Council OKs unarmed crisis program
Members approve $1 million for new office to respond to nonviolent emergencies
The City Council unanimously approved $1 million Wednesday to fund and create the Office of Unarmed Response and Safety, which councilmembers said is necessary to expand the 988 suicide and crisis hotline to include an unarmed crisis response.
According to a motion by Councilmembers Bob Blumenfield, Marqueece Harris-Dawson and Eunisses Hernandez, the new office will require at least three staff members to solely focus on the expansion of the city's Crisis and Incident Response Community-Led Engagement
program and unarmed crisis response teams.
“I know we are excited and want to have a robust network of alternative responders,” Blumenfield said. “We know that when someone calls 911 at a time of crisis, the lifesaving impact is about who responds and with what resources they have to respond to.”
The Office of Unarmed Response and Safety will require a principal project coordinator to oversee the work of two senior project coordinators or management analysts, with one position focused on data collection and analysis, according to the motion.
While the council moved to create the Office of Unarmed Response and Safety, recommendations will be forthcoming about who will fill the three positions.
“We've had some good deployment models for a long time, and we are growing our unarmed response,” Blumenfield said. “As we scale our network of alternative responses, we often need to provide the infrastructure and support to make sure that these initiatives expand across our city.”
In early January, following the deaths of three men in encounters with L.A. Police Department officers since the new
“We've had some good deployment models for a long time, and we are growing our unarmed response. As we scale our network of alternative responses, we often need to provide the infrastructure and support to make sure that these initiatives expand across our city.”
— Councilmember Bob Blumenfield
year, three councilmembers sought to expedite creation of the office, which was initially brought forward by then-Councilmember Mitch O'Farrell in October. O'Farrell sought to build on previous council plans to create unarmed crisisresponse
models.
According to O'Farrell's motion, the office would ensure around-the-clock coordination and deployment of unarmed response specialists to nonviolent calls for service, as well as collaboration with 911 dispatchers, and seek to address barriers for serving high-need communities by improving coordination between agencies.
The office also would incorporate the various related models and pilot programs currently deployed in the city.
Earlier this month, the Los Angeles Police Protective League — the union representing LAPD officers — threw its support behind the unarmed response model, identifying 28 types of emergency calls that could be diverted
away from armed LAPD officers. The union's list included nonviolent calls related to homelessness and mental health, non-fatal vehicle accidents, welfare checks, calls to schools unless school administration initiates a call for emergency response, calls involving alcohol or drugs when no other crime is in progress, homeless encampment cleanups and parking violations.