Four officers with the Craig Police Department attended Crisis Intervention Teams (CIT) training the week of February 7- 11, 2022.
"The Crisis Intervention Teams (CIT) model was developed in 1988 in Memphis, Tennessee as a partnership between the police department, advocacy groups for people with mental illness, mental health treatment providers, local universities, and other community stakeholders. The goals of CIT were to train law enforcement officers in the recognition of mental illness, to enhance their verbal crisis de-escalation skills, and to provide more streamlined access to community-based mental health services." (https://www.citac.co/about).
"The CIT model has since spread to many areas of the United States. In 2002, the Colorado Regional Community Policing Institute (CRCPI), a branch of the Colorado Division of Criminal Justice, launched the state's first CIT trainings in Jefferson County and Denver. When CRCPI was disbanded in 2008, CITAC was given the responsibility of supporting the standardization of CIT training in Colorado."
During the first 10 years of CIT training in Colorado, over 7,000 Colorado peace officers – fully half of the certified peace officers statewide – completed CIT training.
CONGRADULATIONS to Officer Tracey Mendoza, Officer Ryan Hampton, Officer Wacie Laabs, and Corporal Grant Laehr for completing this training!
For more information on CIT visit: https://www.citac.co/about