L.A. tests program to send unarmed civilians instead of cops to people in crisis

L.A. tests program to send unarmed civilians instead of cops to people in crisis
Los Angeles, CA – July 20: A mother called in for assistance to help her son with having mental health issues. The Mobil Crisis Outreach Team (MCOT) went to the home on Thursday, July 20, 2023, in Los Angeles, CA. Officers from the Los Angeles Police Department were on hand to support the team. The MCOT team asked the officer the wait outside the door in an effort not to escalate the situation. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
(Francine Orr/Los Angeles Times)

L.A. tests program to send unarmed civilians instead of cops to people in crisis

Homepage News,L.A. Politics

Libor Jany April 5, 2024

Los Angeles officials

eager to ease the city’s reliance on police officers for handling nonviolent mental health emergencies

have launched a new pilot program

that sends unarmed

civilians

with training

to respond to such calls.

M

odeled after a heralded program out of Oregon,

city

officials said the so-called Unarmed Model of Crisis Response has two teams of mental health practitioners

available

24 hours a day, seven days a week,

for situations that would typically fall to police, such as The calls will range from conducting

welfare checks and

responding to calls for

public intoxication

to and

indecent exposure.

The program, run

by the

city attorney’s office, is so far

only

operating in three police divisions Devonshire, Wilshire and Southeast

with plans to evaluate its performance after a year and potentially expand.

City officials unveiled the initiative at a news conference earlier this week,

after

the program ha

d

been up and running for at least a month.

From welfare check-ins, to nonviolent mental health/drug issues, to minor health crises in encampments and elsewhere, we need more tools in our toolbox to truly help Angelenos in need,” City Councilmember Bob Blumenfield said in a statement. “We cant keep asking our police officers to also be social workers, mental health clinicians and outreach workers.”

T

he program is based on the “Cahoots” model,

named for

a Eugene, Or

e.,

nonprofit widely considered the gold standard in mobile crisis intervention. The program, started in 1989, today handles about 20% of the mental health calls

for the city of around 180,000

by dispatching teams of specialists trained in counseling and de-escalation.

The programs launch

in L.A.

comes amid continued public frustration with the city’s handling of the intertwined issues of homelessness, substance abuse and mental health. The LAPD has come under heightened scrutiny after a string of mental health-related shootings and other use-of-force incidents. In 2023 alone, LAPD officers opened fire at least 19 times on people experiencing some form of behavioral crisis, according to a Times database.

D

epartment officials have said repeatedly that, despite increased crisis intervention training and new “less-lethal” weapons designed to incapacitate rather than kill, officers are not always equipped to handle most mental health calls. At the same time, police say,

these types of

calls have the potential to quickly spiral into violence.

LAPD

interim

Chief Dominic Choi said during a meeting of the Los Angeles Board of Police Commissioners

that

the department “fully supports” the

new

program.

“It’s taking some of the workload from us and shifting the resources to the appropriate” responders, Choi said.

He said 911 personnel have been trained to divert calls

to the program

whe

n

there are no weapons or threats of violence mentioned.

Similar

programs have been around for years,

with new efforts springing up

since 2020, spurred by a nationwide movement to redirect law enforcement funding following the murder of George Floyd

by police

in Minneapolis.

Los Angeles was among the major U.S. cities that pledged to develop and invest in new emergency responses that use

d

trained specialists to render aid to homeless people and those suffering from mental health and substance abuse issues.

S

ome

initiatives

have struggled to bring

crisis intervention alternatives

to scale. Earlier this year, the Los Angeles Fire Department recommended ending a pilot

program

after

fire

officials said it didn’t actually free up first responders and hospital emergency rooms.

The

Fire Department’s

program launched in the fall of 2021 and has cost nearly $4 million.

It

operated vans staffed with psychiatric mobile response teams that included

a psychiatric technician, a peer support specialist and

a driver experienced in transporting patients to and from health and mental health facilities.

I

n New York, officials cited staffing and training issues as reasons why a Cahoots-style pilot fell short of its goal of rerouting at least 50% of mental health calls away from police.

Activists

argue

that such efforts remain woefully underfunded and, in same cases, are still too closely aligned with law enforcement.

Too often, city officials have undermined such alternative programs by making poor hiring choices, said Eddie Anderson, a pastor at McCarty Memorial Christian Church

in Jefferson Park

and a recent City Council candidate. He also questioned whether officials would continue to back the effort, given the city’s lingering budget woes.

“We’re really good around funding pilot programs, but not really good at accountability measures and sustainability measures around implementation,” Anderson said.

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