Forum

Can We Bring CAHOOTS-Like Services Back? The Future of Mobile Crisis Services in Eugene

Date: September 12, 2025

Time: Noon to 1:15 pm

Event Type: Live/Livestream
Members and Non-Members may attend our forums for free

Venue: WOW Hall
291 West 8th
Eugene, Oregon
97401

City Club Eugene Icon
Other Details:

We will meet at the WOW Hall, 291 W 8th. Learn more: https://wowhall.org/about-us/. Walk, ride a bike or take the bus. You may park on the street or in the parking lot of FOOD for Lane County's Dining Room, across 8th from the WOW Hall. A freewill donation acknowledging the Dining Room's generosity may be made at the meeting.

Lunch will be available for $15.

Topic:

CAHOOTS (Crisis Assistance Helping Out On The Streets) is a nationally recognized mobile crisis response program founded through a long-standing partnership between the City of Eugene and White Bird Clinic. For decades, CAHOOTS provided compassionate, non-police crisis intervention in Eugene, serving as a trusted community resource and inspiring similar models across the country. In April, White Bird Clinic reduced CAHOOTS’ service hours after years of working to sustain operations amid shifting funding and new state and federal requirements. Soon after, the City of Eugene and White Bird Clinic mutually decided to end the contract. White Bird continues to operate CAHOOTS in Springfield and stands ready to return to Eugene when sustainable funding is available.

The service shift raised widespread concern. CAHOOTS supporters filled Eugene City Council meetings throughout their 2025-2027 budget deliberations, urging officials to restore CAHOOTS. In June, the Eugene City Council allocated funding and directed the City Manager to prepare a proposal to restore mobile crisis services, which is expected to be presented in October.

Meanwhile, a group of former CAHOOTS employees have established a new nonprofit, Willamette Valley Crisis Care, with the goal of responding to the City’s upcoming request for proposals and continuing mobile crisis work in Eugene.

At the September 12 City Club of Eugene program, representatives from Willamette Valley Crisis Care will share updates on their efforts and discuss their ideas about a path forward for restoring mobile crisis services that have long been a lifeline for the Eugene community.

Speakers

Name: Alese "Dandy" Colehour, OMHA, NREMT
Title:
Organization: Willamette Valley Crisis Care
Website:
Biography:

Biographies are provided by the panelists and edited for length/proofreading

Alese “Dandy” Colehour, MSW Candidate, QMHA, NREMT (they/them). Dandy is a transplant from Minnesota, moving to Oregon to attend graduate school at University of Oregon in 2010. In 2015, they dropped out of their PhD program in Anthropology to pursue a profession that was more community-oriented. They started working for CAHOOTS in 2016 as a crisis counselor and cross-trained as an EMT in 2021. They love direct service work but since the closure of CAHOOTS in Eugene have been assisting WVCC with media, administration and grant writing. An aspiring medical social worker, they anticipate graduating from Portland State University in June of 2026 with a Master of Social Work after completing their advanced practicum at PeaceHealth RiverBend. When they aren’t busy working on WVCC, they enjoy playing washtub bass with their band, an annual summit up a mountain, and homesteading on a small organic seed farm.


Name: Laurel Lisovskis LCSW
Title:
Organization: Willamette Valley Crisis Care
Website:
Biography:

Biographies are provided by the panelists and edited for length/proofreading

Laurel Lisovskis, LCSW (she/her), moved from Minneapolis in 1998 to make the Willamette Valley her home. She’s been here ever since, working and raising her daughter Hannah, now grown and living in LA. Having gotten her BSW in 1997, she’s always been involved in community work and has built deep roots both in the public education system and in public safety. Laurel is a direct service worker at heart, working with folks in crisis and specializing in those who have experienced institutional harm and trauma. She also enjoys teaching and training others in the important skills of working with people, especially those impacted by burdened and ineffective systems. Most days, Laurel can be found hiking Spencer’s Butte, talking on the phone to Hannah and listening to her share about her LA adventures.


Name: Jacob Trewe
Title: Founder
Organization: Friends of CAHOOTS
Website:
Biography:

Biographies are provided by the panelists and edited for length/proofreading

Jacob Trewe is a founder of Friends of CAHOOTS, a non-profit grassroots organization started to support alternative response workers after the loss of CAHOOTS service in Eugene in April 2025. He grew up in Alaska and rural Oregon, but has roots in Eugene, having graduated from North Eugene High School and the University of Oregon with a degree in accounting. He spent several years in DC working as an accountant for the Federal Treasury Department and Federal Housing Finance Agency Offices of Inspectors General. He is married, with two children who attend 4J schools. He runs a small tax and forensic accounting firm and serves on several boards, including WVCC, Growers Market, and Toolbox project.


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