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Msg ID: 2734799 Can these liberals be any more hypocritical??? +4/-3     
Author:observer II
7/7/2022 3:07:18 PM

Every Stacey Abrams speech has some defund the police in it. Most times very blatant and direct.

She has been asked the question about whether she supports defund the police on many occasions. And every time she tells us YES. Every time.

So she has no concerns about the safety of the people of Georgia, yet Abrams has spent more than a half a million dollars in private security in 5 months.

This is exactly why you DO NOT vote for these hypocrits. They convince the weak minded to vote for them with promises of safety and security, then turn their backs on them without losing a wink of sleep.

Wonder if it has any Indian heritage in her :)



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Msg ID: 2734812 Can these liberals be any more hypocritical??? +3/-2     
Author:TheCrow
7/7/2022 3:43:28 PM

Reply to: 2734799

She advocates "reallocating resources".

Cops aren't psychologists, but they're called to psychological incidents.

Only about half of 911 calls involve reports of issues requiring law enforcement. So, you're doubling the load on law enforcement. Add that all those calls require admin.

Look up the CAHOOTS program...

As to her using private security? Read the posts by your fellow Trumplican frog boys advocating a violent response to 'over-governing'. Remember January 6?



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Msg ID: 2734819 Newsflash..................Reallocating is defunding. +4/-3     
Author:observer II
7/7/2022 4:40:56 PM

Reply to: 2734812

Reallocating is the same thing as defunding .

If you want law enforcement to have additional training. You find the funds, but you never cut the budget when it directly impacts the very people keeping you safe.

Taking money from law enforcement pockets to fund your stupid sensitivity and race training is the most ignorant idea this country has ever seen.

How about providing additional training to the very people that DO NOT cooperate, or even act like a human being when they are in front of law enforcement.

Every single case of police shootings is the result of a confrontation with law enforcement. Every time without fail.

Spend your time trying to change the stereotype these people have created for themselves. You libs have created an environment that provides these thugs with a free pass to commit crimes.

Hey crofraud, who is it that bails these BLM/ANTIFA thugs out of jail everytime they commit a crime????

Exactly



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Msg ID: 2734916 Love those crickets (NT) +1/-2     
Author:observer II
7/8/2022 11:52:49 AM

Reply to: 2734819


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Msg ID: 2734947 Newsflash..................Reallocating is defunding. +3/-0     
Author:TheCrow
7/8/2022 2:26:46 PM

Reply to: 2734819

Reallocating is the same thing as defunding .

Two different words with two different meanings.

Consider the data offered earlier that about half of 911 calls require law enforcement response. But, aside from fire and ambulance, law enforcement is the only tool available to 911- so the cops are dispatched to everything that isn't smoking or bleeding.

Somebody's having a psychotic break and the cops arrive. They have some mental health training and a positive attitude... but are they the best qualified professionals to maximise results? When your only tool is a hammer, all problems look like nails.

Now suppose that dispatch believed there as an emotional issue or a mental health crisis occuring- a qualified professional shouold be sent and law enforcement personnel reserved for law enforcement issues. Reduce their workload, reallocate the funds to a more productive use.



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Msg ID: 2734954 Does dumb run in your family? +3/-3     
Author:observer II
7/8/2022 2:35:20 PM

Reply to: 2734947

Just listen to what you just said.

If someone calls in to the police for help. Regardless of  whether it's a mental issue or not. Some social worker won't be able to handle the situation.

Because when you deem a person is mental, there's obviously no way they could become violent. Or possible use a weapon. Everyone knows that.

Reallocating IS defunding

You are removing funds from one budget and putting them into another budget.

Your ridiculous programs are simply meant to enable these crimes to happen without reprecussions and consequences.

Maybe you people shouldn't bail out criminals that commit crimes. That would be a good start.

Hey, maybe try teaching your people to act like human beings instead of combative thugs. then we wouldn't have to look at all the thug statues you people are erecting.

You want to stop violence. Stop the violent people. And they aren't police officers.



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Msg ID: 2734958 "Does dumb run in your family?" Broaden your horizon +4/-1     
Author:TheCrow
7/8/2022 2:37:53 PM

Reply to: 2734954

 

Photo by Todd Cooper
 
 

CASE STUDY: CAHOOTS

Eugene, Oregon

  • Jackson Beck
  • Melissa Reuland
  • Leah Pope
 

Amid national conversation in recent months about reducing policing’s footprint in behavioral health matters, the Crisis Assistance Helping out on the Streets (CAHOOTS) program in Eugene, Oregon, has received particular attention as a successful and growing alternative to on-scene police response. Staffed and operated by Eugene’s White Bird Clinic, the program dispatches two-person teams of crisis workers and medics to respond to 911 and non-emergency calls involving people in behavioral health crisis—calls that in many other communities are directed to police by default. CAHOOTS units are equipped to deliver “crisis intervention, counseling, mediation, information and referral, transportation to social services, first aid, and basic-level emergency medical care.”1 All services are voluntary. If the situation involves a crime in progress, violence, or life-threatening emergencies, police will be dispatched to arrive as primary or co-responders.2 CAHOOTS teams deliver person-centered interventions and make referrals to behavioral health supports and services without the uniforms, sirens, and handcuffs that can exacerbate feelings of distress for people in crisis. They reduce unnecessary police contact and allow police to spend more time on crime-related matters. Eugene police may also request assistance if they arrive on-scene and determine that a CAHOOTS team can help resolve a situation.

This case study explains how CAHOOTS teams are funded, dispatched, staffed, and trained—and how a long-term commitment between police and community partners has cemented the program’s success.

Funding CAHOOTS through the police

The City of Eugene has long supported CAHOOTS through the Eugene Police Department (EPD) budget as an essential part of the community’s crisis response system, beginning in 1989 when EPD funded the first CAHOOTS shift.3 In June 2016, the Eugene City Council increased the program’s funding by $225,000 per year to allow for 24/7 service.4 Funding increases have continued over the last few years to allow for overlapping, two-van coverage as the call volume for CAHOOTS has grown.5

After years of working with police in Eugene, White Bird expanded CAHOOTS services to the neighboring community of Springfield in 2015, when Lane County administered an Oregon Health and Human Services grant for the program.6 Between Eugene and Springfield, CAHOOTS is now funded at around $2 million annually—about 2 percent of their police departments’ budgets.7

Dispatching CAHOOTS for ‘better customer service’

A key element of White Bird’s partnership with police is that CAHOOTS staff carry a police radio that emergency dispatchers use to request their response to people in crisis on a special channel. The channel can get “overwhelmed,” Eugene officer Bo Rankin explained, by the increasing number of requests for CAHOOTS teams.8 Of the estimated 24,000 calls CAHOOTS responded to in 2019, only 311 required police backup, and in Eugene, CAHOOTS teams resolved almost 20 percent of all calls coming through the city’s public safety communications center.9

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Of the estimated 24,000 calls CAHOOTS responded to in 2019, only 311 required police backup...

The center is housed in EPD and tasked with receiving and dispatching all police, fire, and CAHOOTS calls.10 With the CAHOOTS program embedded in Eugene’s communications system, Eugene dispatchers are empowered to use this non-police alternative to handle non-police issues.

The police department and CAHOOTS staff collaboratively developed criteria for calls that might prompt a CAHOOTS team to respond primarily, continuing to adapt them based on experience; the protocol is used as a guide rather than a rule. For example, when a call arrives at Eugene’s communications center, through either 911 or the community’s non-emergency line, call-takers listen for details that might fit these criteria. As Eugene communications supervisor Marie Longworth put it, sending CAHOOTS rather than police is often regarded as “better customer service” for community members requesting assistance for themselves or others.11

Official Eugene communications protocol for CAHOOTS

CAHOOTS is a mobile crisis intervention service with two teams that are integrated into the City of Eugene’s Police Department system.
LEARN MORE

Longworth also notes that CAHOOTS’s relationships in the community help dispatchers connect people with appropriate responders. The communications center sometimes gets direct requests for CAHOOTS. In other cases, because of their familiarity with community members and their specific needs, CAHOOTS teams have demonstrated comfort taking on calls that would otherwise go to police.12

Cahoots Staffing Training V2
Photo by Todd Cooper

Staffing and training

Robust recruitment and training underpin the success of CAHOOTS teams. CAHOOTS medics typically bring EMT certifications and experience within fire departments. CAHOOTS crisis workers may have undergraduate degrees in a human services field, but some people bring experience working crisis lines or in shelters, whereas others have lived experience with behavioral health conditions. Increasingly, the program has sought multilingual candidates who can help extend the reach of CAHOOTS services to Latinx communities.13 CAHOOTS team members undergo a months-long training process, in cohorts whenever possible. In addition to at least 40 hours of class time, new staff complete 500 to 600 hours of field training—specific timelines depend on cohort needs—before they can graduate to exclusive, two-person CAHOOTS teams.

Although most EPD officers receive CIT training, CAHOOTS staff take on a more specialized set of issues and benefit from extensive field training focused on crisis incidents.14 The CAHOOTS training process is incremental, ranging from field observation to de-escalation to the nuts and bolts of working with police radios, writing reports, coordinating with service partners, and starting and ending shifts.15

White Bird also engages CAHOOTS trainees in a mentorship process that lasts throughout their careers with the organization, with the understanding that they take on difficult work and need outlets to process experiences together to carry out their jobs.16 The practice demonstrates the importance of wellness for first responders and community members alike.

Cahoot Collaboration V2
© Chris Pietsch – USA TODAY NETWORK

Sustained and inclusive collaboration

Over time, CAHOOTS and police have developed strategies for supporting one another as calls evolve on-scene and require real-time, frontline collaboration. As noted above, requests for service involving a potentially dangerous situation will require early police involvement, but officers may engage alternative responders once the scene is stabilized and they have gathered more information about what the person in crisis needs. For example, Eugene officers can request assistance when they determine that CAHOOTS-led de-escalation might resolve a situation safely for all parties involved, especially when a call appears to involve underlying substance use or mental health issues.

In addition to bringing expertise in behavioral health-related de-escalation to a scene, CAHOOTS teams can drive a person in crisis to the clinic or hospital. This transportation, which must be voluntary, eliminates the indignity of a police transport, which necessitates the use of handcuffs per standard police protocols.17

More rarely, CAHOOTS teams may determine that police involvement is needed when they gather more information, or as a situation evolves on-scene. If they respond to calls involving people who pose a danger to themselves or others, CAHOOTS teams may see the need for an involuntary hold without the authority to carry one out.18 For example, a person may be so severely intoxicated that they cannot care for themselves and will not consent to a sobering center.19 In this case, CAHOOTS staff might call in patrol officers to execute an emergency custody order. For mental health calls that end in involuntary hospitalizations such as these, CAHOOTS vans follow patrol vehicles to the emergency department to share their transfer sheet, which lists observations of and items discussed with the community member. This facilitates continuity of care for the client.20

Collaboration between EPD and CAHOOTS extends beyond emergency response. Over the last few years, EPD has introduced the Community Outreach Response Team program to deliver case management for people experiencing homelessness who often come to the attention of emergency services.21 As part of this program, the police have partnered with CAHOOTS to bring their behavioral health expertise to bear on community members who continue to experience frequent contact with the police. EPD has found that this collaborative problem-solving work complements Eugene’s ongoing efforts to support alternative first responders.22

Close collaboration among government and community partners—including schools, shelters, and behavioral health providers—enables CAHOOTS to respond to a wide variety of situations and to assist police and other agencies with behavioral health emergencies when appropriate.23 Such partnerships during program planning and throughout program implementation are essential to the success of efforts to improve local crisis response systems. CAHOOTS Operations Coordinator Tim Black stressed that the organization’s success did not happen overnight; there were many small, but important, details to address and a wide range of stakeholders to engage for effective implementation. “You want to make sure you have everyone who could possibly have an opinion about this topic at the table,” he explained.24 It is important to include detractors of the police department in program planning, as getting these partners’ input is critical to program success. Officer Rankin noted that CAHOOTS staff themselves can be “strongly against police in many ways,” but it is “nice having all the line people trying to come up with solutions together.”25

Still, the Eugene and Springfield communities are more than 80 percent white, making them racially homogeneous compared to many cities.26 “There’s a lot of privilege that comes along with having a healthy enough relationship with police that you can contact them,” Black acknowledged, and Eugene is now exploring a separate phone line for CAHOOTS that would be disconnected from the police department.27 This is a vital consideration for implementing crisis response programs where relationships between police and communities of color are historically characterized by tension and distrust. Programs may find success by grappling with this distrust directly and engaging a wide variety of partners to reach communities with the greatest need.28

CAHOOTS credits being embedded in the community’s emergency communications and public safety infrastructure for much of its impact, while stressing that the program’s ultimate objective is to reduce policing’s overall footprint. White Bird’s website states, “CAHOOTS is designed to provide an alternative to police action whenever possible for non-criminal substance abuse, poverty, and mental health crisis.”29 According to Black, the program aims to reduce opportunities for people to become justice-involved and lose their rights. Working with the police has made this possible: “By no means do we [ignore] what other public safety personnel are doing,” he explains. “We try to use our privilege in the public safety system to fight for compassionate and responsive services.”30



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