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Weekly roundup

We’ve got exciting updates, and a fresh format for you. Whether you’re just joining the law enforcement or behavioral health space or a long time veteran, we’ve got something for everyone.

This week’s topic: “What happens after the call?” + homeless outreach

This week’s social briefs: Co-Response on X

New Solutions

👮 What Programs are Offering Post 911 Call?

Following the high-profile death of Iryna Zarutska, North Carolina's governor signed an executive order that critics say doubles down on carceral approaches, expanding co-responder models and data sharing between 911 and 988, while ignoring community-based civilian crisis programs that have shown stronger outcomes.

CHEO's post-discharge rapid response nursing program contacts families within one to two days of leaving the hospital to assess symptoms, answer questions, and offer home visits — preventing unnecessary emergency department returns, particularly for rural families facing access barriers.

New Solutions

🏘️ When Three Providers Knock on the Same Door: Why Coordinated Care (Not Just Housing) Is What Ends Homelessness

Written by leaders from three Utah organizations, this op-ed argues that housing alone cannot solve homelessness, stable housing must be paired with integrated mental health and medical care to create lasting change. The authors point to Utah's Magnolia supportive housing community as proof of concept, where coordinating housing, health, and behavioral health services on-site led to emergency department use declining over time and law enforcement encounters dropping roughly 71% compared to before enrollment.

They make the case that fragmented systems are not a neutral default — Utah is already paying for the crisis cycle through emergency rooms and law enforcement, just in the most expensive and least effective way. Their call to action is for Utah to expand fully resourced supportive housing, fund collaboration across providers, and build systems designed to work together from the start rather than requiring providers to stitch them together after the fact.

Julota empowers smarter crisis responses by simplifying and streamlining Law Enforcement and Behavioral Health programs. By integrating hospital, EMS, and social services data into a centralized platform, it enables seamless, secure, and HIPAA-compliant collaboration. Automated reporting ensures compliance, while customizable workflows address community-specific needs. With actionable insights, teams can improve outcomes and secure greater funding, making Julota the only software purpose-built to bridge law enforcement and behavioral health with compassion and efficiency.

Agency Coordination

“If people do not have the support that they need in place when they get out it's all the more likely they will repeat the behaviors that led them to getting incarcerated in the first place.”

Josh Stein, Governor of North Carolina

Crash Expert: “This Looks Like 1929” → 71,105 Diversifying Here

Mark Spitznagel, who made $1B in a single day during the 2015 flash crash, warned markets are mimicking 1929. Seems extreme but we did just see the worst quarter for the S&P since 2022.

So it’s not so surprising that Vanguard and Goldman Sachs forecasted 5% and 3% annual S&P returns respectively for 2024-2034.

Late last year, Apollo’s chief economist Torsten Slok put it this way: "expect zero in return in the S&P 500 over the coming decade."

Almost no one knows this, but postwar and contemporary art appreciated 10.2% annually with near-zero correlation to equities from 1995–2025 overall.*

And sure… billionaires like Bezos can make headlines at auction, but what about the rest of us?

Masterworks makes it possible to invest in legendary artworks by Banksy, Basquiat, Picasso, and more – without spending millions.

29 exits. Net annualized returns like 16.5%, 17.6%, and 17.8% on works held over 1 year+. $1.3 billion invested. 500+ offerings.*

Shares in new offerings can sell quickly but…

*According to Masterworks data. Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Investing involves risk. Important Reg A disclosures: masterworks.com/cd.

Homeless Outreach

One Conversation at a Time: How a Boca Raton Officer Is Redefining What Police Homelessness Response Can Look Like

Boca Raton Police Officer Adam Glass serves as a homeless liaison officer within the department's Community Engagement Unit, spending his days building relationships with unsheltered residents and connecting them to housing, mental health services, and recovery programs — prioritizing trust over enforcement. His approach is illustrated through his work with Lynn Greenblatt, a nearly 70-year-old woman who spent close to a year moving between hotels and sleeping in her car before Glass helped her secure housing and medical appointments. Glass says the work is fundamentally about dignity: "There's someone's mother, brother or sister — if a family member of mine was struggling, I'd want them to be respected and treated well."

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