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A Bucks County program is turning local cops into ‘ambassadors’ and connecting drug users with treatment

The Bucks Police Assisting in Recovery program has expanded to 12 departments, and is expected to be implemented county-wide in a year.

Bensalem Director of Public Safety Fred Harran started the Bucks Police Assisting in Recovery program in his department three years ago. In that time, he said, about 80 residents have been connected with treatment through his officers.
Bensalem Director of Public Safety Fred Harran started the Bucks Police Assisting in Recovery program in his department three years ago. In that time, he said, about 80 residents have been connected with treatment through his officers.Read more

If a Bucks County resident is struggling with drug addiction and looking for immediate help in getting treatment, officials are now directing them to a new, unlikely ally: local police departments.

Started three years ago in Bensalem, the Bucks Police Assisting in Recovery program trains officers in substance-abuse disorders, and has them serve as “ambassadors” to treatment programs, as Fred Harran, Bensalem’s public safety director, put it.

» READ MORE: In Bucks County, a new program is sending first-time drug offenders to treatment instead of to a courtroom

Officials announced Wednesday that the program has expanded to 12 departments and is slated to encompass the entire county in a year.

“We are not the experts in all fields, we are not the experts in drug issues, we are not the experts in mental illness. But we are the ambassadors,” Harran said. “We will ambassador to the public to get you to the experts, to get you the help you need, no questions asked.”

The county’s Drug and Alcohol Commission received a $300,000 grant from the state earlier this year to expand the program, according to Diane Rosati, the commission’s executive director. That funding goes toward training the officers, as well as volunteer “navigators” who will assist them. It also helps pay for the intake at drug and alcohol treatment centers, and for the treatment itself if a person doesn’t have health insurance.

» READ MORE: Federal government helps Bucks County go after drug traffickers and suppliers with new designation

Currently, the program is available in all parts of the county, from Quakertown to Lower Southampton. Residents interested in getting treatment can call or go to a participating police station and ask for help, and will receive an immediate intake assessment, according to Rosati.

During its pilot run in Bensalem, the program served about 80 residents. It is designed, according to Bucks County District Attorney Matt Weintraub, to increase “points of access” for people who are seeking help immediately, with the intention of limiting barriers that might discourage them from getting that treatment.

“It has nothing to do with who you are, whether you’re innocent or guilty,” Weintraub said. “It calls for the ultimate trust: A person who may have drug paraphernalia on them has to surrender themselves to the police and say, ‘I need help.’

“And if they’re willing to do that,” he added, “these police officers will commit themselves to their safety.”

» READ MORE: A former guard at Bucks County jail smuggled in opioids to help an inmate drug ring, the DA says

The county debuted a similar program in 2018 through the municipal court system that targets drug users after their arrests.

The District Court Diversionary Program engages first-time offenders shortly after their arraignments and puts them into treatment immediately. If they complete the program, the charges are dropped.