We occasionally catch up with our colleagues at The Fort Collins Coloradoan about the stories they're following. This time, Executive Editor Eric Larsen joins us to discuss plans for the as well as changes to how police in Fort Collins handle emergency dispatch calls related to .
Fort Collins has been abuzz over plans to redevelop the Foothills Mall. Loveland-based developer McWhinney bought the property after its former owners defaulted on a loan payment. McWhinney owns some of the redeveloped housing around the mall as well. The company recently announced some $300 million in planned renovations to the shopping center.
Larsen told KUNC the proposed remodel would raze the interior shopping mall that people have come to know over the years and make it more of a live/work/play outdoor-focused space.
In another story, the Fort Collins Police Department and the nonprofit Outreach Fort Collins are making significant changes to how they handle emergency dispatch calls related to homelessness.
In recent years, Fort Collins police have really grappled with how to address issues of homelessness, Larsen said. If the first interaction that you have with an officer is you getting arrested, it's probably going to be a negative one.
Co-responder models have been taking root across the Front Range to handle non-emergency, non-criminal concerns. Those programs triage calls to non-police responders like mental health professionals when possible. The goal is to help connect people in crisis to more appropriate help while saving officers for situations where they're most needed. In Fort Collins, police are routing calls involving unhoused residents directly to Outreach Fort Collins, which specializes in outreach and aid to homeless individuals.