From Pioneer Press/Disability
Scoop:
“Police Offer Stickers For Homes
To Alert First Responders About Disabilities”
The St. Paul Police Department
announced this month that people can get stickers for their homes or vehicles
to tell first responders that someone inside may be deaf or hard of hearing,
have autism, dementia or Alzheimer’s disease. “In an emergency, every second
counts and the quicker that officers can identify any barrier to communication
is better for everyone involved,” said Sgt. Mike Ernster, a St. Paul police
spokesman. “The officer could adjust their approach to the situation based on
this information.” The St. Paul Police Department sought input from various
organizations, including the Autism Society of Minnesota. The group’s executive
director, Ellie Wilson, said it won’t necessarily be easy for families to
decide to put up a sticker disclosing someone in the home has a disability. If
people choose to, Wilson views the stickers as useful for first responders and
families because she said behaviors that are associated with autism “are easily
mistaken by emergency responders” as someone acting aggressively or
suspiciously. In training first responders, including law enforcement, “one
thing they say is the hardest part about learning to support people with
invisible disabilities is knowing when someone does or does not have a
disability,” said Wilson, who added the stickers could take away some of those
initial questions. St. Paul got the idea from the Scott County Sheriff’s
Office, which started offering emergency alert window decals last summer. Sarah
Deppe, the sheriff’s office communications and office coordinator, came upon
the stickers being used elsewhere when she was doing research — she knew people
have used alert stickers on their homes for pets who need to be rescued in case
of an emergency, but hadn’t seen them used in Minnesota for people. The
sheriff’s office has handed out around 400 stickers so far, with the most
requested being for autism, according to Deppe. “These capture why someone
might not be responding to commands, if they have PTSD or are on the autism
spectrum,” for example, said Scott County Sheriff Luke Hennen. “Officers might
be confused about why a person isn’t responding, … so this is another way to
bridge that gap and avoid confrontation when it’s not necessary.” Agencies from around the region and elsewhere
have contacted the Scott County Sheriff’s Office and requested their template,
including the St. Paul Police Department.
^ It is a hard decision on
whether to use these stickers to announce to everyone (not just first
responders) that you or someone else living with you is disabled. While it will
alert first responders what to watch out for it also tells strangers and they can
use that against the disabled person. If I had to decide whether to use this or
not I would put the sticker by my front door at my house, but not use it on my
car. With that said it is a step in the right direction to have this program
and to allow people to decide for themselves if they participate. ^
https://www.disabilityscoop.com/2020/03/13/police-offer-stickers-alert-first-responders-disabilities/27974/
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