琉璃神社

Skip to content

Nelson police now paired with trained first responder for mental health calls

The Interior Health initiative is also being run in Trail
web1_231207-kws-humanrightstribunal_1
Interior Health has partnered four outreach liaisons in Nelson, Trail, Cranbrook and Williams Lake to work with local law enforcement related to mental health and substance use calls. File photo

Nelson police responding to mental health calls will now be joined by a trained clinician.

Interior Health announced Feb. 7 it was adding four outreach liaisons in Nelson, Trail, Cranbrook and Williams Lake to work with local law enforcement. The clinicians are able to respond to mental health and substance use-related calls, and have training in de-escalation and harm reduction.

Insp. Kris Rice with the Nelson Police Department said the clinician began attending calls in January. The program, which includes Nelson鈥檚 RCMP detachment, is already showing its benefits.

鈥淚鈥檝e seen first-hand the value of having her come to a scene like that. As you know, police get a lot of training in mental health, but we don鈥檛 get training to the same degree as a clinician would have.鈥

Rice said clinicians are able to attend calls on their own, but not when there is the possibility of violence. Sometimes they may be on standby until police complete a risk assessment.

Likewise, because a mental health call now begins with the health authority instead of the department, the clinician may attend but ask police for backup.

The partnership is flexible. Rice said he has also already seen a situation when a client felt more comfortable with an officer they knew than a mental-health worker they didn鈥檛.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all about the client; it鈥檚 all about de-escalation. So it鈥檚 not necessarily the clinician needs to have that direct conversation, but the clinician is there to provide their expertise and that oversight and working together and sharing information.鈥

Mental health-related calls, and how they should be responded to, have become a focus for law enforcement in B.C.

In 2022, an all-party panel of MLAs . They included the integration of mental health with 911 calls, and increased co-ordination between police and mental health workers, with an emphasis 鈥渙n prevention and community-led responses and ensuring appropriate first response.鈥

The first reforms to the Police Act are expected to be brought to the Legislature , but it鈥檚 not clear which ones will be on the table for MLAs.

Nelson police chief Donovan Fisher said the new partnership with Interior Health aligns with the Police Act recommendations but isn鈥檛 connected. The initiative, he said, came from discussions between the health authority, BC Association of Chiefs of Police and the RCMP鈥檚 Southeast District.

Nelson police responded to 732 calls with a mental-health component in 2023. Fisher doesn鈥檛 think the partnership will lead to a decrease in those calls, but he does believe it will result in better outcomes for those in need of help.

鈥淭he clients are the ones who are going to benefit and get the best response that we can give them as a police department. So we鈥檙e not apprehending people who don鈥檛 need to be apprehended 鈥 and making sure that they鈥檙e getting where they need to go. And then [the clinician] can also follow up with them after the fact.鈥

READ MORE:



Tyler Harper

About the Author: Tyler Harper

I鈥檓 editor-reporter at the Nelson Star, where I鈥檝e worked since 2015.
Read more



(or

琉璃神社

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }
Pop-up banner image