Citizen Portal
Sign In

Get Full Government Meeting Transcripts, Videos, & Alerts Forever!

Toledo presenters outline diversion, crisis care and co-responder plans including $550,000 federal grant

Toledo City Council Public Safety and Criminal Justice Reform Committee · November 10, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

CJCC behavioral-health staff described diversion programming, the Zeph Center care center that has accepted 116 crisis drop-offs (94 from Toledo PD), a planned co-responder unit funded at about $550,000 and a $678,332 grant to expand adult treatment court services.

Annie Minton, the Criminal Justice Behavioral Health coordinator for the CJCC, told the Toledo City Council Public Safety Committee that the CJCC’s Behavioral Health Criminal Justice (BHCJ) committee is focusing on diversion, competence-to-stand-trial pathways and a co-responder model pairing officers with licensed mental-health clinicians.

Minton said the Zeph Center care center has taken 116 drop-offs since opening, 94 of them brought by the Toledo Police Department, and described the center as…

Already have an account? Log in

Subscribe to keep reading

Unlock the rest of this article — and every article on Citizen Portal.

  • Unlimited articles
  • AI-powered breakdowns of topics, speakers, decisions, and budgets
  • Instant alerts when your location has a new meeting
  • Follow topics and more locations
  • 1,000 AI Insights / month, plus AI Chat
30-day money-back on paid plans