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The NYPD is getting more mental illness training - New York Daily News
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NYC cops still asked to help in police-free mental health calls
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Working as a law enforcement officer is one of the most dangerous professions there is.
Many times the public only gets to see brief glimpses of what it s like policing a community on a daily basis.
Questions continue to be asked about what police reform is needed when it comes to instances involving officers using deadly force.
Activists have endorsed more body-worn cameras, de-escalation training, implicit bias training, and early intervention systems as examples they believe could better serve officers and the citizens they ve sworn to protect.
Black Lives Matter protests began to fuel Blue Lives Matter responses and with the big picture showing shooting deaths involving officers have decreased tremendously as a nation, they continue to happen in every corner of the country.
More police departments are training officers in de-escalation techniques, but does it work?
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MADISON, Wis. In the year since George Floyd’s death, people across the country have called for changes to police practices and more oversight of police departments.
Madison is no different, with a number of changes coming to the city’s police department and past actions under review. Here is a look at what’s changed in Madison since May 25, 2020.
Proposals introduced to ban use of tear gas and projectile crowd-control measures
As peaceful protests gave way to unrest in downtown Madison in the days following Floyd’s death last summer, authorities were seen on video using tear gas and other projectiles in an attempt to disperse crowds, often leading to people throwing the canisters back in the direction of police. Authorities did acknowledge using chemical agents on the crowds in the early days of protests and unrest, but did hold off while largely standing back and observing protests later in the summer.