With spotlight on policing failures, how can the system better respond to mental-health crises?
TORONTO — When someone broke into her car earlier this month, Meenakshi Mannoe considered calling police.
The Vancouver resident weighed several questions: Would she get her belongings back? Was it even worth the hassle? And the tipping point: What good would it ultimately do?
In the end, Mannoe concluded it wasn’t a big deal — she could easily replace her lost portable speaker and first aid kit, and she questioned the impact of calling the cops on someone desperate enough to take them.
“Is it an inconvenience? Absolutely. But I don’t want to contribute to the over-criminalization of folks, or hyper-policing when I know that people are doing things just to get by, just to survive.”