Scott said his officers’ arrests often just push criminal activity to other parts of the neighborhood. And he acknowledged that to make progress on a complex issue such as addiction, law enforcement and social services need to work hand-in-hand.
In June, the city launched an interagency hub called the Drug Market Agency Coordination Center to bring together public health officials, police and the Department of Emergency Management to address the city’s drug crisis, which has taken over 400 lives this year and has devastated some local businesses.
Mark Mazza, who works on the front lines of the drug and homelessness crisis for the city’s Department of Emergency Management, said the coordination center marks the first time those city divisions are working together and said he was optimistic that progress would be made through that kind of collaboration.
“City departments working together is a new thing,” he said. “We’re not going to arrest our way out of this, and we’re not going to house our way out of this unless public health has a firm place in this plan.”
St. Anthony’s CEO Nils Behnke said he hoped for the panel to reconvene in three months to take account of any progress—or take public accountability for the lack thereof.