The Alamosa City Council received its quarterly update on the LEAD (Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion) and co-responder programs during its Dec. 17 meeting and recognized the Center for Restorative Programs (CRP) for partnership and community impact.
Program staff reported about 27 referrals in recent months and described caseload management that included roughly 35–50 individuals in active follow-up. Staff highlighted recent conference participation, ongoing partner engagement and the steady operational work of the collaborative program that brings law enforcement and social services together.
A staff member shared a detailed success story of a pregnant client who entered a 90-day intensive residential treatment program while pregnant and on medication-assisted treatment. The client received coordinated prenatal care, transportation, housing assistance and employment supports, completed treatment, gave birth to a healthy baby and transitioned to stable housing. "LEAD came into my life with no judgment, just support," the client said in remarks relayed by staff.
Council thanked program staff and CRP for their work. The council presented a plaque honoring the Center for Restorative Programs for "excellence in partnership and community impact" in establishing the LEAD program and invited staff for a photo opportunity.
Why it matters: The update underscores ongoing, operational collaboration among law enforcement, social-service partners and nongovernmental providers to address substance use and related social needs through diversion and support services, and highlights an example of a successful client outcome.
What’s next: Staff noted the co-responder team’s physical move to the Martinez Building and ongoing transition logistics; councilors praised the program’s results and said they expect continued partnership and periodic reports.