News

What happens when those trained to respond to crises disappear? In Downtown Eugene, the sudden loss of CAHOOTS, the city's ...
As Eugene residents lose access to the alternative crisis response program, CAHOOTS, a Springfield teen expresses that it was ...
With the exit of CAHOOTS (Crisis Assistance Helping Out on the Streets) on April 7 from the city of Eugene after 35 years of ...
White Bird’s CAHOOTS program, which provides services to people in crisis, will no longer serve the city of Eugene. Employees ...
On Monday, the City of Eugene and White Bird Clinic announced that mobile crisis response service CAHOOTS would no longer serve Eugene due to contract, and funding issues.
Eugene ends CAHOOTS services and shifts crisis response to MCS-LC due to budget issues, impacting available services and prompting future collaboration efforts.
Several residents turned out to a city council meeting to ask officials to figure out a way to keep funding the mobile crisis ...
Henry Cakebread and Ashley Barnhill-Hubbard with CAHOOTS, a mental health crisis intervention program, discuss their last ...
Crisis Assistance Helping Out on the Streets, or CAHOOTS, was abruptly halted on Monday, April 7, cancelling essential ...
That was the message from those who attended Thursday night’s town hall meeting held at the University of Oregon, following the elimination of CAHOOTS services in Eugene earlier in the week.
After nearly three decades of working with CAHOOTS in various capacities, Eugene officials announced the city has cut ties with the mobile crisis intervention teams effective Monday. The complete ...
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