this post was submitted on 11 Nov 2025
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Some municipalities in Manitoba are renewing calls for the province to make legislative changes to reduce the role police play in responding to crises as rural and northern communities deal with staffing challenges with law enforcement and an increase in mental health calls.

This comes more than a year after the NDP government committed to an extensive review of the Mental Health Act after families and advocates pressed for system changes. Winnipeg police have also voiced support for an approach that would see mental health groups take the lead on non-violent calls.

Right now, the legislation dictates that peace officers are the only people able to detain someone experiencing a mental health crisis and often the only ones able to transport individuals to a facility.

"The current model is unsustainable and is a grossly ineffective use of resources," said Lisa Gaudet, deputy city manager in Dauphin, Man.

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[–] phoenixz@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 days ago

Some municipalities in Manitoba are renewing calls for the province to make legislative changes to reduce the role police play in responding to crises as rural and northern communities deal with staffing challenges with law enforcement and an increase in mental health calls.

So you want to do the right thing for the wrong reason? You don't send the police to mental health calls because police is there to stop criminals and uphold the law, with force if needed, but what these people need is actual help from a mental health professional.

Do the right thing for the right reason. I know that sounds like an extreme idea but you can do it, I believe in you!