Florida City Says Cops Will No Longer Be Dispatched to ‘Non-Violent Calls’
St. Petersburg FL July 12 2020
Police in St. Petersburg, Florida will no longer be dispatched to “non-violent calls” in the coming weeks; raising serious questions over the safety and security of residents and tourists traveling to the region.
“St. Petersburg police officers will no longer respond to non-violent 911 calls, such as quality-of-life complaints or mental health concerns, amid nationwide calls for budget cuts and policing changes, the the agency announced,” reports Fox News.
“The Florida city’s police department will instead send employees from its newly created Community Assistance Liaison division, which officials described as ‘a social service agency.’ They will respond to 911 calls pertaining to a number of issues, including drug overdoses, disorderly intoxications, suicide crises and panhandling, the department said in a Thursday press release,” adds Fox.
“Change is coming to St. Pete Police Department,” said Chief of Police Anthony Holloway during a Thursday press conference.
According to the press release, CAL officers will respond to the following calls:
Intoxicated individuals
Mental health crises
Drug overdose
Disorderly intoxication
Suicide crises
Homeless complaints and panhandling
Neighborhood disputes
Truancy, or disorderly minors
Disorderly juveniles at elementary schools
The program is slated to begin Oct. 1.
Holloway explained that the median age of police officers on the force is 25 and most don’t even have children, “but we’re asked sometimes to help someone raise their kid.”
As for mental health calls, Holloway said, the officers don’t have enough training in the area and are not experts on those types of issues.
Out of the 259,800 911 calls in 2019, the St. Petersburg Police Department responded to an estimated 12,700 calls for help regarding those issues, the department said.
On Thursday, Holloway also said the department is examining its use of force policy and how complaints are handled. It’s monitoring calls to determine whether or not to respond at all.
“Believe it or not, we still get some calls about, ‘there’s an African American male sitting in the park, he doesn’t look like us,’” the police chief said during the press conference. “We’re not coming to those calls. If that person, he or she, is not committing a crime, we’re not going to that.”
He detailed additional training for the department, doubling de-escalation and self-defense training from one to two times per year.
The department also requires civilian members to receive “Fair and Impartial Policing” training, which its sworn officers already receive. A civilian member from a local advocacy or faith group will be added to the police department’s hiring board.