“We are being policed. โWe are โbeing swept off the streets. We are being โharmed. We are being murdered.”
That’s Christie Cellman. You may remember her sharing her story a couple months ago about her home-based health care being slashed.
Cellman is a 39-year-old Ottumwa native and disability advocate with a master’s degree in social work who is working toward a Ph.D. at the University of Iowa.
Her goal with all of that education is to transform the way Iowa polices its vulnerable residentsโincluding disabled folksโand provide more jobs in the community as well.
“Planting social workers alongside police actually put social workers in harm’s way,” she told me.
You may have heard about “crisis intervention” or “crisis response” teams, where you call for help with a mental health issue, and social workers or other licensed mental health professionals accompany law enforcement to try and de-escalate the situation.
Cities like Cedar Rapids, and regional organizations like Elevate, are two examples in Iowa.
The idea behind a crisis intervention team is to reduce violence. But Cellman said an armed officer can actually increase the risk.
“Police are very under-trained โand under-resourced in” de-escalation, she said. “And so social workers are being put in a position โwhere they not only have to de-escalate โwhoever they’re there to serve, โbut de-escalate a police officer as well.”
That’s especially a worry when someone with a disability is involved.
“There is โa very high percentage of people with disabilities that are harmed โand even killed at the hands of police,” Cellman said. (The Ruderman Foundation estimates that disabled people make up at least a third to half of all Americans killed by law enforcement.)
Cellman’s idea is a crisis response team made up of social workers, medical professionals, and trusted community membersโand, more importantly, no guns.
“So you want to โbuild a crisis response team that โhas not only social workers, โbut somebody that is equipped medically โand somebody who knows that community โand has ties to that community โand is somebody that the community trusts,” she said. “Not somebody that’s coming in armed, and โnot somebody that’s showing up to houses with โmore ammunition than โcompassion.”
That might be a tough sell in a state where the Iowa Legislature just this year considered a bill that would have ended yearly de-escalation training for law enforcement. (Ultimately, that portion was removed from the bill.)
But Cellman thinks piloting the program to prove the concept might sway folks.
“โIt’s gonna be a challenge in Iowa,” she admitted. “But I think that we have places within our state โthat โwould โpush for something like that. โLike you look at the Iowa City area, the Des Moines area, โI think โimplementing something like thatโand seeing โthe positive outcomes โfrom instituting something like thatโwill go a long way for people to see the positive results.”


















