Date: Fri 23-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 23-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
211-Infoline-health-United-Way
Full Text:
Dial 211 For Answers To Life's Tough Questions
(with cut)
People face emergency situations every day when they need help and information
fast. A teenage runaway wants to come in off the streets. A family's heat is
cut off in the middle of winter. A single mother is missing work and will lose
her job because she can't find child care. A unemployed man is depressed and
is considering suicide.
If the trauma isn't acute or immediate -- if it's not burning or bleeding --
quite often 911 emergency dispatchers won't have time for it. For the past
month, however, Connecticut residents urgently needing different kinds of help
and information have had another number to call -- 211.
The 211 number, available throughout the state, rings through to Infoline, an
established information, referral, and crisis intervention service. This first
statewide use of the number could serve as a model for other states if the
Federal Communications Commission acts favorably on a petition to designate
the number nationwide.
In recent years, approximately 180,000 calls have come into Infoline annually.
They've included requests for everything from where to place a stray animal to
crisis calls for emergency shelter or suicide-related calls. Infoline expects
the calls to increase by about 50 percent as a result of the new number.
Donna Caruso, communications director for the United Way of Connecticut, which
administers Infoline, reports that just in the first weeks of the 211 service,
calls to Infoline had jumped 20 percent.
"We have a public awareness campaign going on which seems to have been
successful," she said. "And as time goes on more and more people will be
learning about it and using the service."
The 211 call center became a reality when Governor John Rowland and the state
legislature supported the action in the 1997-1999 biennial budget adjustments.
"Each and every day, thousands of people call different state agencies and
volunteer groups looking for guidance to get them over an unexpected bump in
the road. Today, we have the technology to make that call easier," said the
governor.
Infoline operates 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Professional caseworkers
help callers with simple and complex problems. Some callers are simply looking
for a volunteer opportunity. Caseworkers also are prepared to handle such
issues as substance abuse, gambling, domestic violence, suicide prevention,
and financial problems. Their most important resource is their database of
community services, which is maintained by Infoline information specialists.
The database is updated daily and includes more than 3,000 programs and 25,000
services in Connecticut.
A group of non-profit organizations, including the United Way, is awaiting
word from the Federal Communications Commission on whether the agency will set
aside 211 as a nationwide access number for information and referral services.
While there is a network of information and referral services across the
country, only one other service, located in the Atlanta metropolitan area, is
using 211. Infoline is the first service to use 211 on a statewide basis.
Several other states, however, are in the process of establishing such
services.
The most frequently requested services are for child care, financial
assistance, food, protective services, legal assistance, utilities/heat,
social support, housing, and mental health. More than half of all calls come
from vulnerable populations groups, including the elderly, poor, disabled,
minorities, victims, and families in crisis.