Nov. 10, 2020 By Allie Griffin
Mental health experts will be sent out next year instead of police officers in response to 911 calls involving non-violent people experiencing mental illness problems, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Tuesday.
The new plan, which will be piloted in a number of neighborhoods next year, involves dispatching FDNY Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) and mental health crisis workers to the scene when non violent mental health episodes take place.
The professionals will replace armed NYPD officers who currently respond to these 911 calls.
“For the first time in our city’s history, health responders will be the default responders for a person in crisis, making sure those struggling with mental illness receive the help they need,” de Blasio said in a statement.
The pilot will launch in two “high-need” precincts in February 2021, de Blasio said — though he didn’t specify which precincts or neighborhoods.
The mental health team will be trained to respond to a variety of mental health calls, such as suicide attempts, substance misuse and serious mental illness episodes — all of which NYPD officers, along with EMTS, currently respond to.
The mental health experts will work to de-escalate the emergency situations to reduce police involvement. However, the mayor said, if there is a situation involving a weapon or risk of harm, the teams will respond along with NYPD officers.
The team members will have ongoing training, technical assistance and support from New York City’s public hospital system, de Blasio said.
3 Comments
It’s easy to imagine a scenario where the “non-violent” person is confronted by the social worker nicely and gently, but when told they need to go for an evaluation, that same person turning very violent. Then what? SMH!
What could possibly go wrong?
It sure is fun living in a city that’s a petri dish for every stupid Progressive experiment.
Like you said, they should respond to mental people instead