The Anti-Carceral Crisis & Safety Planning guide: by Project LETS

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The Anti-Carceral Crisis & Safety Planning guide by Project LETS is a community-oriented tool designed to help individuals create supportive, non-policing responses to moments of crisis. The PDF walks users through identifying personal warning signs, grounding strategies, care supporters, access needs, and preferred crisis responses—while clearly outlining boundaries around what not to do, such as calling police or psychiatric emergency services unless explicitly consented to. It centers autonomy, harm reduction, and disability justice, offering a compassionate alternative to traditional carceral or coercive crisis systems.

Project LETS (Let’s Erase the Stigma) is a disability justice organization led by and for people with lived experience of mental illness, trauma, and neurodivergence. They focus on peer support, political education, and transformative approaches to crisis care, working to build community-based systems that move away from institutionalization and coercive psychiatric practices. Their work emphasizes self-determination, collective care, and the belief that people in crisis deserve support—not punishment or forced intervention.

https://projectlets.org

Free PDF download

The Anti-Carceral Crisis & Safety Planning guide by Project LETS is a community-oriented tool designed to help individuals create supportive, non-policing responses to moments of crisis. The PDF walks users through identifying personal warning signs, grounding strategies, care supporters, access needs, and preferred crisis responses—while clearly outlining boundaries around what not to do, such as calling police or psychiatric emergency services unless explicitly consented to. It centers autonomy, harm reduction, and disability justice, offering a compassionate alternative to traditional carceral or coercive crisis systems.

Project LETS (Let’s Erase the Stigma) is a disability justice organization led by and for people with lived experience of mental illness, trauma, and neurodivergence. They focus on peer support, political education, and transformative approaches to crisis care, working to build community-based systems that move away from institutionalization and coercive psychiatric practices. Their work emphasizes self-determination, collective care, and the belief that people in crisis deserve support—not punishment or forced intervention.

https://projectlets.org

Free PDF download