The System

Crisis & Justice

When crisis meets law enforcement, there are supposed to be exits — off-ramps to treatment instead of jail. Spokane’s map has 66 marked gaps where those exits are missing or broken.

66
specific gaps identified in the crisis-to-justice system (Sequential Intercept mapping, Yates 2025).
50 / 13 / 0
of the 66: fifty still open, thirteen in progress, zero verifiably closed.
~16,000
jail bookings a year — the county jail is now the region’s largest de facto behavioral-health facility.

The Sequential Intercept model asks one question at every step from 911 call to reentry: could this person have been diverted to treatment here? Each missed intercept is a person carried deeper into the most expensive, least therapeutic part of the system. One number to hold onto: the region has zero adult secure-withdrawal beds — the beds Ricky’s Law requires for involuntary substance-use treatment.

The model — six intercepts, one rule

A different lens on the same system: where the criminal-justice and behavioral-health worlds can catch people, intercept by intercept — drawn by Spokane practitioners (the Sequential Intercept Map, Yates 2025).

This is Spokane’s Sequential Intercept Map — drawn by local practitioners in 2025, rebuilt here so anyone can read it. It answers one question: at what points can a person with mental illness or addiction be intercepted out of the justice system and into care? Six intercepts, left to right — and one rule governing all of them: the earlier the catch, the better the outcome and the cheaper the cost. Use Next to walk the logic.

The scorecard in the Sequential Intercept view identifies 66 specific gaps in the region’s crisis-to-justice system (currently 50 open · 13 in progress · 0 closed). The Safe & Healthy Task Force’s 14 recommendations would directly advance 41 of the 66 — and recommendation A1, the regional council, is what makes the rest reachable.

The narration threaded through this page comes verbatim from the atlas’s guided tour of the intercept view; a few of its cues (“chips,” tabs, buttons) refer to the interactive map itself.

The six intercepts

Intercept 0 — Interventions outside criminal justice

INTERCEPT 0 — BEFORE POLICE AT ALL. Everything in this first column exists so that a crisis never needs a badge: 988 and the crisis line, mobile teams, outreach, the survival circuit. Look at the green $ chips — this is the cheapest real estate on the whole board. Every dollar of intercept-zero work is bought back many times over one column to the right.

THE HOURS PROBLEM. Now read the fine print on the mobile teams: MCAT works 8am–9pm. MRSS works weekdays. Only the DCRs and the youth team run 24/7. Crisis doesn’t keep business hours — but most of intercept zero does. This single fact routes thousands of night-time crises to the only doors that never close: police, the ER, and the jail.

211 / 311 / Crime CheckThe non-emergency phone layer

Three numbers absorb the calls that shouldn’t become 911: 211 for community resources, 311 for city issues (including people lying on the street), Crime Check for non-emergency reports. Where they route determines whether a crisis meets a helper or an officer.

Cost: ≈$0 at point of call · Payer: United Way (211) · City (311) · SPD (Crime Check)

The cheapest intercept that exists — the entire question is where the call gets routed next.
988 — MH Crisis Line24/7, six counties

The front phone of the crisis system, staffed by Frontier. Can dispatch mobile teams instead of police — when the teams are on shift.

Cost: state 988 telecom tax · Payer: HCA → SCRBH → Frontier

Funded by the statewide phone-line tax (E2SHB 1477). The call is paid for; the bed it may need is the scarce part.
DCR — Designated Crisis Responders24/7 · the involuntary gate

The only clinicians who can initiate an involuntary hold. Serious-crisis evaluations: detain to an E&T, or release. Every ITA pathway starts here.

Cost: state crisis contracts · Payer: SCRBH (BH-ASO)

Each investigation is clinician time under the state crisis contract — volumes unpublished (a named data gap).
MCAT7 days, 8am–9pm

Mobile Community Assertive Treatment: the daytime mobile mental-health team for crises below DCR severity. Note the hours — crisis doesn’t keep them.

Cost: SCRBH crisis $ · Payer: HCA/SCRBH

A mobile-team response runs a few hundred dollars — against a $3,000 ER visit or $150/day jail bed it may prevent.
MRSSMon–Fri, 10am–7pm

Mobile Response & Stabilization Services — weekday mobile stabilization. Off nights and weekends, this box is empty.

Cost: SCRBH crisis $ · Payer: HCA/SCRBH

CYFMC — Youth Mobile Crisis24/7

Children/Youth/Family Mobile Crisis — one of only two responses in this column that never sleeps.

Cost: SCRBH crisis $ · Payer: HCA/SCRBH

HOT TeamCode Enforcement + SPD + provider

The Homeless Outreach Team pairing enforcement authority with a service provider — the city’s street-level engagement unit.

Cost: ≈$150/contact · Payer: City general fund

Officer + code-enforcement time; the provider seat is grant-funded.
The survival & service layerShelters, detox, street medicine, clinics, drop-ins, Maddie’s Place…

The SIM’s "Additional Contacts" column is our map’s entire survival circuit and treatment front door — the capacity every intercept upstream depends on.

Cost: ≈$3M/yr donated · Payer: Philanthropy & congregations

The survival circuit runs almost entirely on private money — counted in The Bill because the community pays it, just not through taxes.

Intercept 1 — Law enforcement

INTERCEPT 1 — THE FORK. When police do arrive, three doors open: warning, citation, arrest — and one alternative: the Stabilization Center, where an officer can hand a person to care in minutes. $11.3M a year, and the single most important diversion asset the region owns. Its limits — voluntary-only, 23-hour stays — are both on the practitioners’ gap list.

911 → PatrolWarning · citation · custodial arrest

The classic fork: every street contact ends in one of three doors. Which door dominates is the region’s real policy, whatever the ordinance says.

Cost: ≈$150/contact · Payer: City GF (SPD)

≈$1.5M/yr of The Bill in camping/street-crisis police time.
CDU — Community Diversion UnitSPD

Officers with a diversion mandate — the unit built to choose the services door at the moment of contact.

Cost: police budget · Payer: City GF

BHU — Behavioral Health UnitSPD

Police + clinician co-response for behavioral-health calls. The SIM’s own gap list: coordination between BHU and BRU.

Cost: police budget + BH grant · Payer: City GF + SCRBH

BRU — Behavioral Response UnitSFD

The fire department’s behavioral-health response arm — plus CARES social workers for follow-up on high-utilizer calls.

Cost: ≈$1,050/response full-cost · Payer: EMS levy + SFD budget

Same cost math as all SFD responses: ≈$57M budget ÷ 54,279 runs.
Nurse NavigationSFD-sponsored

Routes non-emergency medical calls to appropriate care instead of an ambulance ride — even provides a Lyft. Quiet, brilliant, and almost unknown.

Cost: saves a $1,050 run · Payer: SFD-sponsored

Every call routed to care instead of an ambulance is quiet money in the bank — a Lyft against an ambulance ride.
Stabilization Center (SCSC/SRSC)Pioneer-operated · first-responder drop-off

The 23-hour crisis alternative to jail and the ER — an officer can hand someone to care in minutes and return to patrol. $11.3M/yr; the diversion door this whole intercept depends on.

Cost: $11.3M/yr (2026) · Payer: County 0.1% + state + Medicaid + settlement

≈$500–700/stay at capacity. The diversion door costs a fraction of the jail door it substitutes for.
Emergency DepartmentLocal hospitals

The default when nothing else is open — $3,000 a visit, discharge to the same sidewalk. See The Bill.

Cost: ≈$3,000/visit · Payer: Medicaid · hospitals eat the rest

≈$16.2M/yr of The Bill in homeless ER visits — plus ≈$13M inpatient behind it.

Intercept 2 — Initial detention / first hearings

INTERCEPT 2 — THE DOOR THAT SWALLOWS. ~16,000 bookings a year. 60% with behavioral-health involvement, 61% with substance-use disorder — most unassessed at intake. The offramps here (5177 diversion, pretrial release done well) work, but they’re paperwork-gated and understaffed. Whoever isn’t caught upstream lands here, at $150 a day.

Booking — or book & release~16,000 bookings/yr

The jail’s front door: full booking, or book-and-release (14% in 2025) that returns a person to the street in hours with a court date they may never make.

Cost: ≈$500/booking + $150/day · Payer: County GF — city billed per interlocal

~16,000 bookings/yr. The city’s detention bill: $7.4M (2024) → $10M+ (2025).
Mental-health screeningAt intake

Everyone booked is screened — 58% of Medicaid enrollees booked have MH needs, 61% SUD. The SIM gap list asks for SUD assessment at intake too.

Cost: jail medical contract · Payer: County (Mediko, Feb 2026)

5177 DiversionFirst/low-level misdemeanor + MH diagnosis

Washington’s misdemeanor mental-health diversion: case management up to a year instead of prosecution. One of the system’s best offramps — and one of its least known.

Cost: ≈$4–6K/yr case mgmt ⚠ · Payer: State + county

A year of diversion case management costs less than five weeks of the jail bed it replaces.
First appearanceMuni · District · Superior · weekend review

Bail, release conditions, pretrial monitoring (92.5% appearance rate under Supported Release), electronic monitoring — the hours where detention-by-omission gets decided.

Cost: court operations · Payer: City & county GF

≈$3M/yr of The Bill in BH-linked court process.
DCR hold from jailThe ITA detour

When the screening finds crisis-level illness, the ITA lane can begin from the jail itself.

Cost: state crisis contracts · Payer: SCRBH

Intercept 3 — Jails / courts

INTERCEPT 3 — THE MOST EXPENSIVE PSYCHIATRIC FACILITY IN THE REGION. The jail: ≈830 people on an average day, ≈$31.9M a year of the status-quo Bill. Beside it, the boxes that actually work — Community Court (locally evaluated, proven) and the therapeutic courts — running on grants that shrank from $738K to $430K. We fund the expensive box by default and the effective boxes by exception.

Spokane County Jail~830 ADP · 60% BH-involved

The region’s largest de facto psychiatric facility, at ≈$150/day and ≈$31.9M/yr of The Bill. Withdrawal protocol inside; MAT if already enrolled through SRHD — the gap lists ask for much more.

Cost: $150/day · ≈$176 all-in · Payer: County GF · city billed

≈$31.9M/yr of The Bill is the jail’s behavioral-health share — the single largest line.
Community CourtLibrary-based · WSU-evaluated

The proven problem-solving docket for street-level offenses — services at the courthouse, warrants quashed, outcomes measured. SOCs (stipulated orders of continuance) resolve cases on compliance.

Cost: ≈$1–2K/participant ⚠ · Payer: City + AOC grants (shrinking)

The WSU evaluation showed it works; the funding line shrank anyway ($738K→$430K).
Therapeutic courtsDrug/Recovery · MH · DUI · DV · Alpha

Case manager, weekly judge contact, sanctions and applause — the evidence-based alternative running on shrinking grants ($738K→$430K).

Cost: 0.1% BH tax + AOC · Payer: County 0.1% · state AOC

Cost per graduate runs far below one jail year; every meta-analysis says it pays for itself.
ABHS — inpatient treatmentFrom custody to treatment

American Behavioral Health Systems: where a sentence can become an inpatient treatment placement instead.

Cost: ≈$450/day inpatient ⚠ · Payer: Medicaid / state

A treatment bed at roughly triple a jail day — that actually treats.
Home detention / credit for time servedAlternatives to a cell

Electronic home monitoring and sentence credits — cheaper custody where risk allows.

Cost: defendant fees + county ⚠ · Payer: Mixed

Intercept 4 — Reentry

INTERCEPT 4 — THE $0 DOOR. Find the chip on the Release box: $0 · Nobody. Nothing is systematically funded at the single deadliest point on either map — the first two weeks after release carry a 129× overdose-death risk. Reentry plans exist “in select cases.” The practitioners’ entire Intercept-4 gap list is this door, itemized.

ReleaseThe 129× window

Dismissed, sentence served, or plea — either way, out the same gate. The first two weeks carry a 129-fold overdose-death risk. The deadliest seam on either map.

Cost: $0 · Payer: Nobody

The most expensive free thing in the county: nothing is funded at this door, and the 129× window opens on the other side of it.
Reentry planDrafted by Detention Services — select cases only

The SIM’s own words: "in select cases." The gap lists ask for prescriptions at release, provider reach-ins, MAT continuity, weekend-release services — the plan, universalized.

Cost: staff time, select cases · Payer: County Detention Services

Dept. of CorrectionsBrownstone · Eleanor Chase · Revive contracts

The state-side reentry infrastructure — ~55 beds plus supervision — that county jail releases mostly don’t get.

Cost: state DOC budget · Payer: WA DOC

~55 reentry beds + supervision — state releases get infrastructure county releases don’t.

Intercept 5 — Community corrections

INTERCEPT 5 — SUPERVISION. Community corrections: a tenth the cost of custody, with the leverage to require treatment — or to recycle people to jail on technical violations. The violation arrow points straight back to Intercept 2. Whether this box is an exit or a conveyor depends entirely on what it’s connected to.

CJS / District / DOC supervisionValidated assessments, early discharge for success

Probation and supervision — structured accountability that can require treatment, or recycle people to jail on technical violations. Violation arrows point straight back to Intercept 2.

Cost: ≈$5–15/day · Payer: City/county/DOC

Supervision costs a tenth of custody — and each technical-violation lap erases years of that savings.

Two maps, one system

This intercept map and the continuum map are the same city drawn by two hands — the justice doorway in detail here; housing, money, and treatment capacity there. They agree on the units, the choke points, and the holes. Where to go next: walk ▶ Follow one arrest to feel these intercepts as one night in one life — or press Esc to return to the continuum map, where the recommendations and The Bill pick up the argument this diagram starts.

The Gap Scorecard — the scoreboard the region never kept

Below the columns: the most valuable thing on this document. In 2025, the practitioners named 66 specific gaps, intercept by intercept, in their own words. We’ve scored every one (⚠ Gap scorecard tab): as of July 2026 — 50 open, 13 in progress, zero verifiably closed. A list nobody re-scores is a wish. A scorecard with owners is a plan.

In 2025, Spokane’s own practitioners named 66 specific gaps, intercept by intercept. As of July 2026, the SBA’s best-effort status read: 50 open · 13 in progress · 0 verifiably closed · 3 need verification.

These statuses are provisional and invite correction — owners of any gap: use the 💬 comment button on the atlas and we will update the board. The real recommendation is bigger: the regional council (★ recommendation #1) should own this scorecard officially — statuses, owners, and dates — published quarterly. A list of gaps nobody re-scores is a wish; a scorecard with owners is a plan. New: every gap now carries a draft BEST ANSWER — a mechanism, an owner, and a cost order where known. They are arguable by design: argue via 💬 and improve the plan.

Intercept 0 — Interventions outside criminal justice20 of 33 open
StatusGap — in the practitioners’ words
OPENPsychiatric ER
Sacred Heart has 8 psych-ED beds; its 40-person psychiatric triage team was cut May 2026. Moving backward.
Best answer: Build an EmPATH-model psychiatric emergency unit at Sacred Heart — a calm, no-gurney psychiatric ER (proven at ~40 US hospitals to cut boarding ~80%). Capital: hospital community-benefit + state BH capital funds. Owner: Providence + county.
OPENBridge prescriptions (scripts to span care gaps)
Best answer: Adopt a standing bridge-prescription protocol: 14–30-day scripts at every ER/jail/E&T discharge — standard practice nationally. Cost ≈$0 beyond pharmacy. Owner: hospitals + Mediko + medical society.
OPEN24/7 MAT access
CAT offers same-day starts — daytime. The window of willingness keeps night hours; the system doesn’t.
Best answer: Fund a tele-bupe on-call line + extended CAT hours (settlement $200–400K/yr). Other WA counties run 24/7 MAT starts by phone. Owner: county settlement + CAT/Ideal Option.
NEEDS VERIFICATIONResponse to 311 calls re: people lying on street
Best answer: Route 311 street-welfare calls to the Nurse Navigation/HOT queue with a response-time standard; publish volumes. Cost: a dispatch protocol change. Owner: City 311 + SFD.
NEEDS VERIFICATIONAccess to INBH (private psych beds)
100 private beds exist; admission criteria/insurance access unverified.
Best answer: Negotiate single-bed-certification and charity-access agreements with INBH; publish admission criteria. Owner: SCRBH + INBH.
OPENHousing
Task Force: 1,000+ supportive-housing unit gap — "the fulcrum of the system."
Best answer: The whole map’s answer: close the 1,000+ unit gap via the unified regional measure (0.2%) + HTF/LIHTC pipeline + landlord compact. Owner: the regional council (rec #1).
OPENRelapse prevention
Best answer: Fund contingency management — the only evidence-based meth treatment — plus recovery-housing expansion; settlement-eligible. Owner: county + providers.
OPENMid-level intervention (between outreach & crisis)
Best answer: Extend MCAT to 24/7 as the mid-level tier between outreach and DCR — the highest-leverage hours change on this map. Cost ≈2–3 added shifts. Owner: SCRBH/HCA crisis contract.
IN PROGRESSPeer-based response & support
Peer Spokane, Recovery Café, CAT’s all-peer staff exist; SHTF B3 would formalize across the system.
Best answer: Adopt SHTF B3 wholesale: certified peers at every transition point, Medicaid-billable — the financing already exists. Owner: SCRBH + providers.
OPENSiting resources by access need (impacted zip codes)
The low-barrier services review (Hard Questions) is this gap, argued in full.
Best answer: Adopt a city siting policy per the low-barrier services review: capacity standards, impact zones, co-located treatment — siting as part of the intervention. Owner: City Council + planning.
OPENCoordination / communication / shared data
The central finding of this entire map. SHTF B1. City and county systems still don’t talk.
Best answer: Build the B1 data spine: one by-name cross-system record. Boise did it with one data manager. Cost ≈1–2 FTE + integration. Owner: regional council.
OPENConsistent, measured outcomes
State audits: the city wasn’t even monitoring HUD subrecipients. See "How would we know it’s working?"
Best answer: Make this scorecard official: quarterly statuses, owners, dates — rec #2’s ledger plus outcomes. Cost ≈$0. Owner: regional council.
IN PROGRESSCivilian-based overdose teams
SFD CARES: 4 social workers, 72% high-utilizer call reduction in pilots. Tiny against 1,795 OD responses.
Best answer: Scale SFD CARES from 4 toward ~12 social workers — its pilot cut high-utilizer calls 72%; it pays for itself in avoided runs. Owner: SFD + settlement/levy.
OPENWorkforce shortage
>90% BH-worker burnout, 44% turnover (2022). Named at four separate intercepts.
Best answer: Regional BH workforce package (SHTF C7): pay parity across contracts, loan-repayment slots, SFCC/WSU pipeline. Owner: regional council + state delegation.
OPENUBI / financial stability
Best answer: SOAR-first policy instead (see the Master Key map): every eligible person filed = uncapped federal income — no local UBI required. Owner: every shelter contract, as a deliverable.
OPENImmigrant support
Best answer: Contract refugee/immigrant-serving orgs for BH navigation + interpretation. Owner: county 0.1% + city.
IN PROGRESSCulturally specific services
NATIVE Project, tribal services exist; SHTF C5 targets expansion.
Best answer: SHTF C5: fund tribal, Black-led, LGBTQ+-led, refugee-led services as prime contractors, not subcontractors. Owner: county/city RFPs.
OPENAwareness of Medicaid navigators (BHT)
Best answer: Co-locate Medicaid/BHT navigators at libraries, DSHS lobbies, and the Bridge Center — awareness is a staffing decision. Owner: MCOs (contract term) + SWC Resource Center.
IN PROGRESSHarm reduction / overdose-prevention sites
SRHD syringe services + naloxone saturation; volumes unpublished.
Best answer: Expand SRHD mobile services + leave-behind naloxone; publish volumes. Owner: SRHD + settlement.
OPENReliable, affordable transportation
Best answer: STA partnership: free BH-appointment passes + a court/treatment shuttle. A bus pass vs a $1,650 FTA lap. Owner: STA + courts + county.
OPENCare coordination across the system
= SHTF B4 warm handoffs. "Losing far too many."
Best answer: = SHTF B4: the warm-handoff standard (plan, navigator, destination) written into every public contract as a condition of payment. Owner: all funders, at renewal.
IN PROGRESSMedically supported housing / services
Two respite programs now exist (Hope House 44 + Healing Hearts 30) — new since this map was drawn. 74 beds vs thousands of discharges.
Best answer: Expand respite from 74 beds toward discharge volume with hospital community-benefit co-funding — each bed saves the hospital readmissions. Owner: Providence/MultiCare + Medicaid waiver.
OPENSafe Parking
Best answer: Church-lot safe-parking pilot (3–5 lots, host agreements, one navigator) — the cheapest shelter form there is. Owner: faith coalition + city permit pathway.
IN PROGRESSTiny homes
Village Cohousing Works organizing; nothing built at scale.
Best answer: Back Village Cohousing’s model on faith-owned land; one built pilot beats ten studies. Owner: congregations + HTF micro-grants.
OPENSafe place to sleep
643 unsheltered (2026 PIT) vs a scattered-site system short of displaced demand.
Best answer: Close the bed math: scattered-site capacity matched to displaced demand, paired with enforcement (the bookends bargain). Owner: city + regional measure.
IN PROGRESSDrop-in navigation center
Navigation center pilot now operating (Jewels, $1.7M contract through 3/2027) — the SIM’s "(Pilot)" label came true.
Best answer: DONE in pilot — now scale: extend navigation-center hours toward 24/7 and add co-located FCS billing. Owner: city + Jewels/EHF contract.
IN PROGRESSDay-use sites
Housing Navigation Center day-use operating on Cannon.
Best answer: Extend the Housing Navigation Center + Women’s Hearth into evenings/weekends — day-use that closes at 6 p.m. misses half the day’s crises. Owner: city contract amendments.
OPENPediatric psychiatric beds
Worsened: Daybreak licenses suspended 2023.
Best answer: Advocate an adolescent psychiatric unit (INBH or Sacred Heart) + state capital ask; interim: tele-psych + transfer agreements. Owner: hospitals + state delegation + MCOs.
OPENStandardized eligibility criteria
Best answer: One shared, published, plain-language eligibility matrix across CE, shelters, diversion, and 5177 (a B1 by-product). Owner: CoC + county.
OPENBehavioral-health ER
Best answer: Same build as the psych ER: the EmPATH unit IS the behavioral-health ER — one project closes two gaps. Owner: Providence + county.
IN PROGRESS988 visibility
Call volumes rising statewide; local awareness campaigns thin.
Best answer: Cheap: a $50K 988 visibility campaign — bus ads, school posters, provider cards. Owner: SRHD + SCRBH.
IN PROGRESSYouth-based interventions
Crosswalk 2.0 opened 2025 (44 youth beds); SHTF C6 school-centered system unbuilt.
Best answer: Adopt SHTF C6: the school-centered 16–25 prevention system, seeded by 0.1% student-wellness money. Owner: districts + county + OHY.
IN PROGRESSFamily treatment
Rising Strong keeps families together in treatment — 175 reunified since 2017; capacity-limited.
Best answer: Expand Rising Strong’s model (175 families reunified) toward demand; FCS + CHG braided. Owner: CCEW + county.
Intercept 1 — Law enforcement8 of 9 open
StatusGap — in the practitioners’ words
OPENCoordination between BHU / BRU
Best answer: Joint SPD/SFD dispatch protocol + shared record for BHU/BRU (a B1 by-product); co-train, co-locate one shift a week. Cost ≈$0. Owner: the two chiefs.
OPENAdequate shelter beds first responders can use — at all times
The 3 a.m. problem: an officer with a willing person and nowhere open.
Best answer: Reserve first-responder beds in the scattered-site network — 5–10 beds bookable by radio at 3 a.m. A contract amendment, not a program. Owner: city shelter contracts.
OPEN23-hour requirement limiting crisis-stability beds
Design constraint at the SRSC — stabilization on a stopwatch.
Best answer: Pair the 23-hour SRSC limit with step-down (PATH facility 2027 + respite referrals); ask HCA for a 72-hour crisis-stabilization pilot waiver. Owner: SCRBH + Pioneer + HCA.
OPENExpanded 24/7 crisis-team coverage
Verified hours: MCAT 8am–9pm, MRSS weekdays only. Only DCRs & youth mobile run 24/7.
Best answer: MCAT to 24/7 — the same fix as Intercept 0; one change closes both gaps. Owner: SCRBH.
IN PROGRESSPeer support at law-enforcement contact
Best answer: Peers riding with co-response teams (B3); Medicaid-billable hours. Owner: SCRBH + peer orgs.
OPENImmediate SUD/medical/BH access with financial support
Best answer: A flexible “close-to-crisis” fund: navigator-controlled dollars ($500 caps) for the detox ride, the phone, the night’s motel — the $200 that prevents the $2,000. Owner: philanthropy-seeded, city-matched.
OPENNo funding for close-to-crisis services
Best answer: Same flexible fund, formalized: settlement dollars earmarked for use within 72 hours of crisis contact. Owner: county settlement allocation.
OPENWorkforce shortage
Best answer: C7 workforce package (see Intercept 0). Owner: regional council.
OPENStreamlined medical clearance
Hours in the ER before a psych bed can even be requested.
Best answer: An agreed psychiatric fast-track for medical clearance (standard labs, 2-hour target) between hospitals and the E&Ts. Owner: hospitals + Frontier + SCRBH.
Intercept 2 — Initial detention / first hearings6 of 6 open
StatusGap — in the practitioners’ words
OPENRobust evaluations in jail
Best answer: Expand Pioneer’s in-custody evaluations + tele-psychiatry into booking; the Medicaid reentry waiver (WA implementing) funds pre-release services. Owner: county + Pioneer + HCA.
OPENAdequate time for PSU prior to booking
Best answer: Booking-protocol change: PSU screening time before the booking decision on flagged cases — the SRSC diversion window. Owner: jail + SPD interlocal.
OPENAdditional diversion opportunities (e.g., MAT diversion)
5177 exists for MH; no SUD equivalent at booking.
Best answer: Create a pre-booking MAT diversion track (LEAD-style): treatment agreement instead of booking for possession-level cases. Owner: prosecutors + CAT jail bridge.
OPENSUD assessment at intake
61% of Medicaid enrollees booked have SUD — unassessed at the door.
Best answer: Add a validated SUD screen to intake beside the MH screen — minutes per booking, for 61% of the population. Owner: jail medical (Mediko amendment).
OPENCollaboration for suicidal ideation
Jail suicide rate: 49/100k (2019 national).
Best answer: Joint jail–hospital–DCR suicide-risk flagging through the shared record (B1); interim: an MOU. Owner: jail + Frontier + hospitals.
OPENWorkforce shortage
Best answer: C7. Owner: regional council.
Intercept 3 — Jails / courts4 of 5 open
StatusGap — in the practitioners’ words
OPENFlag therapeutic-court eligibility closer to arrest
Best answer: A therapeutic-court eligibility checklist at charging + a 5177/community-court flag in prosecutor intake. Cost ≈$0 — policy only. Owner: city + county prosecutors.
OPENFree/reliable transportation to court obligations
An FTA for want of a bus ride becomes a warrant, a booking, a jail lap. See Dave’s journey.
Best answer: STA court shuttle + text reminders (courts adding texts cut FTAs ~25% nationally). Trivial cost. Owner: courts + STA.
OPENLanguage access
Best answer: Statewide interpreter line contracted into all dockets + translated condition sheets. Owner: AOC funds + courts.
OPENWorkforce shortage
Best answer: C7. Owner: regional council.
NEEDS VERIFICATIONFree phone calls
Best answer: Zero out jail call costs at contract renewal — several states and counties already have; family contact cuts recidivism. Owner: county commissioners.
Intercept 4 — Reentry8 of 9 open
StatusGap — in the practitioners’ words
OPENConsistent prescriptions at jail release
The 129× window, unmedicated.
Best answer: 30-day scripts as a release standard, written into the Mediko contract, funded by the reentry waiver’s pre-release benefit. Owner: county + HCA.
OPENProvider "reach-ins" before release
= SHTF B4, at the deadliest door.
Best answer: Reach-in contracts: FCS navigators credentialed into the jail 30 days pre-release — the waiver pays. Owner: county + CCEW/Revive/Frontier.
IN PROGRESSAdequate MAT in jail
SRHD OTP doses reach the jail for those already enrolled; coverage % unpublished (— a named data gap).
Best answer: Universal MAT in custody, not just prior SRHD enrollees — Rhode Island’s version cut post-release OD deaths 60.5%. Waiver-fundable. Owner: county + SRHD + Mediko.
OPENAnti-psychotic injectables at release
One shot = 30 days of stability through the most chaotic month. Not standard.
Best answer: A long-acting injectable option at release for psychotic-spectrum patients — 30 days of stability through the worst month. Owner: jail medical + MCOs.
OPENOvernight & weekend releases
Released at 2 a.m. Saturday to a closed system.
Best answer: Daytime-release policy + a release lounge (coffee, phone, navigator, bus pass) staffed weekday mornings. Near-zero cost. Owner: Detention Services.
OPENServices at book-and-release
14% of bookings — hours in custody, zero connection made.
Best answer: A navigator desk in the book-and-release lobby — 14% of bookings, hours in custody, zero connection: one staffed desk fixes it. Owner: county + CAT/peers.
OPENPeer access at reentry
Best answer: Peer reach-in contracts (B3) — peers are the credential jail-leavers trust. Owner: county + peer orgs.
OPENCulturally specific treatment
Best answer: C5: tribal and culturally specific reentry contracts (a NATIVE Project reentry track). Owner: county RFP.
OPENFamily treatment
Best answer: A Rising Strong reentry track: family-treatment slots reserved for reentering parents. Owner: CCEW + DOC.
Intercept 5 — Community corrections4 of 4 open
StatusGap — in the practitioners’ words
OPENSUD treatment that accepts Medicaid/Medicare
Best answer: Enforce MCO network adequacy (SUD networks that actually take Apple Health/Medicare) + FCS attached to supervision. Owner: HCA contract oversight + state delegation.
OPENSUD treatment with interpreter services
Best answer: Interpreter-line contracts for SUD providers — interpretation is Medicaid-reimbursable; this is a billing-code fix. Owner: MCOs + providers.
OPENDV-treatment (DVIT) providers
Worsened: the DV therapeutic court closed Sept 2025.
Best answer: Restore the DV therapeutic court + incentives for DVIT certification (the Sept 2025 closure moved this backward). Owner: courts + AOC + county.
OPENHousing for people with records / sex-offense histories
The hardest-to-house population, and nobody’s program.
Best answer: DOC-contracted scattered beds + a landlord mitigation fund for registrants — nobody’s program today, everybody’s problem tonight. Owner: DOC + county + a brave landlord compact.

Source: Spokane Sequential Intercept Map (2025) gap lists, verbatim; statuses cross-referenced against this map’s audited research (AUDIT_LOG). Nothing here is a criticism of the practitioners who named these gaps — naming them was the brave first step. Scoring them is the second. Closing them is the point.

Four people, one machine

The atlas walks four composite people through these intercepts, step by step — the same machinery producing four different outcomes, depending on the hour, the paperwork, and which doors happened to be open. Every step below is ported verbatim; the red boxes are the lesson each step teaches.

Danny — one arrest, one nightMeth + PTSD, 1:40 a.m. The enforcement-default path, gap by gap — and the $4K night it should have been.
Step 1 · THE CALL211 / 311 / Crime Check

Danny, 34 — meth and untreated PTSD, camping behind a downtown shop. At 1:40 a.m. the owner calls Crime Check about “a man screaming at the dumpsters.” The call is coded as a disorder complaint, not a behavioral-health crisis. That single routing decision — made by a call-taker in eight seconds — has just chosen which system Danny enters.

Had the same call reached 988, a mobile team could have been dispatched instead of patrol. Intercept 0 exists precisely to catch this call — when its doors are open.
Step 2 · PATROL ARRIVES911 → Patrol

Two officers, 1:52 a.m. Danny is mid-episode — meth-amplified paranoia reads as defiance. The fork opens: warning, citation, or custodial arrest. He can’t comply with commands he can’t process. Arrest it is.

The fork’s three doors are only as real as what’s behind them at 1:52 a.m. on a Sunday.
Step 3 · THE DIVERSION THAT SLEPTCDU — Community Diversion Unit

SPD’s Community Diversion Unit and Behavioral Health Unit are built for exactly this moment — and staffed for daytime. MCAT closed at 9 p.m. MRSS doesn’t work weekends. The only 24/7 door, the DCRs, requires crisis-level severity Danny doesn’t quite meet.

Practitioner gap #4, Intercept 1: “Expanded 24/7 coverage crisis teams.” Scorecard status: OPEN.
Step 4 · THE CENTER HE REFUSEDStabilization Center (SCSC/SRSC)

The Stabilization Center would take him — voluntary, calm, clinical, free to the officer. Danny, paranoid, says no. The officers have four calls stacking. There is no non-refusal receiving option, and no time to talk him in.

The Task Force’s C1 recommendation asks the region to evaluate a non-refusal crisis receiving center — the missing door this exact minute needs.
Step 5 · BOOKEDBooking — or book & release

2:20 a.m., booking. Withdrawal starts on a concrete floor around hour ten. The mental-health screen flags him — he joins the 60%. He’s now a $150/day resident of the region’s largest psychiatric facility.

61% of Medicaid enrollees booked here have substance-use disorder. The SIM gap list asks for SUD assessment at intake — still OPEN.
Step 6 · THE OFFRAMP HE COULDN’T REACH5177 Diversion

On paper, Danny might be a 5177 diversion candidate — low-level misdemeanor, mental-health involvement, case management instead of prosecution. But 5177 needs a documented MH diagnosis, and Danny — like Randy on the continuum map — has never survived the appointments it takes to get one.

The best offramps in the system quietly require paperwork the people who need them most cannot produce. That’s not a flaw in Danny. It’s a flaw in the design.
Step 7 · FIRST APPEARANCEFirst appearance

Monday, 8:30 a.m., released on conditions: appear in three weeks, stay out of the downtown corridor, keep an address current. He has no phone, no calendar, no address. The conditions are written for a life he doesn’t have.

Step 8 · THE MISSCommunity Court

A community-court referral was possible right here — services at the library courthouse, the WSU-validated model. Nobody flags him for it; eligibility gets spotted at arrest in some cases, at first appearance in others, and in Danny’s case, not at all.

Intercept 3, gap #1, verbatim: “Flagging therapeutic court eligibility closer to time of arrest.” OPEN.
Step 9 · THE WARRANT LAPSpokane County Jail

The bus route to court changed in March. Danny misses the hearing — FTA — warrant — picked up eleven days later — eleven more days inside, $1,650. He loses the tent, the ID he’d finally gotten, and his dog. Fourth lap. The system calls each lap an outcome; the ledger calls it ≈$2,900.

Intercept 3, gap #2: free, reliable transportation to court obligations. A bus pass against a $1,650 jail lap — the cheapest fix on either map.
Step 10 · RELEASED, 2:00 A.M.Release

Charges eventually dropped — obviously. Out the sally port at 2 a.m. Saturday: no prescription, no injectable, no reach-in from any provider, no plan — Detention Services drafts reentry plans “in select cases,” and Danny isn’t select. He is now standing in the 129× overdose window, wearing everything he owns.

Intercept 4’s gap list is this exact scene, itemized: prescriptions at release, provider reach-ins, injectables, weekend releases. All OPEN.
Step 11 · RUN THE TAPE AGAINCJS / District / DOC supervision

Now replay the night with the gaps closed: the 1:40 call reaches 988 — a 24/7 mobile team talks Danny down by 2:15 — a non-refusal receiving center holds him overnight — a peer meets him at breakfast — a single-visit diagnostic documents what fifteen years of missed appointments never did — 5177 attaches a case manager — community court quashes the old warrants — an injectable and a housing navigator walk out the door with him. That version costs roughly $4,000. The version you just walked costs ≈$23,000 per cycle — and it repeats.

Every fork in Danny’s night was named as a gap by Spokane’s own practitioners in 2025. The scorecard is the to-do list. The arithmetic is the argument. The decision is the only missing part.
Elena — the system working as designedSame machinery, Tuesday afternoon, one old diagnosis on file: 5177 diversion, zero minutes in custody, ≈$5K. Why is this the exception?
Step 1 · THE SHOPLIFTING CALL211 / 311 / Crime Check

Elena, 41 — bipolar disorder, housed but barely, off her medication since her insurance churned at redetermination. A grocery manager calls Crime Check: she’s taken $31 of food. It’s 2:15 on a Tuesday afternoon — and that timestamp is about to matter more than anything else in this story.

Same machinery as Danny’s night. One difference: the sun is up, and the daytime system is a different country.
Step 2 · THE CDU SHOWS UPCDU — Community Diversion Unit

Because it’s a weekday afternoon, the call routes to SPD’s Community Diversion Unit — on shift, available, trained for exactly this. The officer runs her name: one prior, a documented bipolar diagnosis from a hospitalization two years ago. That old piece of paper is about to save the county thousands of dollars.

Danny had no documented diagnosis, so no doors opened. Elena has one — the single administrative difference that changes everything downstream.
Step 3 · THE OFFRAMP, TAKEN5177 Diversion

With a low-level misdemeanor and a documented MH diagnosis, Elena is textbook 5177 diversion: no booking, no charge filed — a case manager for up to a year instead. The officer makes the referral from the parking lot. Total custody time: zero minutes.

The chip on this box reads ≈$4–6K/yr — less than five weeks of the jail bed she never occupied.
Step 4 · THE CASE MANAGER’S FIRST CALL988 — MH Crisis Line

Her diversion case manager’s first move isn’t legal — it’s medical: reinstating her Apple Health (the churn that started this), a psychiatry appointment, meds refilled within the week. The shoplifting was never the illness; it was the illness’s invoice.

Coverage churn — a paperwork event — is a clinical event. The benefits primer (HELP button) exists because of stories like this one.
Step 5 · THE HEARING THAT NEVER HAPPENSFirst appearance

There is no first appearance, no bail decision, no public defender file — because there is no case. Compliance check-ins replace court dates. Eleven months later the diversion closes successfully and the incident evaporates from her record.

Step 6 · WHAT IT COSTCJS / District / DOC supervision

Total public cost of Elena’s episode: roughly $5,000 — a year of light case management and a psychiatry restart. The identical episode at 1:52 a.m., or without the old diagnosis on file: booking, court dates, likely an FTA — Danny’s ≈$23,000 lap.

Elena is the system working AS DESIGNED. The design exists. The scorecard’s question: why does working-as-designed require a Tuesday afternoon and lucky paperwork?
Ray — a righteous arrest, a therapeutic courtA veteran’s DUI. Enforcement done right, then DUI court done right — the humane and the cheap option turning out to be the same option.
Step 1 · THE STOP911 → Patrol

Ray, 58 — Army veteran, 20 years sober once, drinking again since his wife died. Pulled over at midnight doing 40 in a 25, blows a .14. A DUI — his second; the first was 30 years ago. Custodial arrest; there’s no diversion from a DUI, and there shouldn’t be.

Not every arrest is a system failure. Some enforcement is exactly right — the question is always what the system does NEXT.
Step 2 · BOOKED, PROPERLYBooking — or book & release

Booking, breathalyzer records, a night in the tank, morning release with a court date. Ray has a phone, a truck, an address — notice how differently the same machinery treats a person with those three things.

Step 3 · FIRST APPEARANCEFirst appearance

His public defender spots what the screening missed: the drinking started with the grief, the PTSD is service-connected and untreated, and Ray qualifies for something better than a sentence — DUI therapeutic court.

Intercept 3 gap #1 — flagging therapeutic-court eligibility early — worked here because one overloaded defender caught it. The gap asks for it to be systematic, not heroic.
Step 4 · DUI COURTTherapeutic courts

Eighteen months: same judge weekly, random testing, treatment attendance, a VA referral that finally addresses the PTSD — and applause in a courtroom, which Ray initially finds ridiculous and later admits kept him coming. He relapses once, week 30; the response is a treatment adjustment, not expulsion.

Swift, certain, PROPORTIONATE responses, plus one judge who knows your name. NIJ and GAO confirm it cuts recidivism. Locally it runs on a grant line that fell $738K→$430K.
Step 5 · THE VA THREADThe survival & service layer

Ray’s case manager braids him into the veteran system — the one population America actually built a complete system for: VA health care, a service-connected rating, SSVF when the mortgage wobbles. Veteran homelessness fell by half nationally because that full toolkit exists under one accountable roof.

The veterans’ system is the proof-of-concept this whole project keeps citing: by-name list + full toolkit + one owner = it works.
Step 6 · GRADUATIONCJS / District / DOC supervision

Month 20: graduation, charges reduced per the program, supervision closed early for success — the validated-assessment, early-discharge model the SIM names at Intercept 5. Ray’s total: ≈$14,000, most of it treatment. A standard DUI sentence with jail time and no treatment costs more — and returns a 58-year-old widower to drinking alone with a suspended license.

Therapeutic courts are the rare box where the humane option and the cheap option are the same option. The scorecard’s question: why is its funding shrinking?
Tasha — the ITA lane from a bridge railingPsychiatric emergency, 61 hours boarding, 32 beds for six counties, and the coin-flip between hospital and jail.
Step 1 · THE BRIDGE CALL911 → Patrol

Tasha, 29 — schizoaffective disorder, unsheltered two years, known to every outreach worker downtown. Tonight she’s on the Monroe Street Bridge railing, shouting at the river. Police and fire respond together. This is not a crime scene; it’s a psychiatric emergency in a public place.

Step 2 · THE DCR DECIDESDCR — Designated Crisis Responders

A Designated Crisis Responder meets the co-response team — the one 24/7 clinical door. Danger to self: clearly met. The DCR initiates an involuntary hold. For once the question isn’t authority — it’s geography: where does she physically go?

The ITA lane’s whole choreography (the HELP button explains it for families) begins here — and immediately hits the bed problem.
Step 3 · BOARDINGEmergency Department

The answer, for 61 hours: a gurney in an ER hallway under a single-bed certification, waiting for one of the region’s 32 E&T beds to open. Six counties squeeze through those 32 beds. She’s sedated, safe, and going nowhere — at ER prices.

Boarding is the bed shortage made visible: ≈13 psych beds per 100k against a recommended 50. The most expensive waiting room in the county.
Step 4 · THE 120 HOURSDCR hold from jail

A bed opens at Calispel. The 120-hour clock (weekends excluded) plays out; the court orders a 14-day commitment. Medication takes hold — the first sustained treatment in two years, purchasable only via court order and a crisis on a bridge railing.

The law protects liberty until the cliff’s edge — which means the front door for people like Tasha IS the cliff’s edge.
Step 5 · THE OTHER TIMELINESpokane County Jail

Rewind: had the DCR been tied up that night (volumes: unpublished), the same bridge call ends in obstruction charges and the jail’s psychiatric floor — the 60%. Same woman, same illness; flip a coin on system capacity: hospital or jail.

Whether a psychotic crisis lands in treatment or custody is substantially a staffing accident. That coin-flip is what the SIM exists to eliminate.
Step 6 · THE LRAMCAT

Discharged on a Less Restrictive Alternative: court-ordered outpatient — monthly injectable, check-ins, a caseworker. It holds exactly as long as the appointments do. Her housing status — still a tent — is the LRA’s quiet saboteur: no address, no routine, no refrigerator.

An LRA without housing is a treatment plan built on sand — why the continuum map’s housing lane and this map’s intercepts are one system, not two.
Step 7 · THE HANDOFF THAT DECIDESRelease

Everything now rides on one seam: E&T discharge to community follow-up. Done warm — navigator, FCS housing referral, first appointment already booked — Tasha’s trajectory bends. Done as paperwork, she’s back on the railing within a season, and the whole ≈$40,000 sequence re-runs.

Task Force B4, the practitioners’ gap lists, and this map’s thesis converge on this exact moment: every handoff is a chance for connection or a point of failure.
NextThe plan that closes 41 of the 66
The Roadmap →