U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona praises Connecticut police social work project
Eastern hosts inaugural 'Boots on the Ground' celebration
Willimantic, CT (04/29/2022) — Eastern Connecticut State University hosted the first capstone celebration for the Social Work and Law Enforcement (SWLE) Project on April 22 in the Shafer Hall Auditorium. Titled "Boots on the Ground," the event commemorated the inaugural year of a statewide collaboration that is formalizing the emerging field of police social work.
In addition to highlighting the program's current students, officers and organizers, the event featured pre-recorded remarks from U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona. Students in the project also presented on their experiences in the field, working with clients as police social work interns.
The first-of-its-kind project began in fall 2020, when two Eastern social work student interns were embedded into the Willimantic Police Department (WPD) to support officers on mental health and other nonviolent calls that could benefit from the skills of a social worker. The pilot internship evolved into a statewide collaboration that is now training students from seven universities to work with officers from four municipal police departments.
"I'm heartened by programs like the Social Work and Law Enforcement Project," said Cardona, a Connecticut native who comes from a family of police officers and public servants. "This program can help prevent the punishment of people with mental health challenges by connecting them with a strong support network Through this program, people can get the long-term follow up and care they need by connecting with a trained social worker."
Not only is this the first such project in the state, but Eastern professor and licensed clinical social worker Isabel Logan says it is likely the first specialized training program in the country that prepares social workers and police officers to work alongside each other. Logan, who serves as the SWLE's co-director, spearheaded the partnership with the Willimantic Police Department following the passage of CT Public Act 20-1, "An Act Concerning Police Accountability," in July 2020.
In addition to Eastern, the SWLE Project is training students from Central, Southern and Western Connecticut State Universities, Sacred Heart University, the University of St. Joseph and Fordham University, who in turn are interning with police departments in Willimantic, Norwich, Stamford and Milford.
"As an Eastern alumnus and Willimantic police officer of nearly 18 years, I couldn't be prouder that this project has its roots in Willimantic," said Lt. Matthew Solak, the project's other co-director. "It really speaks to the tenacity and to the dreams that people in our community have about working together in a community partnership that is bringing together social work students and professionals alongside law enforcement for the first time ever in the state of Connecticut."
Case Studies
Illustrating the benefits of police social workers (PSWs), seven current SWLE interns at the undergraduate and graduate levels presented case studies on specific clients they've worked with through their host police departments.
Eastern alumna Emily Constantino '21, a recent graduate of the University of Saint Joseph's MSW program, is one of the project's original PSW interns in Willimantic. One of her clients was a 61-year-old white male with substance abuse and mental health issues, including suicidal ideation. Primarily over the phone, she met with the man on a weekly basis, using motivational interviewing to build rapport and crisis intervention during his emotional episodes. She also helped to refer him to outside agencies for additional support.
Constantino said these interventions and continued contact resulted in him being connected to additional support services, decreased hostility toward the police and decreased frequency in calls to the police department.
Eastern alumna Francelis Gonzalez-Perez '20, a graduate MSW student from Fordham University, presented a particularly dramatic case study on her experience interning with the Norwich Police Department. She and an officer were the first on the scene as a distressed man threatened to jump from a bridge. The daytime incident developed into a spectacle as onlookers dared him to jump.
Gonzalez-Perez assisted in de-escalation with the client and crowd, and also provided support for the onlooking family while serving as a liaison for Crisis Services. These efforts in concert with the police resulted in a safe removal of the client from the bridge and earned Gonzalez-Perez a unit citation award from the Norwich Police Department.
"This is really illustrative of the benefits of collaboration," said Sgt. Nicolas Rankin from Norwich. "To have someone on the scene someone who doesn't appear to be a threat a trained, competent person who can work with the family and pass (the client) on to a higher level of care. Social workers represent a friendly face to people in crisis, they're more approachable."
Senior Connor Pollick is a current Eastern social work student interning with the Willimantic police. He described a 42-year-old Hispanic female with high stress due to her dealings with a difficult 20-year old son and five younger children. Pollick helped connect the woman to resources for her children and support groups.
"If the client and I had not met, she'd still be struggling with minimal support," said Pollick. "I'm now a part of her growing support system. Had the police accountability bill not been in place, this client may have fallen through the cracks."
Eastern alumna Daniella Cervetta '20, a graduate MSW student at Sacred Heart University, described a similar case. The Milford Police Department intern has been working with an unemployed 55-year-old white female from an affluent neighborhood who is coping with a traumatic divorce. The client has made more than 30 calls to the police in the past two years concerning feuds with her daughter.
"The client blames her daughter for the toxic atmosphere in the house without recognizing her own behavior," said Cervetta. "She's normalized police intervention as an appropriate response to dealing with her daughter." Cervetta has been working to develop her client's parenting and communication strategies.
"This is work the police would love to do, but we just don't have enough hours in the day," said Lt. Solak in a previous interview. "If we spend all our time following up on mental health calls, we wouldn't have time to do anything else."
Willimantic Police Chief Chad Hussey agreed: "I'm grateful for the support of our partners at Eastern and thankful for the hard work of all my officers and the social work students who assist them in protecting and serving the citizens of this city."
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Eastern Connecticut State University is the state of Connecticut's public liberal arts university, serving more than 4,300 students annually on its Willimantic campus. In addition to attracting students from 163 of Connecticut's 169 towns, Eastern also draws students from 31 states and 10 countries. A residential campus offering 41 majors and 65 minors, Eastern offers students a strong liberal art foundation grounded in a variety of applied learning opportunities. Ranked as the #1 public regional university in New England by U.S. News & World Report in its 2020, 2021 and 2022 Best Colleges ratings, Eastern has also been awarded 'Green Campus' status by the Princeton Review 12 years in a row. For more information, visit www.easternct.edu.