Blue envelope program offered for drivers on autism spectrum

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Blue envelope program offered for drivers on autism spectrum
By Alisson Kuznitz

State Police in Massachusetts have begun implementing a program to improve interactions with people on the autism spectrum, building upon legislation that won Senate approval in January and remains before a House committee.

Participating drivers can choose to place copies of their license, registration and insurance cards inside a blue envelope, which acts as a visual cue for police and other public safety officials during stressful and potentially dangerous traffic stops.

The envelope would notify police that the driver is on the spectrum and provide guidance for how to handle certain behaviors, such as stimming — the repetitive performance of certain physical movements or vocalizations sometimes performed by people with autism or other neurodevelopmental conditions. Drivers can also share emergency contact information on the envelope.

Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll touted the initiative, which State Police developed with the Massachusetts Chiefs of Police Association and advocacy groups, during an event hosted by the Advocates for Autism of Massachusetts organization Tuesday morning.

"This is an initiative that reflects our administration's deep commitment to support programs that strengthen inclusivity and support law enforcement's ability to more effectively meet the needs of every single community member," Driscoll said.

The Senate in early January passed legislation to also create a voluntary blue envelope program, directing the envelopes to be made available at Registry of Motor Vehicle offices. The bill, filed by Sen. Jo Comerford, D- Northampton, and now in the House Ways and Means Committee, did not carve out a specific responsibility for State Police to use the envelopes, Comerford aides said.

With the bill's fate in the House unclear, law enforcement and advocates have moved forward with their own program, which the Healey administration announced Tuesday as it marked Autism Acceptance Month in April. State Police implemented the initiative "with the cooperation of Senator Comerford," spokesman Dave Procopio said.

Comerford said the program will help not only the driver, but also law enforcement and first responders during an interaction.

"This person lives with autism, has autism spectrum disorder, and may exhibit behavior that is not completely expected and so proceed with that kind of awareness for greater communication effectiveness," she said.

Autism advocates warn that police, without training, can misinterpret the behavior of individuals on the spectrum — such as hand-flapping, body rocking or repeating certain phrases — and use force when it could have been avoided.

"It is incumbent upon us, as law enforcement officers and compassionate community caretakers, to recognize and mitigate the stressful effects that interaction with a police officer can have on a person with autism," Col. John Mawn, interim superintendent of the State Police, said in a statement. "The Blue Envelope Program is an important step toward that goal."

State Police are rolling out the blue envelopes to their barracks and working to share information with municipal police departments in the coming days, said Agawam Police Chief Eric Gillis, president of MCOPA.

Blue envelopes "will soon be available at local police departments," the Executive Office of Public Safety said.

People on the spectrum can request the envelopes at barracks or online, according to a new state webpage. The envelopes are free, and people can request multiple envelopes if they have more than one car.

"Our officers receive training in dealing with persons with autism and the different communication styles that are necessary for those interactions," Gillis told the News Service. "But to open the conduit right out of the gate with the blue envelopes lets our officers know across the commonwealth who're they dealing with, and that they need to kind of shift gears a little bit when dealing with that type of individual."

Gillis added, "This is something we've been behind for a long, long time, and it's just nice to see it come to fruition."

The blue envelopes, which contain written instructions for police officers and drivers on the autism spectrum, were available at Tuesday's event.

For police officers, the envelope states the driver "may display repetitive body movements or fidgeting and may have unusual eye contact" and "may exhibit signs of high anxiety especially due to bright lights and noises such as your radio."

Police are asked to "allow driver extra time to respond to your questions; they may have difficulty interpreting and processing your directions"; "use the most simplistic explanations possible, speak clearly, and limit unnecessary details or jargon"; "please clearly tell the driver when the stop is over and that they may leave"; and "if the driver becomes upset, ask and/or consider contacting the person listed on the reverse of this envelope."

Drivers are given instructions that tell them to keep their hands on the steering wheel until they are told otherwise by police, provide the blue envelope to the officer, and ask the officer to consider calling their emergency contact. Drivers are warned "the officer may shine a flashlight in your car, may have a loud radio, and may have flashing lights on their car."

State officials recommend attaching the envelopes to the car's sun visor or placing them in another accessible location.

The envelopes also contain QR codes, which out-of-state law enforcement can scan if they are unfamiliar with the program.

Ilyse Levine-Kanji, an AFAM executive committee member, said the wording on the envelopes may be slightly adjusted should the legislation clear the House and be signed into law. But Levine-Kanji, who offered feedback to State Police on their envelopes, said she doesn't expect major changes.

"They knew of the blue envelope bill and they'd been helping push it along, but when it wasn't moving, they said, 'This idea is too good to let go. We just need to do our own blue envelope,'" she said. "This is a blue envelope that is going to be used until the bill passes."

Comerford said some western Massachusetts police departments, including Deerfield and UMass Amherst, are already using a similar program on their own.

NEPM's Adam Frenier contributed to this report.
 
A buddy of mine killed a guy at an Iraqi checkpoint because he was being weird and non-compliant in a vehicle (possible VBIED). He said the family eventually showed up and said "No, he was just literally retarded. This was only a matter of time."
 
The great thing about us autists is that we don't do no more crime 'then those "normal" people but we still have a higher rate of the police doing mean stuff to us.

But then for whatever reason a bunch of white, champagne socialist "liberals" shout at us and try to cancel us when we shout "#ALM". 🙄

#AutismLivesMatter
#JusticeForTheFarms
 
Wearing a medallion also helps the officer determine that you have autism

300px-Chrischanscar.jpg
 
Eagerly awaiting the first bodycam video of some pooner melting down on a cop. “YOU SAW THE BLUE ENVELOPE YOU’RE NOT SUPPOSED TO TALK TO ME I DON’T FEEL SAFE I’M LITERALLY AUTISTIC!”
 
And as much as I find the "all cops are bastard" crowd annoying, there certainly are trigger happy cops out there that would take someone acting like that as justification to fill them with bullets.
I hear this all the time but I don't know of any actual evidence that it's true. Most of the time when a cop shoots an autist, it's because the autist in question was swinging around a knife and literally screaming "REEEEEEEE". Once someone starts brandishing a deadly weapon, all bets are off regardless of how divergent their neurons are.

Yes, maybe if the cop had asked them about shiny hunting instead of leading with "hands where I can see them" things would have progressed differently, but nobody's getting shot just because they won't make eye contact or can't shut up about the difference between a steam engine and a tank engine.
 
As with many of these things, its a nice idea to help deescalate situations thats going to get abuse the fuck out of. Its not going to be "Please be patient, I have autism" but just a bunch of self-diagnosed assholes using it as a get out of trouble free card.
Oh no no you see they were only "MASKING" before revealing themselves as super special stimmy wholesome100 autistic neurodiverse chungies!

God I fucking hate this fake ass world. Autism is a fucking condition that's main deal is that it just causes issue with properly reading social cues unless you have the screaming chimp severe Autism where they literally could not learn anything. It's been warped so severely by people who had their lives fucking handed to them on a silver platter seeking for the illusion of struggle that it's become more of a fucking joke than people calling shit autistic online as a funny insult could ever be.

For real though with the way shit's going in the modern world now the last few years you 100% should not be signaling having autism 24/7.
 
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The great thing about us autists is that we don't do no more crime 'then those "normal" people but we still have a higher rate of the police doing mean stuff to us.

But then for whatever reason a bunch of white, champagne socialist "liberals" shout at us and try to cancel us when we shout "#ALM". 🙄

#AutismLivesMatter
#JusticeForTheFarms
A lot of them are the same fucktards who spew horseshit about how important neurodiversity is. Much like how conservative black people are labeled as Uncle Toms, House Niggers, and Coons, they want cheerleaders and puppets rather than people with independent thoughts.

Black people get a lot more leeway in that regard, ironically. It used to be progressive to treat blacks as you would anyone else, but now it's considered progressive to let them engage in outright antisocial behavior. Not something like "he won't call a man a woman" - more like "he was a great role model in school even though he had a rap sheet 2 miles long and regularly got into fights with his neighbors."
 
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This inevitably ends with one autist fixating on the reasons why their blue envelope is a slightly different shade of blue to an envelope belonging to another autist.
 
The envelope would notify police that the driver is on the spectrum and provide guidance for how to handle certain behaviors, such as stimming — the repetitive performance of certain physical movements or vocalizations sometimes performed by people with autism or other neurodevelopmental conditions. Drivers can also share emergency contact information on the envelope.
If someone is so fucked in the had that they they have random uncontrollable movements like that they shouldn't be allowed anywhere near a vehicle in the first place because its going to cause an accident sooner or later. For that matter if they are incapable of complying with cops during a traffic stop, which is something every driver should expect to be likely to happen at least once in their life then they shouldn't be allowed anywhere near a vehicle

and this blue envelope is a stupid idea, its just going to lead to everybody trying to exploit the system making fake ones and then suing the PD when they don't get treated with kid gloves and get tasered or shot for chimping out
 
State officials recommend attaching the envelopes to the car's sun visor or placing them in another accessible location.
I wonder if this is going to be similar to The Wallet Card Project where its usefulness all amounts to whether or not the sperg can actually keep their mind straight when push comes to shove and not, y’know, freak the fuck out before the cops even find out why.
Requirements for a Wallet Card®:
  1. you must be a person living with a disability that is either autism spectrum disorder or an intellectual disability,
  2. you must be 14 years old or older, and
  3. you must be verbal enough to say “can I show you my wallet card”
I see them either getting so nervous they rush to grab the envelope from wherever they have it without telling the officer what they’re doing or they get so frazzled they aren’t even aware they have it.
I feel like the envelop is just gonna be another thing autists get (or their care givers get for them) but don't end up using for one reason or another. I can see it working when there’s someone else in the car with them who can keep a clear enough head to pull the envelop out at the appropriate time, but at that point wouldn’t it just be easier for that person to tell the officers why the other is acting strange?
Kinda funny side note but as you can see in the pics above, the wallet card has a “biodot” (a black square that responds to your body heat like a mood ring) that changes colors based on if the user is tense, relaxed, calm, or nervous. It’s a cheap gimmick that I feel undermines an already just-okay-ish concept. No one is gonna rely on a mood ring to gauge someone’s emotions, in any situation. To improve the idea, maybe the blue envelope can come with the horoscope for their zodiac sign? :p
TL;DR: the autists that need this the most are most likely not going to be in the right mind to use it when in the situations it’s intended for
 
the majority of kiwifarmers are dumb autists who cannot fathom people disliking dumb autists for being dumb autists
 
the majority of kiwifarmers are dumb autists who cannot fathom people disliking dumb autists for being dumb autists
I think it's pretty clear to everyone that the majority of the Internet is dumb autists who dislike dumb autists for being dumb autists that dislike dumb autists for being dumb autists who dislike dumb autists for being dumb autists.
It's autism all the way down in both literal and metaphorical form.
 
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