Today, Explained - How acid trips led to better policing
Episode Date: March 1, 2021Thirty years ago, Eugene, Oregon, figured out an alternative to the police. They called it CAHOOTS. Seriously. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoi...ces.com/adchoices
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Visit connectsontario.ca. 2020 was a big year for police reform, maybe the biggest year ever.
Protests across the country led to protests across the planet.
Activists, athletes, celebrities, even the former president, among the biggest known boosters of police, had to acknowledge that things weren't up to snuff.
Now, what all that extra attention on policing accomplished varies. There was some defunding,
there was some rethinking, but it's most definitely a work in progress. And we've had
at least two recent reminders of the country's open wound, both out of New York. A grand jury declined to pursue charges against
two police officers who were filmed shoving a 75-year-old protester to the ground in Buffalo
during last year's protests. And another grand jury declined to bring charges against any of
the officers involved in the death of Daniel Prude. Prude died after police officers placed a mesh hood
over his head and handcuffed him while he was having a psychotic episode on the street outside
his brother's house in Rochester last March. Both incidents scream there must be another way,
another way to respond to people having psychotic episodes, another way to deal with a 75-year-old
man who is peacefully protesting. And in Eugene, Oregon, they've found another way. They actually
found another way like 30-something years ago, and the police are on board. Rowan Moore Garrity
wrote about it for The Atlantic. So I wrote about a program in Eugene, Oregon called
CAHOOTS, which stands for Crisis Assistance Helping Out on the Streets. And basically what it is,
is a mobile crisis response service that's integrated into their 911 dispatch system. So
you call 911 for one of any number of things, whether it is someone having a mental health crisis in the street or somebody who just looks like they might be too intoxicated to get themselves home safely or perhaps even a domestic dispute.
And based on the particulars of what you say, the 911 dispatchers might say, you know, this looks like a call where instead of sending a cop,
it might be better for us to send cahoots. And what cahoots is, is basically two people,
one with a crisis or outreach background, the other with some kind of a medical background,
whether it's a nurse, an EMT, or a paramedic, on a van with first aid supplies, snacks,
and just an approach that is all about de-escalation and connecting with the
person at the center of the call. Okay, before we get any more into Cahoots, I think we have to talk
about the fact that this is a serious program in a serious place that is called Cahoots.
That is right. So the name is funny and it gets at one of the things that I think is vital and what's made it successful, which is CAHOOTS is a program of a community health clinic that's been around since the 60s in Eugene.
And that clinic, White Bird, really came out of the sort of hippie movement of that era. There was an earlier clinic in Haight-Ashbury in San Francisco that sort of pioneered this model
of, hey, the authorities, the medical establishment doesn't know how to deal with people who are
having a bad trip. They're not sort of meeting alienated youth where they are. So we need to
start a free clinic. So Whitebird began that way and has retained a lot of that counterculture, institutional culture.
And so by the time Cahoots was born in the late 80s,
obviously it had matured a lot,
but there was still a lot of, I think, distrust or at least the sense that,
hey, we may be able to help more established institutions
like the police intervene in people's lives,
but we still need to keep our distance.
And so the name Cahoots was
actually a joke, kind of like, hey, wink, yes, it's really us and we're really collaborating
with the cops. I mean, kudos to them because it still hits decades later. Jumping from the 80s
to now, what does this program look like in the 2020s? So today, you would think that the
Cahoots fans look and feel something like a kind of a lower tech ambulance. They carry first aid
supplies, they carry snacks, and basically they drive around town. It's two people, one person
with a medical background, whether it's an EMT or a nurse, and one person with
a sort of street outreach or crisis intervention, mental health type background.
And those people basically tag team on every call.
It could be someone who got out of the hospital with very bad burns and now 10 days have gone
by and they haven't had their bandages changed because they're living in a rainy climate in a tent and it's hard for them to get back to the hospital or to the burn care clinic.
It might be somebody who's 13 year old is cutting their wrists and they're not really sure what's
going on. You know, it could be someone with schizophrenia in the midst of a full-blown psychotic episode. It could be a death notification. It could be really any number of things. And so it's a good
way to both appreciate the variety of things we call on the police to do. And also when you see
someone with a very different skill set approach those same tasks, just how different those calls
look from the ones that make the news.
And you got to witness this firsthand back in August when you went for what,
a ride along in a Cahoots car?
Yeah. So I followed Cahoots on two shifts, one overnight and one during the day.
And about 60% of their calls involve the homeless community in Eugene in some form or fashion.
And most calls are what they call first party callers. So somebody saying, I need help,
my family member needs help, my neighbor needs help, my friend needs help, or something like
that. So when I rode along, the first shift I went on started about five o'clock in the afternoon.
We went and gave one man first aid for some cuts on his
hands. This is a guy who's living outside. We went to the campus of the University of Oregon
to a call where the police and the fire department had already been because there was a young man who
people kept sort of being, I guess, for lack of a better term, sketched out by. A guy who was laying on the grass, you know, according to the 911 call, acting
erratically.
When we got there, he was laying on the grass, kind of taking a nap.
But then there was also a little pile of latex gloves burning by his head.
And by the time we pulled up, he was sort of poking at it with a knife.
And so that was one of those calls where you could say, oh my goodness,
if the police arrived here, it would be a completely different thing. And what happened
in that instance is the medic in the Coutts call, Chelsea Swift, walked up, pulled the knife out of
reach because the guy didn't seem too worked up about anything, sat and talked to him. And we
ended up just giving him a ride back
to the middle of town. It wasn't that there was anything in particular he kind of needed,
but it was very clear that his behavior was alarming to some people on campus and that
maybe it wouldn't be great for him if he stayed there and continued acting that way.
Rowan, tell me more about someone like Chelsea Swift. Is she a crisis intervention worker? She's not a cop, but she did go up to this person and take away his knife.
It sounds like it could be dangerous.
Swift, she goes by Swift, was on the night that I rode along a medic.
She had also done crisis outreach work on the Cahoots van and before that.
So has a lot of experience.
She worked in the Bay Area doing harm reduction work with IV
drug users. Her own background, I think, is part of what sort of sent her in that direction. She
grew up in Connecticut. Her mother had an undiagnosed mental illness and some struggles
with addiction. This has been, as she put it, a job I'm so good at, I would never have wanted, meaning that she ends up doing something that
looks a lot like kind of EMT emergency response work in many places, but that has a completely
different culture. The policies are very clear that if there's any possibility of violence,
if there's anything, you know, that seems dangerous about the call, now those are subjective terms,
but if there's anything that seems dangerous about the call, then that is a police call.
It's not a cahoots call, or possibly it's a cahoots call once the police are through.
In practice, a 911 call doesn't tell you everything. Somebody could be lying. They
could be really angry. The connection could be really bad. And the dispatchersOOTS has been around for 30 years
and a lot of the people who they help
probably wouldn't be thrilled to see the cops,
it's also true that some people will call 911
but try to phrase their need in such a way
that it will lead to CAHOOTS being sent and not the police.
All of that's to say that really a lot of cahoots' work,
like a lot of police work, happens in a kind of gray area.
You don't know how dangerous it is.
It may be dramatically more dangerous in five minutes
than it was five minutes ago.
And there's a lot of kind of quick thinking on your feet.
And there are some number of calls,
about 1% of the calls Cahoots handled last year,
for instance, they called police for backup. But that's a few hundred calls out of more than,
you know, 15,000. So it doesn't happen all that often.
Yeah, I was curious, actually, how much of 911's calls are being diverged from police to cahoots.
So there are a few reasons that's really tricky. If you just look at the raw data, how many calls come into the 911 center, right, or how many calls get dispatched in the city of Eugene by police dispatchers, and how many calls is cahoots handling, the number is around 17% or just shy of one out of
every five 911 calls. But if you ask the police, okay, so did CAHOOTS divert 17% of your police
calls? That sounds really impressive. They'll say, whoa, whoa, whoa, don't get carried away.
A lot of those things wouldn't be police calls. And I think there's some truth to that. So for
instance, one of the most common requests that Cahoots gets is transport. People who are living on the street in Eugene who badly
need to get to a medical appointment. Cahoots can do that. The police aren't just going to throw you
in the back of their cruiser and then take you to your friend's house, right? So there is some
truth to that, that not every call that comes in via 911 is truly a police call.
It sounds a little bit like a program that you could take advantage of if you were, say, intoxicated, but maybe feeling a little frugal and didn't want to call an Uber or a Lyft or a taxi.
Could you just call Cahoots and get a ride home?
Yes, you could. I don't think that in reality, that's the way it has worked in Eugene because response times are long. Unless
you are really in the midst of an ongoing emergency, they're not likely to get to you in
less than an hour. So the rest of us have a question to ask, which is, what is a 911 system for? On one level, the fact that cahoots exists in Eugene and you could call
them, you know, if you're really drunk and just need a ride home, suggests like, yeah, there is
some mission creep that's possible. But on another level, it suggests, wow, we have this 911 system
that in most places can only send you police or the fire department. But we have a lot of what one CAHOOTS employee I spoke to called emergencies of need, particularly in the case of Eugene with people who are homeless, where there are emergencies that the police department may not be able to solve and that the fire department may not be the best response for. And Eugene is a place where we have given people a way to voice those as emergencies and get a response to that on some kind of emergency basis. really should be in our 911 system and other places, or shouldn't it be? My view is it really should be somehow
because you see in so many different places,
the cops do end up getting called
and the cops do end up showing up.
And when they do show up,
it doesn't really seem like
they're always the right people for the job.
Cahoots sounds super functional,
but police alternatives
are pretty controversial elsewhere. Do people dunk on cahoots sounds super functional, but police alternatives are pretty controversial elsewhere.
Do people dunk on cahoots?
Does it have detractors in Eugene?
In Eugene, it's actually remarkable.
It's very hard to find anybody who wants to say anything bad about cahoots.
Really?
For the most part, people like it.
They rely on it or know people who have relied on it at the very least. Or perhaps
if you're a business owner downtown, you know, you've relied on it by sort of getting somebody
else help or something like that. But I'd say the number one drawback is people feel like it's a
resource that there should be more of. And I think one of the things I've been heartened to see this year is we're starting
to see our society do a lot more critical thinking around how we engage with 911. You'll see signs up
on people's fences that say, don't call 911, call this community resource. And in a way, people in Eugene who say,
call 911 and then make it seem like you don't need the cops
when really the cops are going to want to be there,
they're doing the same thing.
What they're trying to do is respond to
or avoid the risk of police violence if things should escalate.
And I think we are at a moment
where we have a real crisis of legitimacy
in some places and with some communities
in terms of that 911 response.
If people just broadly
don't trust your 911 system enough
to opt into the right parts of it,
then it's not just that they're misusing it,
but it's that the system
is not necessarily handling things
in a way that it should. In other words, if the risk of police violence is so great,
or is perceived as so great, that telling the truth about your emergency
could get someone you love killed, then we really need to recalibrate. More with Rowan in a minute. I'm Sean Ramos from It's Today Explained. Thank you. Your AuraFrames make it easy to share unlimited photos and videos directly from your phone to the frame. When you give an AuraFrame as a gift, you can personalize it.
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Rowan, I asked you how people felt about Cahoots and whether there were drawbacks to the system, and you said it was pretty much widely approved of and praised. How did the police in Eugene,
Oregon feel about Cahoots? The mayor of Eugene said to me, until this whole defund the police movement, I don't think the police ever sort of thought of it as competition. I'm paraphrasing here. She said, IAHOOTS have developed a really good basis for collaboration
where from the police point of view,
CAHOOTS is someone who can show up
and instead of your only tool being,
okay, well, I can drop you off at the emergency room
or I can arrest you and take you to the city jail.
Now you can call somebody who can both take over from
there so you can go get onto other things. And they can also say, hey, do you need a place to
stay tonight? Are you seeing any mental health counselors? And I think that's a resource that
the police have really come to rely on. Did you talk to any police officers about the program? I did. I walked with an officer who sort of patrols a downtown area in Eugene on foot and
deals with a lot of the same population of people experiencing homelessness there. And
she sort of, I think, calls cahoots on an almost daily basis on behalf of the people that she runs across because they're able
to help in ways that she just can or may not have time for or would rather not deal with sometimes.
I think this past year, 2020, police brutality becoming a huge focus of a national protest
movement, becoming the focus of our sort of very partisan political
divisions and so forth has complicated the working relationship between cahoots and the police and
eugene quite a lot and i think right now there's this challenge where if people in eugene are
pointing at cahoots and saying they should have half of your budget instead of 2%, and we should
fire half of you and bring on five times as many of them. Regardless of the opinions within CAHOOTS,
that makes it a really difficult thing to navigate with people who are essentially your colleagues.
So I think it's been a challenge for them to sort of avoid seeing each other in the context of this national debate around what
role should police play in our society. Well, let's talk about how the program is funded.
So the program is directly funded by contract with the police department. They are a vendor
who sells their services to the police department. And in a city with a police department budget of about
$66 million a year, the cost of cahoots is somewhere between $1 and $2 million a year,
or right around 2%. At the low end, they respond to 5% or 8% of 911 calls. And at the high end,
maybe they respond to 17, 18% of 911 calls, and they do it for 2% of the budget. People look at
those numbers and they say,
well, geez, you know, why shouldn't we have three times as much cahoots, four times as much cahoots,
or at the very least reduce the police budget, because cahoots is doing so much. And I think
in the next few years, Eugene and other cities may find out more kind of where does it make sense to place
that line? How far should we move the needle or how far can we move the needle safely away from
police and onto people with a different kind of skill set? Are there other cities that have
programs like this and that have had similar levels of success as cahoots?
Yes, absolutely.
I think the main difference, what sets cahoots apart is scale.
So there are a variety of ways that other cities have responded to,
I think, a similar set of challenges around homelessness,
drug addiction, mental health issues, and so forth.
In Austin, for instance, there's a program
they call the Community Health Paramedic Program, where basically there's a unit within their fire
department's emergency response service that has specialized training. There are cities,
you know, in the Bay Area, there's a program where a licensed mental health professional
is paired with a police officer or sheriff's deputy with special training,
and they will go out to acute mental health crisis calls.
But both of those handle kind of well under 1%.
In the case of the Alameda County program,
it might just be a few calls a day,
whereas Cahoots in a city of only 170,000 goes to 15,000, 16,000 calls a year.
It's interesting. I mean, it just sounds like cahoots is the middle ground between all of
these calls to defund the police and police reform that so many people have essentially been asking for. And here it is, this quiet program
that's found success for decades in Eugene, Oregon. How did they feel when the whole country
started debating about whether or not it could pull off something they'd been doing for a
generation or two? On one level, I think they're very inspired and excited about
the notion that Cahoots has caught fire as a model. I think the thing that I heard from a
lot of people in Eugene, including people who have worked at Cahoots, is if other cities really want to adopt a model like this, don't discount how much the sort of particular history, culture, and context of Eugene, and in particular, what kind of an organization White Bird is, don't discount how much that has played a role in its success. And what I mean by that is CAHOOTS has worked very closely with the
police for 30 years, and not in a million years would you mistake CAHOOTS for kind of an arm of
the police department. They have a very different culture. It's a non-hierarchical organization.
They make decisions by consensus. Everybody gets paid around the same amount. And so they have a
level of credibility and trust with people who are living on the street,
with people who are using drugs in public, with people of all stripes from all walks of life.
They have a level of credibility and trust and a kind of a brand that says to people,
don't worry, I'm here for you. It's going to be okay. And a lot of those same people have an
extremely different relationship with the police. And I think that And a lot of those same people have an extremely different relationship
with the police. And I think that's a product of that 30-year collaboration and is a product
of that unique history. And I think if you're the mayor of Houston and you want to start something
like this, or you're the mayor of Miami or LA or New York or whoever, right, and you want to start
a program like this, one of the biggest challenges is going to be, okay, I don't have 30 years. I don't have a
whitebird-free clinic that everybody already knows. It sounds like hard work. Is that why
more cities haven't been able to pull it off? I don't think all that many cities have tried.
And I don't mean to diminish efforts by a lot of smart
people in a lot of places to find a more humane way to respond to different kinds of emergencies.
But we really have not glimpsed a kind of different paradigm in this country. I mean,
the fact that it only exists in Eugene is still telling. You know, when you see Cahoots approach a young man
laying on the grass with a knife, and you imagine the way that the police might have reacted in that
same situation. Now, I didn't say would have reacted or all police might have reacted, right?
But nevertheless, when you see Cahoots approach somebody in that situation, it was mind-blowing to me. And it kind of felt like,
oh my gosh, like, you mean there is another way? Because a lot of our political debate and a lot
of the sort of passion in the protests around police brutality has been very vivid and powerful
in the model it's denouncing. But we just don't have a frame of reference for somebody without
a badge and a gun stepping in in a role of authority in these tense situations. Somebody
whose training really is focused on how do we talk somebody off a ledge here. Every police officer on
the force has 40 hours of special training for crisis intervention. But, you know, CAHOOTS has
500 hours. And it's also probably a very
different group of people who are recruited into that program than the group of people who get
recruited into police departments. And I think that is really important, too.
It's amazing to hear how functional this program is in a place like Eugene, Oregon,
and compare that with the kinds of vitriol you heard to these kinds of ideas
on presidential debate stages or in Congress or all over social media, the reality of considering
alternate emergency services isn't quite as radical as it might seem.
Yeah. And so I think there's a good and growing body of academic research or academic literature about what people sometimes call the skills mismatch. In other words, police officers are
hired to do one narrow crime fighting oriented job, and then they get into their squad car or start to
patrol their beat, and all of a sudden, the job the community needs them to do requires them not
to just be an investigator or a crime fighter, but also a grief counselor, right, if they're doing
death notifications, but also a social worker if they're mediating between members of
a family and there's a possibility of domestic violence. Also a substance abuse counselor if
they're dealing with somebody who is dealing with substance use disorder in some way or another.
Also a mental health counselor, right? So the police have all these different hats that they do, in fact, need to try
and wear in the course of doing their jobs. And in most places, it's not what they were hired for,
it's not what they were trained for, and it's not what they ever thought of their job as being.
And so then you see the collateral damage everywhere. I mean, of course, this is all
happening in the context of an intensely racist society that is still working through that in all kinds of institutions would be well-placed to respond to each of those emergencies,
you probably wouldn't arrive at, okay, it's either the police department or the fire department.
But because when 911 systems started out and it was, okay, police or fire, and all of this stuff,
all of the sort of challenges of city living, right, has been layered on top of it.
We still just have police or fire.
So when you start from that place of what do we need these people to do, I think you'd get to a very different emergency response system than the one we have now.
And I think cahoots is powerful because it's one of the few real world examples we have of what that looks like in an American city.
Today's episode was inspired by an article in The Atlantic.
It's titled An Alternative to Police That Police Can Get Behind.
You can read it at theatlantic.com.
It was written by our guest, Rowan Moore Garrity.
I'm a journalist. I live in Phoenix. I wrote a book about Mozambique
that I'm still trying to promote two years later.
What's it called? You're doing a terrible job.
Oh, sorry. It's called Go Tell the Crocodiles, Chasing Prosperity in Mozambique.
That's a good title.
Thank you. you