She created the first peer support team for OCSD, a critical resource for all employees

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It’s a little discussed number: More cops commit suicide than are killed by gunfire and traffic accidents combined.

“There is a cultural element of law enforcement,” says Orange County Sheriff’s Heather Williams. “(Officers) don’t talk about feelings. Admitting sadness is a sign of weakness.”

But being the first on the scene of a child drowning or a suicide by train is something that first responders can’t just stuff back inside without consequences.

And with the help of Williams, they won’t.

Williams was instrumental in creating the Orange County Sheriff’s Peer Support Team, which was launched in 2013 but which she joined in 2014. Today the team is made up of 75 sheriff’s employees, both sworn and professional staff, all of whom have volunteered their services.

Their role: to support peers in their personal or professional lives, whether that involves a divorce, alcohol, post-traumatic stress or death of a family member.

The mindset of most law enforcement: “I’m there to fix other people’s problems. I should be able to take control of and fix my problems.”It’s unrealistic. Everyone needs a shoulder to lean on at some point.

“I call it the humanizing of law enforcement,” says the 44-year-old mother of two. “To really be a human being underneath that strong and stoic persona.”

Heather Williams, Regional Peer Support Coordinator for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department. Photo by Steven Georges/Behind the Badge OC

Heather Williams, regional peer support coordinator for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department.
Photo by Steven Georges/Behind the Badge OC

Williams gets more than 100 peer support contacts a month for requests that range from a referral for marital counseling to crisis counseling.

With a master’s in criminal justice from Chapman University, she is on track to finish her doctorate in psychology next summer so she can be the first on-site psychologist for the Sheriff’s Department.

Williams’ doctoral project is on critical-incident debriefings.

“I want to prove that it does help law enforcement fill in the missing pieces of what happened, create safety in talking about the incident, and find closure to some of these horrific incidents (they respond to),” she says.

Her project pulls on more than two dozen critical incidents that she has personally facilitated.

In fact, the seed for the Peer Support Team was planted way back in 2003 when a deranged bagger at an Irvine Albertsons killed two co-workers with a Samurai sword and slashed up three customers and the store manager.

At the time Williams was working for the non-profit Community Service Programs, assisting crime victims.

Williams was brought in by Albertsons and the Irvine Police Department to counsel employees on their first day back on the job and walk customers back into the store.

Standing in the parking lot that day, it hit her.

Heather Williams, Regional Peer Support Coordinator for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, with the Orange County Sheriff’s Challenge Coin, left, for Pier Support with the theme No One Stands Alone. On the right is the Orange County Association Of Peer Supporters or OCAPS coin. The graphic on the right represents, according to Williams, “Law Enforcement of Orange County, intertwined and working together in the event that a department needs mutual aid or support in the aftermath of a critical incident.” Photo by Steven Georges/Behind the Badge OC

Heather Williams, regional peer support coordinator for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, holds the Orange County Sheriff’s Challenge Coin, left, for peer support particpants with the theme “No One Stands Alone.” On the right is the Orange County Association Of Peer Supporters, or OCAPS, coin. The graphic on the right represents, according to Williams, “Law Enforcement of Orange County, intertwined and working together in the event that a department needs mutual aid or support in the aftermath of a critical incident.”
Photo by Steven Georges/Behind the Badge OC

“I saw the ripple effect of what crime does,” she says. “It’s like throwing a rock in the water.”

The ripples went far beyond the victims who were physically attacked.

“There were so many people impacted,” she says. “From the people who live in the neighborhood (around the store) to the employees, to the surviving family members, to the people who shopped there.”

Williams went back to her office and began putting together a Crisis Response Team that law enforcement could call out to fresh crime scenes.

“Our goal was to deal with the emotional end of the situation while law enforcement focuses on the investigation,” she says. In addition to counseling and making sure victims’ basic needs are met, the team helps victims understand the law enforcement process so that they cooperate.

“It was: How can we as a partnership work this really ugly situation?”

The program grew and soon the CSP team was responding to up to 60 callouts a year.

It was on one of these callouts that Williams got a request to help the first responder.

In this specific case, some sheriff’s deputies had been struggling after three young adults who fell asleep on the train tracks in Mission Viejo were run over. Body parts were strewn for a mile on a moist morning.

Heather Williams, Regional Peer Support Coordinator for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department. Photo by Steven Georges/Behind the Badge OC

Photo by Steven Georges/Behind the Badge OC

“One of them said to me, ‘You know, we have training for everything, but no one’s ever taught us to deal with the stress and trauma of this job.’”

That’s when Williams developed a four-hour class called “The Impact of Trauma for First Responders” and began presenting it to various law enforcement groups.

Then came the Seal Beach shooting in 2011. A tugboat operator walked into Salon Meritage one afternoon and shot the place up, killing eight.

That night, after the witnesses and survivors went home, Williams, along with other Crisis Response Team members, sat down with 18 first responders from various law enforcement agencies in the Seal Beach Public Library.

“At that point it was about crisis education: These are the things you may experience. These are normal reactions in the aftermath of trauma.”

Word spread that the team Williams put together wasn’t just an extra, but a necessity.

The Anaheim Police Department was the first to ask her to help them put together a peer support program.

Then the largest law enforcement agency in the county came knocking: The Sheriff’s Department. Commander Jon Briggs hired Williams full time in 2014 to develop the Peer Support Team.

“We are not always the easiest group to crack or break into, but Heather has become a valued, trusted member of our team that is recognized throughout all ranks as a tremendous resource,” says Briggs. “There is a sense of bravado in law enforcement and, in reality, that sense is needed in many situations law enforcement officers face. It is after the call is over, however, that I have come to realize the stress and turmoil many in our profession often face.”

Word is spreading.

Williams has helped the Fullerton, Irvine and Fountain Valley police departments develop their own peer support programs. And she is working with Newport Beach right now.

“We teach (officers) to be physically fit. Why aren’t we teaching them to be emotionally fit?” she says. “Emotional wellness is the key to psychological resiliency. Our law enforcement family deserves to be cared for.”