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Record #: Or2020-242   
Type: Order Status: Failed to Pass
Intro date: 9/9/2020 Current Controlling Legislative Body: Committee on Health and Human Relations
Final action: 5/24/2023
Title: Call for development of Chicago Crisis Response and Care System within Chicago Department of Public Health to be included in 2021 budget proposal
Sponsors: Rodriguez Sanchez, Rossana , La Spata, Daniel , Taylor, Jeanette B. , Sigcho-Lopez, Byron, Ramirez-Rosa, Carlos, Vasquez, Jr., Andre, Martin, Matthew J. , Hadden, Maria E. , Rodriguez, Michael D., Cappleman, James, Osterman, Harry
Topic: CITY DEPARTMENTS/AGENCIES - Health
Attachments: 1. Or2020-242.pdf
Committee on Health and Human Relations

Meeting Date: September 9, 2020

ORDER

WHEREAS, the City of Chicago appropriated $1.78 billion for the Chicago Police Department (CPD) in FY2020. CPD has the second highest per capita spending among all large police departments throughout the country at $660 per year, an amount that has nearly tripled since 1964. The City of Philadelphia is a distant third at $488 per capita; and

WHEREAS, CPD overtime spending has skyrocketed over the past 10 years, from $42.2 million in 2011 to $139.5 in 2019. Overtime spending in 2020 is on-track to exceed that 2019 figure substantially; and

WHEREAS, the CPD's responses to mental health crises have proven fatal in many instances, including cases like the Quintonio LeGrier, and legal settlements for police misconduct in these and other cases now exceeds $100,000,000 annually; and

WHEREAS, Chicago is facing a mental health crisis that has only intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic, with many residents lacking access to mental health services following years of divestment in Chicago's mental health infrastructure, and with a shrinking in the number of city-run mental health clinics, which would be an especially valuable resource to residents today, from 19 to only 5 today; and

WHEREAS, effective models of alternative responses to mental health crises, neighbor disputes, and other incidents have been developed and implemented through a joint partnership between the cities of Eugene and Springfield, Oregon. Crisis Assistance Helping Out On the Streets (CAHOOTS) is a 31 year-old program that provides services such as crisis counseling, suicide prevention/intervention, conflict resolution, substance abuse, housing crises, non-emergency medical care, and transportation in the Eugene-Springfield metropolitan area. CAHOOTS is run by the White Bird Clinic, and each CAHOOTS team consists of a medic and a crisis worker trained in trauma-informed care and de-escalation; and

WHEREAS, CAHOOTS responds to approximately 20% of all calls for service to the Eugene and Springfield Police Departments, and the Eugene Police Department estimates that CAHOOTS saves the department $8.5 million on average annually-nearly 12% of their $68 million budget. Notably, only 1% of calls directed to the CAHOOTS program required additional support from police; and

WHEREAS, CAHOOTS-style programs are being planned in cities including Denver, Colorado; San Francisco, California; Oakland, California; and Albuquerque, New Mexico; and

Committee on Health and Human Relations

WHEREAS, in a city the size of Chicago, such a model can only meet the needs of our diverse communities if it is part ofthe public mental health system, and strengthens and expands the existing network of CDPH mental health clinics; now, therefore,

BE IT ORDERED by the City Council of the City of Chicago:

1. That the Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH), the Chicago Budget Director, and the Commissioner of the Office of Emergency Management and Communications, and in consultation with the City Council of Chicago and its Health and Human Relations Committee, shall work together to develop a plan to include a publicly funded and operated, Chicago Crisis Response and Care System within the CDPH to establish 24-hour crisis response teams throughout Chicago dispatched from a network of public community mental health centers, to be included in the 2021 City of Chicago budget proposal. The Chicago Crisis Response and Care System proposal shall include the following elements:
The network of public mental health centers will expand to include enough facilities to serve the full City of Chicago.
Public mental health centers shall include community and consumer oversight through the establishment of a community advisory council at each center.
Crisis Coverage shall operate 24 hours per day with at least two vehicles constituting a Crisis Response Unit (CRU) in circulation for each center at all times.
Each Crisis vehicle shall have two staff, a Clinical Social Worker and an Emergency Medical Technician or Registered Nurse.
Clinical Social Workers providing Crisis Coverage shall also have time in their weekly schedules for the performance of other duties including follow-up case management, public engagement, special projects with community members, professional development, and providing preventative educational services.
Each of the public centers shall be staffed by additional Clinical Social Workers, Case Managers and Restorative Justice practitioners to provide a continuum of care appropriate to the range of needs expected in the community.
Calls to dispatch a crisis team shall be directed by the Office of Emergency Management and Communications (OEMC) through a new city line (i.e., 211) and through qualifying calls made to either 311 or 911.
OEMC and CDPH shall seek technical assistance from White Bird Clinic for the development and implementation of the service.
i. Include multiple scenarios, timelines, and associated costs for scaling up the
model over time.
j. Timeline scenarios must include an implementation start-date before the end of 2021; and

Committee on Health and Human Relations
That funding for this Chicago Crisis Response and Care System and the connected clinics will be appropriated from the CPD, including its Overtime budget line, and said funds will be re-allocated to the CDPH.
That the Health and Human Relations committee hold a hearing to take place no later than October 30, 2020 in order to allow for public testimony to inform the planning process for the Chicago Crisis Response and Care System.

Alderman 33rd Ward

The following legislation is being introduced by Rossana Rodriguez-Sanchez, co-sponsored by



Daniel LaSpata

Alderman Ward 1 Alderman Ward 8



Alderman Ward 2 Alderman Ward 9



Alderman Ward 3 Alderman Ward 10



Alderman Ward 4 Alderman Ward 11



Alderman Ward 5 Alderman Ward 12



Alderman Ward 6 Alderman Ward 13



Alderman Ward 7 Alderman Ward 14
Committee on Health and Human Relations




Alderman Ward 27



Alderman Ward 28



Alderman Ward 29



Alderman Ward 30


Alderman Ward 19
_Jeannette Taylor
Alderman Ward 32


Alderman Ward 33 _Rossana Rodrigez Sanchez_ Alderman Ward 34
_Carlos Ramirez-Rosa
Alderman Ward 35


Alderman Ward 24
Byron Sigcho Lopez_
Alderman Ward 25



Alderman Ward 38

Committee on Health and Human Relations




Alderman Ward 39
Andre Vazquez
Alderman Ward 40



Alderman Ward 41



Alderman Ward 42

Mayor Lightfoot

Alderman Ward 43



Alderman Ward 44



Alderman Ward 45


Alderman Ward 46
_Matthew Martin
Alderman Ward 47


Alderman Ward 48
Maria Hadden
Alderman Ward 49



Alderman Ward 50
Mail - Ordinances - Outlook


CITY OF CHICAGO
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OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK ANNA M. VALENCIA

Chicago City Council Co-Sponsor Form


Document No.:

Call for development of Chicago Crisis Response and Care System within Chicago Department of Public Health to be included in 2021 budget proposal

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Date Filed:


Final Copies To Be Filed With: • Chairman of Committee to which legislation was referred
• City Clerk

121 NORTH LASALLE STREET. ROOM 107, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS G06O2