To add to this burden, both individual police officers and their agencies were too busy literally trying to stay above water to tend to cops’ mental health needs in the beginning.
“I was so busy being on boats rescuing people that I didn’t really have time to do that kind of work, and that really wasn’t the issue at hand,” says James B. Arey, commander of the New Orleans Police Department Crisis Negotiation Team, Special Operations Division. As a member of the SWAT team and a mental health professional, he had to decide where to direct his efforts.
Luckily, Arey’s friend Dr. Jeff Rouse, a psychiatrist with the Orleans Parish Coroner’s Office, got into downtown New Orleans three days after Katrina first hit and was able to put together a mental health clinic. He gathered up a few other psychiatrists and together they started doing triage in the gift shop of the Sheraton Hotel on Canal Street.
Within the first few days, officers in the New Orleans Police Department’s Fifth District attended group debriefings led by either Rouse or Arey as part of roll call. All 911 operators who manned the phones during and after the hurricane were also debriefed to allow them some mental release and a way to process what they had heard and seen.
“We did a traditional Critical Incident Stress debriefing where you have the whole group, as a group, talk about this event,” says Arey. “They talked about what they saw, what happened to them, what happened to their houses, to their families, what they saw happening to civilians.”