MENTAL HEALTH WORK GROUP

In Minnesota, in a three-week period between November and December 2018, five people experiencing mental health crises were killed during encounters with law enforcement.  Nationally, fully 50% of people killed by police had a disability.

Further, people with untreated mental illnesses are a staggering 16 times more likely to be shot and killed by police“Some of them, it seems the person is almost executed,” said Ron Honberg, director of national policy and legal affairs at the National Alliance on Mental Illness, the country’s premier mental health advocacy group.

These shocking statistics point unequivocally to the need to limit police-only contacts with people experiencing mental health crises.

In early 2019, CUAPB initiated our Mental Health Work Group to address this issue.

-->TELL US ABOUT YOUR EXPERIENCES WITH MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS RESPONSE IN MINNESOTA<--

We are working on a project to understand how well Travis' Law is being implemented.  If you or a family member have had a mental health crisis encounter since September 2021, please take a few minutes to complete this brief survey.  THANK YOU!


ENDING POLICE-ONLY RESPONSES TO MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS CALLS

When police respond to mental health crisis calls, the results can be disastrous. People needing help end up in jail, or worse.  Police officers themselves don't want to respond to these calls.  CUAPB has written a white paper on ending this practice.  It is a definitive guide to ensuring that people experiencing mental health crises get care, not criminalization.

TRAVIS' LAW

In 2021, we took our fight to the legislature with Travis' Law (MN Statute 403.03, Subd. 1b), which requires 911 call centers to send mental health crisis teams, instead of police, to mental health crisis calls.  The bill became law on August 31, 2021.  Since then, we have held workshops for county staff across the state to assist them with implementation.  We have also developed an advertising campaign to inform community members of this new right.

MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS TELEPHONE NUMBERS

Even though calls to 911 should bring mental health crisis responders, some counties are not following Travis' Law or are only sporadic in sending mobile mental health crisis teams. Many continue to send cops, with disastrous results.

GETTING INVOLVED

The CUAPB Mental Health Work Group meets every Sunday at 5 pm.  Like the rest of CUAPB, we are all volunteers and we would love to have your help.  Please email [email protected] to get involved.

  • Michelle Gross
    published this page 2022-03-11 11:16:14 -0600

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