New Mexico mayor proposes agency to use social workers instead of cops in some cases
By Joshua Rhett Miller
New York Post
June 16, 2020
The mayor of New Mexico’s most populous city wants to create a new municipal department consisting of social workers to respond to some 911 calls, saying the time has come for “non-law enforcement” alternatives.
Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller unveiled his plan Monday for a first-of-its-kind department staffed with unarmed social workers to respond to some emergency calls regarding public intoxication, homelessness, addiction and mental health issues.
“We’ve placed more and more issues on the plates of officers who are not trained – despite their best efforts and despite some training,” Keller told reporters. “They’re not totally trained to be a social worker, or to be an addiction counselor, or to deal with things around child abuse when they’re just answering a call.”
The proposed agency, the Albuquerque Community Safety Department, comes amid growing calls to defund police departments nationwide in the aftermath of George Floyd’s police-custody death in Minneapolis on May 25.
The department would need at least 32 staffers for each of six area commands to be on call 24/7 and ready to respond to tens of thousands of incidents per year, the Albuquerque Journal reports.
Many details of the proposal still need to be finalized, chief administrative officer Sarita Nair said.
“Now that we’ve said ‘let’s create this third response department,’ we’ll begin the process of really getting into the weeds of what it’s going to look like, how it’s going to affect dispatch, how this is going to look in terms of staffing, what are the [standard operating procedures] going to look like,” Nair said.
Keller added he believes it’s time to add another agency to alleviate the burden of police and fire departments to respond to calls like “nonviolent and noncriminal” welfare checks, according to the Albuquerque Journal.
The city will not divert funds from its police department to finance the new agency, Keller said.
Some civil rights advocates praised the idea, but said the proposal is far from being a “silver bullet,” suggesting that less cops on the street would be a better start.
“To achieve the real, lasting change Albuquerque deserves, the city still needs to reduce the number of armed police officers patrolling the streets,” American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico Executive Director Peter Simonson told the newspaper in a statement.
But Keller insisted the new department could become a national “new model” on how to respond to public safety issues.
“It is fascinating that given all the challenges in America over the last 100 years on a number of fronts, when it comes to public safety, we still just think there’s two departments – police and fire – in every city,” Keller told the Associated Press.
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LEAP OF FAITH OR JUMP FROM CLIFF ?
Is Albuquerque P D Getting Modern Or Getting Stupid ?
by Bob Walsh
Albuquerque
is the largest city in the state of New Mexico. About 400,000 poor
bastards live there. The Mayor, Tim Keller, has just announced the
formation of a new public safety department. Albequerque Public Safety
will respond to 911 calls relating to drunkeness, homelessness,
addiction and mental health. The 911 responders will be unarmed social
workers, housing and homelessness specialists and violence prevention
coordinators.
It is not completely clear who will make the initial determination as to whether or not to send real cops or fake cops.
The
mayor believes it will take "tens of millions of dollars" to fund this
new agency. It is not yet completely clear where this money will come
from. Perhaps the money fairy will leave it under his bed. The P D is
currently significantly under strength and the officer's union is very
much opposed to taking money from the P D to fund this new agency.
I
predict this program will be a huge success, right up until the time a
social worker and a violence prevention coordinator respond to a "mental
health crisis" and are slaughtered by a drunk psychopath armed with a
machete. After that the program will take a modest downturn. IMHO.
2 comments:
I want to see how it works out. As a betting person, I'll wager that once the program begins, uniformed cops will be called to a lot of scenes by the social workers. I think people will then see what cops have been dealing with for years. I hope they wear body cams.
I hope they wear body armor and rosary beads. They will likely need both.
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