A Local Mental Health Advisory Council (LAC) offers individuals, parents, families, and providers the opportunity to make a real difference in how mental health care is provided in their community. It offers county and state policy makers the wisdom of those who experience mental health concerns first-hand.
There are many benefits to having a LAC:
- LACs empower individuals with a lived experience of mental illness and their families
- Having an active, productive and effective LAC can lead to the improvement of the local mental health system and services for the community
- LACs offer advice on the local mental health system on what is and is not working
- Counties can utilize LACs to advise them on a range of mental health related topics, such as improving their local mental health and social services systems.
All counties, alone or in partnership with other counties should have LACs. Counties, county boards and community leaders use LACs to advise them on a range of mental health topics, such as improving their local mental health and social services systems. A county may have both an adult and a children’s mental health LAC, or they may be combined.
Who serves on a LAC
The adult LAC includes:
- At least one person with mental illness
- One family member of an adult with mental illness
- One mental health professional
- One community support services program representative.
- LAC Resources
Local Mental Health Advisory Council guidebbook (PDF)
Counties and Local Mental Health Advisory Councils (PDF)
Serving on your Local Mental Health Advisory Council (PDF)
For additional questions, concerns or support related to Local Advisory Councils, email mhadvisory.council.dhs@state.mn.us.
Local Advisory Councils
2025 Dates: January 15th, April 16th, July 16th, October 15th
Time: 1:00 p.m.-2:30 p.m.
Location: Hiawatha Valley Mental Health Center (420 E. Sarnia St., Winona, MN)
What is it?: A Local Mental Health Advisory Council (LAC) offers individuals, parents, families, and providers the opportunity to make a real difference in how mental health care is provided in their community. It offers county and state policy makers the wisdom of those who experience mental health concerns first-hand.
Who can serve on the LAC?: Adults with a mental illness, family members of an adult with mental illness, mental health professionals, community support services program representatives, someone who was in a mental health program as a child or adolescent, parents or guardian of a child or adolescent with severe emotional disturbance, children’s mental health professionals, representatives of minority populations of significant size residing in the county, or family community support services program representatives.
Benefits of the LAC:
- LACs empower individuals with a lived experience of mental illness and their families.
- Having an active, productive and effective LAC can lead to the improvement of the local mental health system and services for the community.
- LACs offer advice on the local mental health system on what is and is not working.
- Counties can utilize LACs to advise them on a range of mental health related topics, such as improving their local mental health and social services systems. Review. Evaluate. Recommend.
For more information visit: http://mn.gov/dhs/lac
We hope you consider serving on your local LAC and help create the changes needed in our local mental health systems!
Questions?
Sarah Johnson
507-312-3268
sarahj@hvmhc.org
Adult Mental Health Local Advisory Council
The Olmsted County Mental Health Local Advisory Council offers individuals, parents, and mental health service providers the opportunity to make a difference in how mental health care is provided in the community. The LAC advises Olmsted County, the Olmsted County board, and other community leaders on a range of mental health-related topics, offering local and state policymakers the wisdom of those who experience mental health concerns firsthand. Most LAC members are individuals with lived experience with mental illness and their family members.
The Olmsted County LAC meets monthly at Family Services Rochester, 4600 18th Ave NW, Rochester MN 55901 from 12:30 to 2:00.
If you are interested in using your experience and knowledge to help create a better mental health care system, visit the NAMI Southeast Minnesota chapter’s website to learn more about the Olmsted County Adult Mental Health Local Advisory Council.
The Mower County LAC meets the 2nd Tuesday of each month from Noon to 1:00 pm
Location:
The Bridge, 108 Oakland Avenue East, Austin MN
For more information contact:
Jessie Meyer, jessiem@qcmi.org
Annette Ross, annetter@qcmi.org
The Local Advisory Meetings are on Fridays from 1-3pm in places such as the local library, Owatonna Public Utilities conference rooms, Morehouse conference room and our own large meeting room at Spero. The meetings are typically quarterly.
Our speakers have been suggested by individuals, families and providers who are wanting or searching for more information or resources locally and in the three county (Steele, Dodge, Waseca) area. Examples of past speakers include representatives from National Alliance on Mental Illness, Mobile Crisis Response, SMRLS (Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services) and Community Pathways which is a heavily utilized resource locally.
The meeting is an open conversation place where people can be educated on resources around them and having no judgement as well as how we can educate each other. This is also a space to gather feedback on current needs. Many of the people that attend provide helpful feedback, it has been safe forum for all attendees to discuss current mental health services and resources in the community.
We advertise our meetings through flyers, posting at all Spero facilities. We provide flyers to current people receiving services, programs in the community and as well as family and friends of people receiving services. We also utilize lobby monitors (Spero and MNPrairie), email, newspaper advertisement and Teams invites.
We have been doing both hybrid and in-person meetings and find this has been beneficial for anyone unable to travel far.
For meeting invites and agendas please contact Kassy Nielsen, kassyn@schrc.com, 507-676-2416.