3:33 PM MST on Nov 16, 20233:50 PM MST on Nov 16, 2023
Credibility:
Original Reporting Sources CitedOriginal Reporting | This article contains new, firsthand information uncovered by its reporter(s). This includes directly interviewing sources and research / analysis of primary source documents. | |
Sources Cited | As a news piece, this article cites verifiable, third-party sources which have all been thoroughly fact-checked and deemed credible by the Newsroom in accordance with the Civil Constitution. |

Two of Colorado’s community mental health centers will merge in July, creating the largest behavioral health center in the state.
WellPower, which provides mental health services and homeless outreach in Denver, is combining with Jefferson Center, the safety-net mental health organization for Jefferson, Clear Creek and Gilpin counties.
Together, the two have almost 2,000 employees and serve about 48,000 people per year. The centers have mobile medication-assisted treatment for patients addicted to opioids, walk-in crisis centers and outreach programs that send mental health professionals out with RTD workers, law enforcement and park rangers.
By combining, the centers will be able to offer a longer list of addiction and mental health programs, said Kiara Kuenzler, CEO of Jefferson Center. The partnership allows the centers to combine technology processes and other expenses, as well as fill gaps in specialized care.
She called the merger a “bold response” to Colorado’s behavioral health crisis, in which suicide is the leading cause of death for young people and deaths attributed to fentanyl have skyrocketed. “We are confident that the strengths of our two organizations combined will enable us to meet the needs of our communities in a way that has never been done before in Colorado,” she said in an email announcing the merger Thursday. “By coming together, we can meet the needs of our community faster and more effectively than we could ever do alone.”

The merger made sense now because of recent changes in Colorado’s behavioral health system, including a restructuring of how community mental health centers are regulated and funded. The state’s 17 regional mental health centers have been concerned that they will lose funding as Colorado revamps the system, opening it up to competition with private behavioral health entities. The centers, which have long operated under no-bid contracts with the state Medicaid division, have been under intense scrutiny in the past couple of years.
“We must adapt for the future,” said Dr. Carl Clark, CEO of WellPower, which was formerly the Mental Health Center of Denver. “We believe that joining our two organizations is a powerful solution.”
Jefferson Center served more than 26,000 people in 2022 and has a budget of about $90 million. WellPower, which served about 22,000 people, has a budget of nearly $144 million.
Kuenzler will serve as president of the new organization, while Clark will be CEO until his retirement. The joint organization will operate under the WellPower name.
Jennifer Brown writes about mental health, the child welfare system, the disability community and homelessness for The Colorado Sun. As a former Montana 4-H kid, she also loves writing about agriculture and ranching. Brown previously... More by Jennifer Brown