Boulder County Crisis Counseling Program
Provider Registration
Thank you for joining the Boulder County Crisis Counseling provider panel. With the devastation of the Marshall Fire our community is experiencing an unprecedented need for easily accessible, quality mental health services. Your participation demonstrates the strength and commitment of our community, and we are truly grateful.
JFS and Community Foundation for Boulder County have partnered to offer mental health counseling to Boulder County residents that have been affected by the Marshall Fire or Straight Line Wind Event. This program is free to all impacted Boulder County residents, and JFS pays you directly through a simple invoicing process.
The Boulder County Crisis Counseling program provides individuals and families impacted by the fire with up to 15 individual therapy sessions (JFS reimburses providers a maximum of $100 per session), or up to 15 family therapy sessions (JFS reimburses providers a maximum of $175 per session). The JFS website hosts a referral list of local, licensed mental health providers from which clients can select. Only providers who sign up to be on this referral list will be able to bill for services. This program is for new clients only. The funding is not intended for already existing clients in your practice.
Providers interested in taking part in this program to support Boulder County residents must:
be a fully licensed mental health provider in Colorado (i.e. LCSW, LPC, MFT, PSY). Licensure candidates and unlicensed psychotherapists are not eligible even under supervision;
reside or practice in Boulder County or
have specialties in trauma, EDMR, child and teen practices, are bilingual and/or BIPOC and reside in Metro Denver or Ft. Collins areas;
have capacity to take on at least 2-3 new clients;
agree to the payment structure (up to $100/session for 15 sessions for individual therapy and/or up to $175/session for 15 sessions for couples or family therapy);
agree to invoice Jewish Family Service and to be paid for services provided by ACH/direct deposit, and;
provide feedback on the program when requested.
Access to the mental health services will be available to residents until December 31, 2024 or until all funding is expended, whichever comes first.