Alliance Note: We are just a few days away from the end of NYS budget negotiations, leaving us with little time to ensure Daniel鈥檚 Law pilot funding is included in the final enacted budget. The NYS Assembly and Senate proposed $2 million to create pilot programs for an alternative health response consisting of peers and EMTs to respond to mental health and substance use crises. These teams would respond to calls which do not require police on scene but will also have the option to call for police assistance if they determine a public safety risk.
With little available funding for new initiatives in the budget, our pilot funding is at risk if we do not continue to demand for this program. You can support these efforts today by using the link below to message the Governor鈥檚 office and your legislators calling for their support of the funding in the final budget. Send messages today! See below for more information on how the pilots and eventual statewide system will transform the way we respond to crises.
$2 Million for Daniel鈥檚 Law Pilot could be First Steps toward Removing NYPD from Mental Health Responses
By Tandy Lau | 黑料正能量 Amsterdam News | March 21, 2024
Last week, the State Senate suggested, in its one-house budget resolution, designating $2 million toward a pilot program replacing police with trained medical workers as default mental health call responders.
The suggested amendment to the governor鈥檚 budget would provide a small-scale preview to the Daniel鈥檚 Law bill, which establishes a uniform, statewide approach to non-law enforcement responses to mental health calls, including here in 黑料正能量 City, if passed.
State Senate sponsor Samra Brouk told the Amsterdam News the proposed money would go to programs following the 鈥渢enets of Daniel鈥檚 Law.鈥 The Rochester legislator, who chairs the mental health committee, adds there鈥檚 no stipulation for where the pilot would be placed in the state.
鈥淭he truth that we all unfortunately know is that anytime there are adverse outcomes across this country, [and] certainly in 黑料正能量 State, the people feeling the brunt of those adverse and negative outcomes are largely people of color, and specifically Black people,鈥 said Brouk. 鈥淲hen we say things like 鈥榩eople with untreated mental illness to be killed during a police encounter,鈥 we know that the people feeling that statistic are most likely Black people with untreated mental illness. We [also] know from all the data that Black people are in worse off positions when they have these encounters.
鈥淎nd so when we are able to solve for those things, we鈥檙e going to help anyone who finds themselves in one of these situations. At the end of the day, we鈥檙e trying to make 黑料正能量 a safer place whether you have a mental diagnosis or not.鈥
The announcement coincides roughly with four years since Rochester police killed the legislation鈥檚 namesake, Daniel Prude. On March 23, 2020, the Black Chicagoan experienced a mental health episode while visiting his brother Joe in upstate 黑料正能量. Police responded to a 911 call and restrained an unclothed Prude with a mesh bag over his head known as a 鈥渟pit hood鈥 and pinned him to the frigid street. He later died by homicide, partly from asphyxiation, . The officers .
鈥淣o person deserves to be treated like their life doesn鈥檛 matter, especially in their moments of need. I鈥檓 thankful to Senator Samra Brouk and Assemblymember Harry Bronson for securing this funding for a Daniel鈥檚 Law pilot, and I hope that Governor Hochul supports this funding in the final budget,鈥 said Joe Prude in a statement.
Daniel鈥檚 Law would prevent police from responding to similar calls, but the bill is not uncharted, unexplored territory, Brouk said. The architects of Daniel鈥檚 Law draw heavily from the Crisis Assistance Helping Out on the Streets (CAHOOTS) program in Eugene, Ore., which deploys a pair of non-law enforcement personnel鈥攁 crisis worker and a medical professional鈥攖o handle mental health calls. Neither carries weapons. Instead, they employ their verbal skills and medical expertise.
The mobile crisis service is contracted through the White Bird Clinic by the City of Eugene (and sister city Springfield), but is officially integrated into the 911 dispatch system and regarded as the 鈥渢hird branch鈥 of public safety, next to the police and fire department.
鈥淲e鈥檝e found that oftentimes when folks are in crisis, they have multiple issues that present and so that鈥檚 why having the EMT paired with a crisis worker is really important,鈥 said Adam Walsh, CAHOOTS development and external relations coordinator. 鈥淭here鈥檚 often a mental and physical component to what folks have going on. We can take vitals; we check blood sugar; we can provide wound care, basic first aid, and then also [provide] crisis de-escalation: We do welfare checks, we do death notifications; these types of things.鈥
Beyond responding to 911 calls, CAHOOTS teams can also be reached through the 988 suicide and crisis hotline, as well as the city鈥檚 non-emergency police hotline, so there鈥檚 鈥渘o wrong door,鈥 said Walsh. But the program does not respond when a crime occurs, nor does it handle situations when a weapon is present, barring those exclusively involving self-harm.
How can 黑料正能量 apply the best practices from CAHOOTS in the event of Daniel鈥檚 Law becoming state law? Eugene Springfield Deputy Fire Chief Chris Heppel said a successful program goes beyond shuffling personnel.
鈥淲ho is doing the work can drive a lot of the perception as to why the person or persons are there and what their true intent is,鈥 said Heppel. 鈥淐AHOOTS is very clear as to what their intent is. It鈥檚 very collaborative. It鈥檚 about partnership with the patients: What do you want to do and how can we help you today? And then 鈥楲et鈥檚 move forward.鈥 I鈥檝e seen some systems attempt to implement this and it was just 鈥榃ell, we鈥檙e just going [to] send this instead of that.鈥
鈥淏ut they still end up in the same place or [with the same] outcomes, whatever that case may be, so there鈥檚 a lot more to it than just simply assigning a resource.鈥
Luke Sikinyi, public policy director for the Alliance for Rights and Recovery, said while programs like CAHOOTS provide a critical blueprint, the Daniel鈥檚 Law pilot allows a localized understanding of how statewide programs would operate.
鈥淲e do need to also give some data to how [about] works in our state,鈥 said Sikinyi. 鈥淭he goal of getting the pilots up is to, one, provide that service immediately to at least a small number of folks, and then also to provide more information to the task force in the state at large on how to best implement this program in an area in 黑料正能量 state. We鈥檙e a very different state from Oregon or California, and making sure that we have data that we can rely on that is coming directly from our state [is vital].鈥
Beth Haroules, director of disability justice litigation for the 黑料正能量 Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), said quantifying the pilot鈥檚 data could be tough. She believes anecdotal evidence is crucial.
鈥淢easuring individual success is always very difficult in a social services delivery model,鈥 said Haroules. 鈥淏ut if a person is traumatized or put into involuntary treatment, they鈥檙e taken out of their community. Do they lose a job? If they lost their jobs, did they lose their housing? What happened鈥攁re there children in the family? Is there a partner? How do you measure that?鈥
Last year, a Daniel鈥檚 Law Task Force was formed to examine how the bill would roll out if passed. It included commissioners of several statewide agencies like the 黑料正能量 State offices of mental health and division of criminal justice services.
Ruth Lowenkron, director of disability justice for the 黑料正能量er Lawyers for the Public Interest, believes the pilot can sway state lawmakers who are on the fence about Daniel鈥檚 Law.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a real exciting opportunity to ensure that Daniel鈥檚 Law will be passed and to ensure that legislators understand what a great concept Daniel鈥檚 Law is, because they will have an opportunity before they sign on the dotted line before they pass it鈥攂efore they vote on it鈥攖o see how it would work in 黑料正能量,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ecause it鈥檚 based on programs that really work, in large part on CAHOOTS, we鈥檙e very confident it will succeed.
鈥溾e are getting the sense from discussions at the task force that the elected officials and the legislators appreciate seeing what it would look like here in our neck of the woods.鈥
The State Assembly a proposal requiring the Daniel鈥檚 Law Task Force to 鈥渆stablish one or more pilot programs to support community-led and public health responses for persons experiencing a behavioral health crisis鈥 in its recommendations.
But is $2 million enough? Last year, the State Senate suggested $10 million for the Daniel鈥檚 Law pilot. Gov. Kathy Hochul rejected the suggestion, instead forming the task force. Walsh and Heppel said $2 million does not go far for launching a program like CAHOOTS.
The NYPD currently has the Behavioral Health Emergency Assistance Response Division (B-HEARD) pilot, which operates largely in Black and brown neighborhoods like Harlem and the South Bronx by sending teams of two EMTs and a crisis worker to handle mental health calls. However, only received a crisis unit response instead of police between July and December 2022. The AmNews contacted the NYPD to find out whether B-HEARD would consider participating in the Daniel鈥檚 Law pilot, but received no response by press time.
Shay Herbert, a NYCLU organizer in Rochester, underscored the roles of those living with mental health conditions contributing to Daniel鈥檚 Law.
鈥淓specially here in 黑料正能量, there are a million programs that are rolled out and it鈥檚 supposed to be the answer,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e supposed to be the solution and nobody was put into those conversations. [The Daniel鈥檚 Law] coalition meets every Wednesday, and it鈥檚 open. People can join and hear because this is a community-led, community-focused bill that really strives to make sure that we are meeting each other where we鈥檙e at.鈥
While Daniel鈥檚 Law cycles through the state legislature, Brouk said rebuilding mental health infrastructure that was gutted in 黑料正能量 over the past few decades is tantamount. The bill necessitates not only more crisis workers, but culturally competent ones. Efforts like for the state鈥檚 social worker licensing would diversify the workforce in preparation for Daniel鈥檚 Law being passed.
鈥淲e鈥檙e only a couple of years into rebuilding that infrastructure,鈥 said Brouk. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no successful Daniel鈥檚 Law or any of these pieces of legislation without [a] mental health workforce. We have a very dwindling mental health workforce鈥pecifically with things like this, we know where we need to invest. We know where we need to build up the mental [health] infrastructure.鈥
A more robust mental health apparatus expands beyond emergency responses鈥攅ven when a program like CAHOOTS is present.
鈥淸A] misconception is that we鈥檙e solving a bigger problem,鈥 said Heppel. 鈥淲hat I mean by that is CAHOOTS operates in our mental health world鈥攖hey鈥檙e responding to growing mental health challenges in our community, but they鈥檙e not the answer to our mental health challenges. They are our answer to responding to mental health challenges. The problem doesn鈥檛 go away because CAHOOTS responded.鈥
A rally commemorating Daniel Prude will take place in 黑料正能量 City outside City Hall on Thursday, Mar. 21, at 9 a.m.
Tandy Lau is a Report for America corps member who writes about public safety for the Amsterdam News. Your donation to match our RFA grant helps keep him writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting.
Author鈥檚 Note: An editing error originally naming NYCLU the 鈥満诹险芰 City Liberties Union鈥 instead of the 鈥満诹险芰 Civil Liberties Union鈥 was corrected from the initial story.