Council members emphasized non‑law‑enforcement interventions for downtown public safety and festival coverage, asking the council to fund programs that place mental‑health clinicians on EMS/PD calls and to provide recurring support for the Red Frogs volunteer safety program.
Council Members Evans and Copen both proposed $75,000 to fund a mental‑health professional embedded with EMS for weekend downtown coverage through the REACH model; Copen said discussions are ongoing with the Nashville Downtown Partnership about a potential 1:1 match.
Multiple members urged recurring funding for Red Frogs, a volunteer downtown safety program that provides on‑the‑ground support at events and at late‑night hours; individual requests ranged from $100,000 to $250,000 with proposed funding sources including contingency accounts, police department budgets and self‑insured liability funds.
Members noted the initiatives are preventive and cost‑effective relative to law‑enforcement response, but finance staff cautioned that funding sources need to be confirmed during the substitute process and that some accounts (e.g., insurance, charter‑mandated allocations) are restricted.