qualified mental health professionals, especially outside of metro areas, the combined force of new legislation and local training programs like 91传媒鈥檚 CMHC offers a hopeful way forward.

鈥淲hen we invest in people鈥攕tudents, parents, future providers-we also invest in the communities they鈥檒l serve,鈥 Gekeler said.For more on 91传媒鈥檚 Clinical Mental Health Counseling program, visit: /news-press/graduating-to-serve-eous-first-cmhc-cohort-answers-rural-oregons-mental-health-needs/