Here’s What Happens When Social Workers, Not Police, Respond To Mental Health Crises
More cities are adopting a model for de-escalation that has the potential to benefit people with mental illness, allow police to focus on serious crime and save taxpayer dollars.听
When Lisa Gonzalez saw an encampment of homeless people growing in her Waikiki neighborhood last year, she wanted to direct some assistance their way but wasn鈥檛 sure who to call.听
They exhibited troubling behavior, she said, like defecating out in the open. But she didn鈥檛 want to dial 911 and have the police respond. She didn鈥檛 have much faith they would help.听
Ultimately, she was directed to someone at the Institute for Human Services who said she would pay the site a visit. But every time the IHS worker came by, the homeless people had already moved on, only to come back later.听
鈥淪he鈥檚 never been able to make contact with them because by the time she comes out, they鈥檙e gone,鈥 Gonzalez said. 鈥淚t would definitely help if there were someone who could respond quicker. They’d reach them and be able to have a dialogue.鈥澨
Honolulu lacks a crisis response team that can be dispatched immediately to address mental health crises and behavioral health issues. Instead, the task often falls to a patchwork of social services providers whose work is supported by temporary grants. Or to Honolulu police officers, most of whom are not trained in crisis intervention or de-escalation for the mentally ill. Behavioral health calls make up 10% to 30% of HPD’s call volume, the department said.听
A growing number of American cities are embracing another way: sending mental health first responders instead of police.听
The teams are made up of unarmed crisis workers, such as social workers and health care personnel, who advocates say are better equipped than police to handle cases that don鈥檛 involve violence or crime.听
The concept was pioneered in Eugene, Oregon, more than 30 years ago. CAHOOTS 鈥 or Crisis Assistance Helping Out On The Streets 鈥 is embedded in the area鈥檚 911 system. Dispatchers who receive calls about mental health crises, homelessness, substance abuse and other welfare checks direct the information to CAHOOTS.听
鈥淥n a fundamental level, the CAHOOTS program is designed to send the right kind of first responders into emergent crisis situations where there’s not a crime being committed, there’s no medical emergency, no fire to be put out, but where there is still somebody who’s in profound need,鈥 said Tim Black, the consulting director of the .
CAHOOTS team members help de-escalate conflict, refer individuals to services and even transport them to shelters, stabilization sites or medical clinics 鈥 avoiding unnecessary stays in jail or the emergency room, Black said.
The program handles about 17% of the Eugene Police Department鈥檚 call volume every year, which saves the police department an estimated $8.5 million annually, according to the White Bird Clinic. CAHOOTS budget is only $2.1 million.听
The team can always call for backup if workers need police assistance 鈥 they鈥檙e on the police radio system 鈥 but those occasions are rare. Of the 24,000 calls CAHOOTS responded to in 2019, only 360, or 1.5%, required police backup, Black said. Half of those cases only required police to conduct an involuntary psychiatric hold.听
Interaction with CAHOOTS is voluntary, Black said.听
鈥淲e enter into our interactions with community members on a foundation of mutual trust and with an objective of the least intervention necessary to find immediate de-escalation and stabilization,鈥 Black said.
鈥淭hat’s different from an officer who was trained through the academy, and this mentality is ingrained in them as a patrol officer, that they are a warrior and that they need to assume that every interaction they have with a community member could potentially become fatal, and to assume听that it will become violent and potentially fatal.鈥澨
Cities across the country are increasingly . It has gained particular momentum in the last year as protests nationwide have called for police reform, including shifting police responsibilities and resources toward social services agencies.听听
recently started sending personnel from its health and fire departments to behavioral health crises in lieu of police. announced last week that it plans to pilot the concept in Harlem and East Harlem, areas that produce the most mental-health related emergency calls.听
started a similar program last summer. Around the same time, 听created a new city department to pursue the idea. 听launched its mental health team this month, as did .听
There鈥檚 even aimed at helping states adopt the CAHOOTS model, introduced by senators from Oregon and Nevada, and legislators are working to include a pared down version of that bill in the upcoming .听
Several mental health advocates in Honolulu told Civil Beat it鈥檚 a concept the city should consider.听
鈥淧eople who are having mental health problems are generally not criminals,鈥 said Marya Grambs, a longtime advocate for mental health and people experiencing homelessness.听
鈥淲hile they may be breaking some kind of misdemeanor law, being a nuisance or behaving oddly, they鈥檙e generally not committing (serious) crimes. But their behavior can be very disconcerting and unpleasant. But that鈥檚 not the kind of thing police are really trained to handle. That鈥檚 not what their job description is.鈥澨
鈥楾hey Have The Skills鈥 听
Honolulu Police Chief Susan Ballard is open to the idea of handing some police responsibilities to social workers.听
Following Black Lives Matter protests last year, the chief said at a press conference she agreed with activists that society relies too much on the police to address social ills. HPD should not be the primary respondents to matters involving homelessness and mental illness, she said.
鈥淭hose are all social issues that should be handled elsewhere,鈥 she said. 鈥淯nfortunately when nobody else steps up, and there is nowhere else to turn to, people always turn to the police to take care of whatever the problem is.鈥
Ballard said she would much prefer social workers to take homelessness and mental illness off her department鈥檚 plate.听
鈥淚 think it would be fantastic because they have the skills,鈥 she said.听听
Ballard declined to be interviewed for this story. In a statement, she said HPD has advocated for the involvement of social services providers and the department is open to finding 鈥alternate ways of responding to scenes.鈥澨
鈥淲hile we have looked at the programs being used in other cities and reached out to different agencies, we are not starting our own program at this time due to the pandemic and fiscal constraints,鈥 she said.听
However, replacing police with unarmed crisis responders has the potential to save money, according to CAHOOTS.听
Beyond reducing the police department鈥檚 call volume, the White Bird Clinic estimates it saved over $14 million for ambulance rides and emergency room visits in 2018. 听
Honolulu started in recent years, but only 58 officers have completed the training so far, according to the department鈥檚 latest strategic planning update. The pandemic interrupted an effort to train more officers, the department said.
The department also runs the Health Efficiency Long-term Partnerships program, which pairs officers with homeless outreach workers to help connect unsheltered people to services.听
Could Honolulu Adopt This Model?
Police responses to mental and behavioral health calls听can sometimes devolve into violence or even death.听
Mental health cases make up 13% of use-of-force incidents, according to the Honolulu Police Department鈥檚 latest force report. And in recent years, incidents in which island police injured or killed a person in mental distress have made headlines.
That includes a Waipahu man with schizophrenia who was , a man on methamphetamine who after officers pepper-sprayed him and shot him with a Taser and a man who suffered from paranoia killed by police in 2017 after he allegedly threatened officers with a knife.听听
Even in a CAHOOTS model, police would still need to respond to situations involving a weapon or aggressive behavior, but Black said crisis workers do sometimes respond in tandem with police to help with de-escalation.听听
In Alameda County, California, which started a modified version of CAHOOTS last year, the crisis workers respond alongside police officers. That collaboration is important for the safety of the mental health responders, according to Karl Sporer, the county鈥檚 emergency medical services director.听
鈥My concern is everyone is jumping on the bandwagon of trying to take PD out of this equation, and there will be people who will get hurt who work for me,鈥 he said.听
Some mental health advocates in Honolulu also expressed support for the CAHOOTS concept but were concerned about crisis responder safety.听
鈥It鈥檚 definitely a good option to explore,鈥 said Alicia Rodriguez, a former HPD psychologist who is now in private practice. 鈥淭he hard thing is it can go from zero to 60 really quick and a crisis worker isn鈥檛 comfortable with that.鈥
Another challenge in Honolulu is the lack of stabilization facilities and affordable housing for people in crisis, according to several advocates. So even if crisis workers were able to calm people down and get them to accept help, there are few places to bring them for long-term care.听
鈥淲e don’t have anywhere to take them,鈥 said Kumi Macdonald, executive director of the National Alliance for Mental Illness Hawaii. 鈥淭here really are no stabilization beds. There really is no place for them to go 鈥 If we don’t have a stabilization center, we can鈥檛 really do this project.鈥澨
CAHOOTS鈥 strength is in being a facilitator for people in crisis, Black said. But without a place to bring people that will address their needs, the program would fail.听听
鈥淭he only reason that CAHOOTS is as successful as we are at keeping folks away from jail or out of the hospital is because we have a network of other resources in our community to rely on,鈥 Black said.听
鈥淚f we didn’t have those other resources available, we would just be helping cycle people through the hospital, and folks would still be going to jail. If a community like Honolulu is really considering mobile crisis (response) inspired by CAHOOTS, there also really needs to be an evaluation of what resources are lacking in the community for folks in crisis.鈥
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About the Author
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Christina Jedra is a journalist for Civil Beat focused on investigative and in-depth reporting. You can reach her by email at cjedra@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .