The Police Assisted Referral (PAR) program continues building bridges between law enforcement and the community it serves
By Matthew K. Weiland
Cleveland, OHâThe gulf often separating police on patrol from the general public theyâre trying to protect can often be bridged with the simple act of extending a hand and presenting a business card.
Welcome to the Police Assisted Referral (PAR) program, a collaboration among the Begun Center for Violence Prevention and the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA), FrontLine, and the Partnership for a Safer Cleveland.
âLook at a police officerâs duty belt,â says Mark Singer, PhD, Deputy-Director of the Begun Center and PAR program principle investigator. âWe give police officers a gun. Ammunition. A Taser An asp. Handcuffs. Gloves to pat people down. Everything on the duty belt is for arrests or deterrence.
âBut there hasnât traditionally been one thing on that belt for what police are doing 80-90% of their time. And thatâs assisting and helping people, if only pointing them in the right direction for services.â
A recent article â co-authored by, among others, Dr. Singer and Begun Center Research Assistant and doctoral candidate Jenni Bartholomew, appearing in the December issue of the â highlights the PAR programâs success in âtraining law enforcement to be first social respondersâ.
The Regular Beat
Dr. Singer cites studies showing that for a regular police officer on a routine patrol â either driving in a cruiser or walking a beat â the majority of his or her time is dedicated to âserviceâ calls â non-arrest situations. âOnly 10-20% of their time is spent on arrests,â he explains.
Through the PAR program, police officers now have a mechanism to connect people to services with a simple phone call. âWe give officers something on the duty belt for what theyâre spending most of their time on: An embossed leather card case containing business cards with information and referral numbers.â
The PAR program works this way:
An officer on patrol encountering a resident in need dials a central number and provides a residentâs contact information, along with basic information involving the circumstances and situations facing the individual or family.
Then, within 24 to 48 hours, Cuyahoga Countyâs Mental Health Services, Inc. â now called FrontLine â reaches out to the person in need, inquiring as to the status of the issue, the need for immediate interventions or further referrals, and whether the individual would like a Frontline representative to come out to the home for further assistance.
âThe officers get training in how to recognize problems and issues and how to deal with people in need of mental health services,â says Dr. Singer. âThey also get trained in a quick-triage type of assistance when time is tight and immediacy and urgency is called for.â
Ultimately, he says, everyone agrees that police officers are not social workers. Yet they can put a person who needs one in touch with one, making that phone call.
A Fundamental Change in Perspective
Funded for the past two years by the , the , the , and the , PAR is a program with the potential to fundamentally change the attitudes, interactions, and relationships between a neighborhood and the police protecting and serving it.
Mark Singer, who frequently accompanies CMHA police units out on patrol â assessing the program and ensuring itâs working right â cites data culled from surveys of individuals who received PAR services, surveys conducted over a two-year period that ultimately asked a fundamental question: As a result of PAR, how has your opinion of police officers changed. The results:
â Itâs improved: 39%
â Itâs the same: 56%
â Itâs gotten worse: 4%
âOver a third of the respondents said that their opinion of the police improved through their participation in the PAR program,â he says. âWe hear neighborhood residents saying things like, âThe officer saved my lifeâ and âItâs nice to know that you can count on the police for more than just arresting.ââ
He also notes that the PAR program has also proved exceptionally helpful in boosting police morale.
âPolice officers love it,â says Dr. Singer. âWe did two focus groups with police â one before their participation in PAR and then one after â and what we hear from them is very encouraging. They say, âI can sleep at night, now. Iâd have to leave these events saying, Well, you know, I arrested him, but man, that family is in deep trouble. Now, I know I got the family, or can get the family, help. And it takes me sixty seconds. I phone in. Give the name. The service follows up. And Iâve helped someone.ââ
The other thing that officers cite is the new relationship they experience with the people theyâve helped; citizens stop them on the street now to thank them for pointing them in the right direction. Thank them for helping them get help.
âAnd this is happening in the most dangerous neighborhoods in the city,â says Dr. Singer, âwith citizens who are often the most alienated and the poorest who often distrust police. Thatâs the amazing part.â
Additional Resources
The Partnership For A Safer Cleveland was founded in 1981 by Louis Paisley, then the president of the Cleveland Bar Association. It was originally named the âTask Force on Violent Crimeâ and its goal was to address issues of violence and create solutions to the problems. This was accomplished through thoughtful study and diligent action taken by representatives from business, community, law enforcement, human services, courts and schools.
The Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority Police Department is a state-certified law enforcement agency and is nationally accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA). Sworn police officers of the CMHA Police Department are certified by the Ohio Peace Officers Training Commission and have full police arrest powers. They enforce all city, state, and federal laws, as well as agency policies and procedures. The CMHA Police Department provides quality law enforcement service to residents, employees, and visitors of CMHA properties located throughout Cuyahoga County. The Department provides policing services to CMHA residents 24 hours a day, seven days a week, year-round and has an authorized staff of approximately 135.