Halifax council lays out plan to move away from police-led wellness checks - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Halifax council lays out plan to move away from police-led wellness checks

Halifax council is considering fast-tracking plans to have civilians rather than police respond to citizens who are in crisis.

City could launch civilian crisis response teams this year if funding approved

A pink banner with colourful writing hangs on the railing outside the brick front of City Hall. The sign reads 'fund care not cops'
A sign outside Halifax's city hall in February. The municipality is considering using civilian-led crisis teams as an alternative to sending police to mental health calls. (Haley Ryan/CBC)

Halifax council is considering fast-tracking plans to have civilians rather than police
respond to citizens who are in crisis, a move supported byboth residents and local police forces.

The Halifax Regional Municipality'snew community safety department presented its $13-million budget to councillors Wednesday during a budget committee meeting.

"This is the most important thing that we are doing as a council right now. This is the transformative piece we need to be doing," Coun. Waye Mason said.

Council approved the main budget including new staff in emergency management, school crossing guards, preventing youth violence, funds for food securityand a homelessness co-ordinator.

Amy Siciliano, the department's public safety adviser, told councillorsateam is hoping to finalize a location for the new stabilization centre that willopen this year. Previously called a sobering centre, people who are intoxicated in public could go there to be seen by civilian professionals and peers, rather than stay in a police cell.

A woman with dark hair and a scarf stands outside Halifax City Hall
Amy Siciliano is public safety adviser for the Halifax Regional Municipality. (CBC)

The department will also work on a mobile outreach and transportation service. It would providerides for people who have nohome to the stabilization centre, medical appointments, shelters or other safe spaces.

While the core budget has some funding for the mobile team, councillors added extra funding requests to the city's budget adjustment list that would allow a pilot project to start this year and include a mental health clinician.That list contains both possible cuts andextra fundingfor the 2024-25 budget, and will be considered in March.

Councillors also added funds tolaunch a community crisis response teamto the list, which staff said could be similar to Toronto's Community Crisis Service.

Bill Moore, executive director of community safety for HRM, said the crisis team would involve professionals like social workers who could respond to low-risk mental health calls or wellness checks.

Province to launch new civilian mental-health response

Siciliano added they will workwith the province to shape the pilot project. She said the Nova Scotia government is planning a new civilian mental health responseforrural areas outside the urban and suburban areas of Halifax served by the Mental Health Mobile Crisis Team.

Moore said the ideal plan would follow Toronto's approach where the crisis team is considered as a possible option alongside paramedics, fire or police when a 911 call comes in.

"That requires that all of these different facets be linked together in a system to allow you to escalate, but also allow you to de-escalate," Moore said.

Much of the work stems from Halifax's 2022 report on defunding the police, the recommendations from the Mass Casualty Commissionand other research.

Both heads of Halifax Regional Police and Halifax RCMP have spoken in support of more civilian-led teams to serve people better, and help free up officers for police duties.

"This is what detasking police looks like," said Coun. Lisa Blackburn.

Council will also later consider an extra $250,000 to plan an alternative third-party option where people can report sexual or gender-based violence rather than going to police directly.

Halifax's overall budget will be passed in April.