Board approves MOU to expand behavioral-health transport and clears several community permits
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The board approved an MOU with Regional Health System to allow ambulances to transport people in mental-health crisis directly to behavioral-health facilities, and approved multiple community requests including the Crown Point Community Foundation yard signs, a Chrome Brewing 5K run, advertising renewals, hydro contracts (HIDA-funded) and three-year runner-banner authorization.
The Crown Point Board of Public Works and Safety on Feb. 18 approved a memorandum of understanding with Regional Health System to expand transport options for people experiencing behavioral-health crises and cleared a package of routine community permits and contracts.
Chief described the MOU as a formal partnership that "allows our ambulances to be able to transport someone who's having [a] mental health crisis or emergency directly to" an appropriate behavioral-health facility. He explained a state rule change now permits destinations other than emergency rooms, which can reduce patient wait times and relieve ER burdens. The MOU was reviewed by legal and recommended by staff; the board approved it by voice vote.
Separately, the board approved requests for yard signage from the Crown Point Community Foundation for a March 31 kickoff (staff asked that signage not be placed at the veterans' tank location), approved the Chrome Brewing Fun Run 5K (March 14) after route and EMA coordination, and approved a three-year authorization for hub run banners at downtown intersections. The board also approved renewals of three 2026 advertising/partnership contracts and two hydro contracts funded through a HIDA grant at no cost to the city; staff noted legal review and prior HIDA board approval for the hydro contracts.
Board members emphasized that these items facilitate community events and services; staff will follow up with required submittals or notifications as applicable.
