For further proof that Mayor Bill de Blasio isn’t remotely serious about addressing the city’s mental-health crisis, talk to the members of his Crisis Prevention and Response Task Force.

In April 2018, the mayor asked 80 stakeholders and experts to wrestle with how to reduce mental-health crises that lead to 911 calls. Last week, he issued a summary of their supposed findings — except they didn’t even get to read it, let alone write it.

The short press release outlines how the city will spend $37 million — namely, under the aegis of First Lady Chirlane McCray’s failed ThriveNYC program.

Task force members tell The Post’s Julia Marsh they feel they were “used” as “window dressing” for a sham.

“I was assuming that I wasn’t just some figurehead or some person to fill a room,” said community leader Mark Winston Griffith — that City Hall wanted “genuine participation” and would “inform me of the process as things went along.” Instead, he learned “from media that the report would be released without consulting with the Task Force on final recommendations.”

Another member, mental-health advocate Carla Rabinowitz, was upset not just at the failure to “bring us back to look through these ideas” but at the result — an approach she thinks doesn’t do remotely enough to prevent violent tragedies.

Even Public Advocate Jumaane Williams — who began calling for such a task force back in August 2017 — told The Post that he felt left out of the loop. He called the mayor’s mishandling “worse than any process I’ve seen since I’ve been elected” to the City Council in 2009.

Ideologically, these are de Blasio’s natural allies. Even his friends feel used.

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