Calls for police reform shine spotlight on Oregon model for crisis intervention
An emergency dispatcher picks up a call from a mother who says her adult son is angry and breaking things at home, but he may not react well to police officers.
In most cities, armed officers would be first at the scene, but in Eugene, Ore., there’s another option called CAHOOTS, a community-based crisis intervention service that pairs medics with mental health specialists.
Crisis worker Ben Brubaker says on the day the mother called he was already working nearby and officers had yet to arrive.
He said the situation had calmed down by the time he called the woman and talked to her son.