This, my friends, is what the future of law enforcement will look like.
It started initially in Denver, with four professionals, in 2016.
But it really took off in
June 2020, in a pilot program called STAR… Support Team Assisted Response.
Now it has 32 professionals including 15 volunteers which include behavioral and medical health clinicians who have responded to over 2,300 calls that have reported mental health crises including drug and alcohol use, assistance to those with mental issues such as schizophrenia and delusions and severe depression that has led to suicidal tendencies.
From the info collected from 759 of the residents served so far, that 3/4 of them have been diagnosed with anxiety, depression, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and the like.
Said Chris Richardson of Mental Health Center of Denver, “We have a different response to 911 calls that don’t require law enforcement response and we want to be able to show efficacy in that. We’re getting on their level, trying to come at situations more trauma-informed. We’re having discussions about why 911 was called and how do we help solve whatever’s going on in that moment.
Sometimes, someone just needs to talk for a second.”
And the team connects the homeless population to services and resources like food and shelter, and distributes socks and jackets and water whilst they do so.
And in all these calls, according to this report released last month, not once, not a single time has the police had to be called as back- up for a threat to safety.
Not once.
We can only surmise how many of these calls for someone in crises would have led to needless violence or degradation…… or worse…. by untrained law enforcement.