A committee of St. Pete first responders and city leaders met Thursday to select the organization that will handle its promised police social worker program.
Gulf Coast Jewish Family and Community Services will handle non-violent emergency calls for police by early 2021.
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In July Mayor Rick Kriseman and Police Chief Anthony Halloway first promised the Community Assistance Liaison, or CAL, program to have social workers and mental health professionals take over non-violent emergency calls for police officers.
With funding secured and proposals reviewed, the committee voted unanimously Thursday to recommend St. Pete’s City Council choose Gulf Coast as the organization to provide workers for the CAL program. Council members are expected to formally select the organization in a January meeting. Gulf Coast said it could begin responding to calls within four weeks of getting the contract.
The right time
Assistant police chief Tony Gilliam said the timeline was part of why he chose the organization.
“One vendor was able to provide a definitive time frame,” he said. “The other, it was contingent upon a lot of factors. I think in this day and age, while we can’t give a certain date, we do need to be able to narrow down how long it will take to roll out this program.”
The City also considered Chrysalis Health.
Diverting funds
City leadership announced the program amid calls locally and nationwide to enact police reform, including diverting money from police departments to social programs. Kriseman and Halloway social workers would be brought on using a $3 million grant. The money was originally going to bring on about two dozen new officers. “Defund the Police” movements call for similar reforms.
St. Pete’s 2021 budget shows about $1 million allocated to the CAL program in its first year. Officials said the $3 million grant will cover a three-year period.
The CAL program will provide responses to calls like disorderly intoxication; drug overdose; mental health crisis; suicide crisis; truancy; homeless complaints and neighborhood disputes among others.
Theresa Jones, the city’s manager of veteran, social and homeless services said the Chrysalis vision for the program seemed to resemble law enforcement too much, which is a priority for the city to avoid.
“With their interest in having the radios and some of the things that were said, it almost felt like an extension of law enforcement as opposed to trying to establish a program that addresses the needs of the community that is outside the law enforcement arena,” she said
Detailed plan
Committee members said both organizations displayed a wealth of experience in behavioral health, but Gulf Coast’s plan was more detailed including ways of making the community aware of the program and identifying specific partner organizations it could work with.
“What was presented by Gulf Coast was a very detailed plan,” Ian Womack, division chief for St. Pete Fire and Rescue said. “The level of detail that was provided gives a high level of confidence in their ability to implement and deliver on the objectives of the program and also to identify the moving parts that will accomplish those objectives.”
Gulf Coast also said it could provide 24-hour service all year long. The original CAL program model called for operations between 6 a.m. and 2 a.m.
Independence
The program will roll out in phases. Social workers will embed with police for phase one. That doesn’t sit well with some community members like Karla Correa who want a fully independent program.
“We don’t need that embedded approach like they were talking about in the beginning,” she said. “We need Gulf Coast to be completely separate from the police.”
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