County board champions Stepping Up Initiative
By MARIEKE ANDRONACHE
Special to The Press
More than 580 counties across the United States are part of the Stepping Up Initiative, including Lehigh County.
The goal is to help those struggling with mental illness stay out of jail, providing them with the tools and support they need to avoid incarceration or re-incarceration.
Lehigh Commissioner Bob Elbich, a champion of this cause, spoke about its importance during his last board meeting before retiring on Dec 13.
“This is not a short-term program,” Elbich emphasized. “We are at the very beginning of it, and it’s going to be a few years before we get some real data you can start to use for analysis, and so forth.
“The county has worked very hard to put together the baseline.”
Elbich invited Director of Forensic Services Drew Taylor to speak on the program, which received full board approval in March.
Taylor spoke of the main points of the program.
“These include identifying adolescents and adults with serious mental illness and/or intellectual disabilities in the community criminal justice system or those folks who are in jeopardy of entering the Lehigh County criminal justice system,” Taylor said.
According to Taylor, the principles guiding this program are safety, accountability, empowerment and advocacy.
Along with Sgt. Benjamin Iobst and Officer TC Cunningham, both with the Allentown Police Department, Taylor received special training with other first responders in the county on how best handle emergency responses with the help of Lehigh County Crisis Intervention.
From new hires to others who have been on the force for some time, Taylor offers special mental health training to best serve the needs of each respective police department in the county.
Expansion of the intervention aspect grew in 2017 with Pinebrook Family Matters, which employs four community health specialists who serve the county’s police departments.
Upper Macungie police use The Hub model, which includes monthly team meetings with various resources. The Emmaus Police Department has a similar model.
Taylor also spoke about CARE (Corrections Assessment Reentry Endeavor), introduced in 2020.
“This offers a person who is incarcerated in Lehigh County Jail a menu of mental health services,” he said. Those services range from diagnostics to counseling, all to help with the reentry process.
Commissioners Bob Elbich, Dave Harrington and Zakiya Smalls were all recognized for their work on the county board.
Elbich reflected on his years as a commissioner and seeing the inner workings of the county.
“It’s a very complex system; it’s very important,” he said. “More importantly, I got to see how professional the county staff is.”
Harrington spoke of the COVID-19 pandemic and the challenges faced by the board to help the residents of the county in a time of need.
“I would think that 2020 was one of the most eventful years for a first year in government,” he said. “That we were able to not only steer the county through it to come out of it, what I think, a stronger board with more policies in place to help people in Lehigh County with changes that needed to be done.”
Smalls discussed what she learned.
“What I’ve learned in the legislative process, the role of local counties, local government plays is so much greater than what most people would think,” Smalls said.
She also spoke of the challenges of balancing public office and being a mom.
All chose not to run again at the end of their term.