More Twin Cities area metro counties are embedding social workers into 911 call centers to field calls from those struggling with problems like mental health, homelessness and substance use.
One is Melanie Yang, who began working as an embedded social worker in the Minneapolis 911 call center this fall through a pilot program partnership between the city and Hennepin County.
911 call takers are often the first contact for people seeking help, but call takers may not have the expertise or time to best assist them. So, instead of sending traditional responders such as police officers, the social worker takes calls deemed non-emergency, after they are screened by an initial call taker.
Minneapolis sought to add a social worker to its 911 call center after the release of the Safe and Thriving Communities Report, which proposed new public safety approaches after the 2020 murder of George Floyd.
Minneapolis has embedded social workers in police precincts, but Yang is the first to be in the 911 call center. She previously worked as a paraprofessional at a school district, and said she’s passionate about working with underserved and diverse communities.
The calls Yang has taken so far include pointing community members in crisis to mental health resources, or walking people through what to do after being evicted.
“Sometimes some of those calls might not necessarily be appropriate for police or EMS or fire, and so that’s where I think this program and this role really comes in,” she said.
Ramsey County also has social workers in its call center, part of a pilot program begun in 2023. The county seeks to make the program permanent and increase the number of social workers to make the program available 24/7.