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Study: Civilian 911 Responders Can Enhance Public Safety

Training Key to Identify High-Risk Calls for Police Response, Researchers Say

By Gina Driscoll

hand holds phone calling 911, two paramedics in background

Freeing up armed officers for police duties and preventing police-community discord are some of the advantages of dispatching civilian responders to non-criminal emergency calls, a UMD research team said in a new study.

Illustration by iStock

Deploying paramedics, social workers and others to non-criminal emergency calls could significantly boost a police department’s ability to respond to criminal emergencies while reducing negative interactions with the community, according to new University of Maryland research.

A study based on Baltimore Police Department data published recently in Justice Quarterly showed that up to 57% of 911 calls could be assigned to non-police responders, which would free up at least 59 full-time officers, or about 9% of the department’s patrol personnel.

The study led by Luke Spreen, assistant professor at the School of Public Policy, and Greg Midgette, an assistant professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal justice (CCJS), introduces a model to assess the impacts of call diversion programs, offering policymakers a tool for evidence-based decision making.

“Public safety is one of the most significant categories of municipal spending,” Spreen said. “Focusing exclusively on the costs of operating a civilian responder program ignores positive downstream benefits it is likely to generate, such as reductions in arrests.” The study was supported by Arnold Ventures and Abell Foundation grants.

Co-authors also include Distinguished University Professor Peter Reuter in public policy and CCJS and Associate Professor Lauren C. Porter and Assistant Professor Brooklynn K. Hitchens, both of CCJS. 

Their pathway, of sending civilian first responders to calls that don’t require armed officers, can help address questions of how police departments deploy their personnel, following a high-profile series of officer-involved killings of Black people, including Breonna Taylor and George Floyd. Recent studies have shown that police are more likely to use force when interacting with Black people, and that Black people are more likely to believe that police act unjustly.

Spreen acknowledged that shifting resources has a political dimension but said the landscape has shifted in the wake of incidents of police misconduct, along with growing evidence that diversion programs work.

Successful programs to divert low-risk 911 calls from police officers to civilian responders often start small, gradually scaling up to demonstrate effectiveness and build community trust. “We believe this is the correct approach,” said Spreen, “though our analysis suggests that most existing diversion programs may still be too small.”

Case studies of call diversion programs in cities like Albuquerque, Atlanta, Denver and Houston help underscore the importance of investing in training for emergency call takers and dispatchers to identify suitable calls for civilian response.

“It is very challenging to parse exactly what event is unfolding from a 911 call, or how much danger it poses to the first responder,” Spreen said.

The researchers also called for the use of performance metrics to evaluate program effectiveness and guide future development.

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