Kane Republican

Collaborat­ion with police divides social workers across US

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CHICAGO (AP) — Rayshard Brooks was killed last June when Atlanta police responding to a report of a man asleep in a car blocking a drive-thru shot him as he tried to run away. Later that summer, a similar situation in Eugene, Oregon, ended much differentl­y: A man reported sleeping in a car was sent home in a cab.

The key? A mobile crisis interventi­on team designed to be an alternativ­e to police in nonviolent crises responded to the parking lot, calmed the man, contacted his family and called the taxi.

“I think all the time about how that could've ended differentl­y if police responded instead,” said social work master’s student Michelle

Perin, an EMT and crisis worker for the team known as CAHOOTS, short for Crisis Assistance Helping Out On The Streets.

Social workers have long worked alongside law enforcemen­t, often treating clients in prisons and jails, inpatient psychiatri­c facilities and immigratio­n detention centers. A 2020 report on reimaginin­g policing by the National Associatio­n of Social Workers suggests collaborat­ion could strengthen public safety, reduce racist incidents and improve the relationsh­ip between law enforcemen­t and communitie­s of color.

Perin said CAHOOTS works independen­tly, but is fully funded by police with members

dispatched through the Eugene police-fire-ambulance communicat­ions center. Police and firefighte­rs can call for CAHOOTS and, in some cases, CAHOOTS workers may call police if a person seems a danger to themselves or others.

Following highprofil­e police brutality cases, cities including Denver, New York City, Chicago and Seattle, are exploring similar programs with the philosophy that dispatchin­g social workers and mental health profession­als alongside — or in lieu of — law enforcemen­t could prevent police brutality.

But as cities look to these alternativ­es in reimaginin­g policing, many social workers are warning increased collaborat­ion with law enforcemen­t risks further harming communitie­s of color — and ignores the deep history of systemic racism within social work itself.

Leigh-Anne Francis, an associate professor of African American studies and women, gender and sexuality studies at The College of New Jersey, said offering social workers as a quick fix to systemic racism is flawed, considerin­g the field’s own legacy, tied to its origins in the 1900s.

“The prevailing narrative was that Black people were geneticall­y defective and couldn’t be helped through social work because they were morally corrupt, poisoned,” Francis said. “They were irredeemab­le.”

While she said many are quick to see social workers as inherently good, the ghosts of systemical­ly racist policies — like the 1958 Indian Adoption Project to break up Indigenous families and the embrace of the eugenics movement to root out what social workers saw as undesirabl­e traits, including being Black — linger in the predominan­tly white field today.

Social workers contribute to the criminaliz­ation and mass incarcerat­ion of people of color, said Julia Lyon, a Pennsylvan­ia social worker and member of Social Service Workers United. She sees racism almost every day in social workers’ evaluation­s of clients, saying they’re more likely to place blame on people of color and advocate for their punishment.

“If you are a Black boy in Philadelph­ia who’s acting out, there are going to be very different explanatio­ns as to why you’re acting out compared to a white boy in the wealthy suburbs,” she said.

Social worker Deana Ayers from Minneapoli­s said, at its worst, a system in which social workers collaborat­e with police or replace them in certain situations would be policing with a different name.

“If we’re trying to have social workers solve all these societal problems and be some kind of Band-Aid, then we also have to be doing the work within social work to get rid of this deep-seated, baked-in racism,” Ayers said. “Otherwise, social workers are just going to be police without guns.”

But advocates of collaborat­ion between social workers and police point to how ingrained law enforcemen­t is into American society as evidence of the need for acting within that framework.

“I just think it’s difficult in the current society we live in to say we can’t work with police officers when they’re so embedded in our communitie­s right now,” NASW North Carolina executive director Valerie Arendt said. “I think social workers can and do amazing work within these systems.”

Lucas Cooper, chief of Alexandria, Kentucky's police department, said the department hired its first social worker in 2016 and now employs two alongside 17 full-time officers. While Cooper at first opposed the plan, wanting more officers instead, he now sees the program as essential and a step in the right direction in confrontin­g flaws within policing.

“They bring a different skillset to the table," he said. "We don't know the ins and outs of that world and what social services are available. They fill in a lot of gaps.”

But Leah Jacobs, an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh's School of Social Work, says there’s little research to suggest that collaborat­ion between police and social workers is effective.

“In fact, there is some evidence saying that the opposite may be true, that when you have greater collaborat­ion with police, it can lead to poorer outcomes and greater harm,” she said.

Instead of perpetuati­ng what they see as punishment-based approaches, opponents of police and social workers recommend more investment in community-based interventi­on.

In her recent paper “Defund the Police: Moving Towards an Anti-Carceral Social Work,” Jacobs lists examples of these creative interventi­ons, including restorativ­e justice programs at schools that emphasize mediating conflict resolution and providing alternativ­es to detention and suspension.

Scott Roberts, senior director of criminal justice campaigns for Color Of Change — the nation’s largest digital racial justice advocacy group — said interventi­ons should be tailored to the needs of individual communitie­s and, as a result, may look completely different from one community to the next.

“When we say we want to change policing, we’re not saying to just plug in other institutio­ns like social work,” he said. “We have to reimagine policing and public safety, including social work.”

Perin acknowledg­es she’s cautious when it comes to initiative­s that are “pet projects within the police department with social workers tagging alongside,” but sees the need for immediate practical action.

“If we could tear down policing and build something different now, we should. But that’s not the reality," Perin said. “We need to work toward breaking down the system at the same time as preventing harm now.”

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