Orange County Grand Jury • 2023-2024 • Agency Response
Response to: Law Enforcement’s Response to Mental Health Calls for Service

City of Costa Mesa California 92628-1200 P.o. Box 1200 from the Police Department July,30 2024 The Honorable Maria*

Published: July 30, 2024 2 pages
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Findings and Recommendations 5 findings

F1
Mental health training for law enforcement officers in Orange County exceeds the State's requirements, resulting in law enforcement applying these skills to better evaluate and handle mental health calls for service. Response - Agree
Related Recommendations (1)
R1
Based on its investigation, the 2023-2024 OCGJ has determined that law enforcement agencies throughout Orange County have developed unique techniques to adequately address mental health calls, thus this report does not contain recommendations. City's Response: Agrees with findings- No recommendations.
F2
Law enforcement agencies in Orange County have developed unique ways to deal with mental health calls in their communities based on their needs and budgets, enabling law enforcement to better serve their communities. Response - Agree
No recommendations for this finding
F3
Law enforcement collaboration with County PERT clinicians and Be Well mobile response units has been an effective tool when responding to mental health calls for service. Response - Agree
No recommendations for this finding
F4
People with mental illness respond more positively to "soft uniformed" police personnel, which can be effective in de-escalating situations. Response - Agree
No recommendations for this finding
F5
Providing follow-up case management is not only necessary but critical for the wellbeing of people experiencing mental health issues Response - Agree
No recommendations for this finding

* This report's PDF did not contain easily extractable text and required Optical Character Recognition (OCR) for analysis. There may be minor errors in the extracted findings and recommendations due to OCR limitations with scanned documents.