Los Angeles Times

L.A. City Council rethinks policing

Members float idea for specialist­s to handle service calls deemed to be of a nonviolent nature.

- By Dakota Smith

A proposal calls for alternativ­es to the LAPD to handle some matters.

Several Los Angeles City Council members called Tuesday for a new emergency-response model that uses trained specialist­s, rather than LAPD officers, to render aid to homeless people and those suffering from mental health and substance abuse issues.

A motion submitted by City Council members Nury Martinez, Herb Wesson, Marqueece Harris-Dawson, Curren Price and Bob Blumenfiel­d asks city department­s to work with the Los Angeles Police Department and Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority to develop a model that diverts nonviolent calls for service away from the LAPD and to “appropriat­e non-law enforcemen­t agencies.”

The LAPD now has a “greater role in dealing with homelessne­ss, mental health and even COVID-19related responses” the motion states, blaming budget cuts to social service programs for the city’s increased reliance on police officers.

“We have gone from asking the police to be part of the solution, to being the only solution for problems they should not be called on to solve in the first place,” the motion said.

It’s unclear how large the new response team would be, but in a statement, council members cast the program as part of an effort to reimagine public safety and reduce unnecessar­y police interactio­ns.

Representa­tives for the Los Angeles Police Protective League, the union representi­ng rank-and-file officers, have previously pointed to the increased demands placed upon police officers, saying officers now perform the duties of therapists, drug treatment counselors, social workers and

EMTs.

Jerretta Sandoz, vice president of the union’s board of directors, said Tuesday that the union agreed that “not every call our city leaders have asked us to respond to should be a police response.”

“We are more than willing to talk about how, or if, we respond to noncrimina­l and nonemergen­cy calls so we can free up time to respond quickly to 911 calls, crack down on violent crime and property crime, and expand our community policing efforts,” Sandoz said.

The council members’ motion comes after tens of thousands of people have protested in Los Angeles streets in recent weeks, decrying police brutality and calling for a new approach to policing, particular­ly in Black communitie­s.

The City Council on Tuesday also voted to move ahead with studying ways to cut the LAPD’s budget by $100 million to $150 million and put the money into community programs. The council vote was 11 to 3, with Councilmen Paul Koretz, Joe Buscaino and John Lee dissenting. A report back to the council on those proposed budget cuts is expected in the coming weeks.

Buscaino, a former police officer who now serves as a reserve officer, told The Times that his no vote reflected his belief that “real police reform” will come from expanding an existing LAPD program focused on building relationsh­ips between police officers and communitie­s.

Separately, the council members’ motion submitted Tuesday also asks for a report back on crisis interventi­on models, including the “Cahoots” program in Eugene, Ore. The program, short for Crisis Assistance Helping Out on the Streets, sends in teams of medics and mental health counselors if 911 operators determine armed interventi­on isn’t needed.

The program’s teams handled 18% of the 133,000 calls to 911 last year, requesting police backup only 150 times, said Chris Hecht, executive coordinato­r of White Bird Clinic, which runs the operation.

The program operated on a $2-million budget last year that Hecht said saved the Eugene-Springfiel­d, Ore., area about $14 million in costs of ambulance transport and emergency room care.

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