After rejecting a merger with the mental health management system in Alamance and Caswell counties, Orange County’s provider is searching for other partners.
Judy Truitt, area director of the OPC Area Program that serves Orange, Person and Chatham Counties, said the program withdrew from negotiations with Alamance-Caswell Local Management Entity in December.
“The board felt that our goals were not in sync and that we were working for different outcomes,” Truitt said. “At this point we are in several discussions, we are moving forward.”
But the program, which manages publicly-funded mental health, developmental disability and substance abuse services is still looking for another mental health program to merge with.
A merger would consolidate services and save the state money.
Truitt said OPC is the fourth smallest local management entity in the state. She said the state is putting pressure on these smaller entities to merge to reduce the number in the state.
“The state is interested in continued mergers because it would be cost saving,” Truitt said.
Alamance-Caswell, which dropped below the state’s required service population of 200,000 after Rockingham County dissolved its membership, began to look for other organizations to join with to meet state requirements last year.
Alamance-Caswell officials have written a memorandum of agreement to merge with Piedmont Behavioral Healthcare after plans to combine with the Orange-Person health care management organization fell through, but nothing has been finalized.