The Bulletin Board

Forensic hospital on track, with a higher price tag

By: - June 1, 2023 1:39 pm

A new forensic hospital for people whose mental illness contributed to criminal activity is slated to be built to the right of the New Hampshire Hospital in Concord. (Screenshot | Department of Health and Human Services.)

The Department of Health and Human Services was before the Executive Council Wednesday with a second request to repurpose unspent federal money to cover higher-than-expected construction costs for a new forensic hospital. 

The council gave the department the OK Wednesday to use $4.8 million it set aside during the pandemic to pay outpatient surgery centers to take COVID-19 patients if hospitals couldn’t treat them. The money remains available because the additional space was not needed, interim Commissioner Lori Weaver told the council in her request. 

The department got approval for a similar request in November to use $5.75 million in unspent federal pandemic assistance to cover increased construction costs. Lawmakers allotted $38 million for a hospital capped at 24 beds, 16 fewer than the department had sought.

The state has received two bids, from PC Construction in Vermont for $41.9 million and Engelberth Construction in Concord for $44.2 million.

The hospital would sit next to the New Hampshire Hospital and treat patients who committed a crime but cannot stand trial because of their mental illness; people found not guilty at trial because of their illness; and people who have not broken the law but are too dangerous to be treated in a conventional setting like the state hospital.

They are currently hospitalized at the state prison.

Department of Administrative Services Commissioner Charlie Arlinghaus said Thursday it’s not uncommon for bids to come in over estimated costs, something lawmakers and state officials anticipated may happen once the forensic hospital project was better defined. Arlinghaus said of the last 29 contracts that went before the Executive Council, 19 were higher than estimated.

In her letter to the council, Weaver said the hospital remains on track to open in late summer or early fall of 2024.

For more information on the project timeline and design, visit the Department of Health and Human Services website at dhhs.nh.gov and search “forensic hospital.”

Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics.

Annmarie Timmins
Annmarie Timmins

Senior reporter Annmarie Timmins is a New Hampshire native who covered state government, courts, and social justice issues for the Concord Monitor for 25 years. During her time with the Monitor, she won a Nieman Fellowship to study journalism and mental health courts at Harvard for a year. She has taught journalism at the University of New Hampshire and writing at the Nackey S. Loeb School of Communications. Email: [email protected]

MORE FROM AUTHOR