Contact people for the EA community

This post is out of date. Please see the updated version of this post.

[last significant update December 2022]

We, Julia Wise and Catherine Low, work on the community health team at the Centre for Effective Altruism. Part of our work is being contact people for problems or concerns you encounter in the EA community. This is one part of the team’s larger work.

Ways to contact us:

Why have point people?

People who encounter a problem in the community often don’t feel up to handling it on their own. It can be helpful to have help from someone with experience in this area and time to dedicate to the role.

Having a central point for collecting information allows patterns to be recognized. For example, imagine that three different people experience a problem from the same person. If there’s no one to collect this data, each case appears to be a one-off incident. But if someone knows about all three incidents, the nature of the problem is much clearer.

What kinds of situations can we help with?

Some types of work we’ve done:

  • Helping friends of a community member who was experiencing a mental health crisis coordinate to better support their friend

  • Advising group organizers on handling conflicts and other problems in their groups

  • Speaking to people about ways their behavior has made people uncomfortable or caused problems (for example, mild sexual harassment), and asking them to change their behavior

  • Restricting people from attending CEA’s events based on past serious problem behavior

Our backgrounds

Julia:

I’m a licensed independent clinical social worker, with studies and work that focused on mental health. I got involved in EA around 2010 and joined CEA to work on supporting the EA community in 2015.

My experience includes:

  • Volunteering at a women’s domestic violence shelter, counseling callers to a domestic violence and sexual assault hotline, and accompanying sexual assault survivors during examinations at a hospital

  • Working in a psychiatric hospital with people in mental health crisis

  • Counseling inmates and detainees in a jail, including both survivors and perpetrators of community violence, domestic violence, and sexual assault

Social work is focused not on blame or punishment, but on reaching better outcomes by reducing risk of future harm and by connecting people with resources and support. This approach is very much the one I use in my work in the effective altruism community.

Catherine:

I was a high school teacher for 11 years before moving full time into EA community building. I ran local and national EA groups and worked on EA outreach projects , before joining CEA’s Groups Team in early 2020 to support EA groups worldwide. I started working for the Community Health team mid 2021.

Confidentiality

If you contact us about a problem you’ve experienced or a concern you have, we will do our best to keep it confidential, but there are occasionally some exceptions. We’re currently working on a clearer policy — in the meantime we suggest asking us about any questions you have here before you share sensitive information.
[Edited to add: Julia has made two mistakes on confidentiality that she knows of. More info in this comment.]

Here are some possibilities:

  • You just want to vent or discuss your concern, and do not want the information to go any further

  • You are ok with us discussing an anonymized version of your concern with certain other people with your permission

  • You would like to be put in touch with other people who have experienced a similar problem (with their permission)

  • You would like us to let others know about the situation, for example the organizers of a local group where you experienced a problem

  • You would like us to speak to the person who caused a problem about their behavior

  • You want to report a problem to us, but don’t want us to take action unless other people also raise the same problem

We will sometimes offer to discuss with you the possible actions we could take with differing levels of confidentiality, so you can make a well informed decision.

We will sometimes ask if we can share your case with the other community support person so we can get the benefit of their advice.

Exceptions:

If we thought someone was in physical danger, we would act to reduce that danger. That might include breaking confidentiality. For example, if you tell us you’re planning to physically hurt someone, we would warn them.

For Catherine only:

In addition, if Catherine thought someone was at risk of serious mental harm, she would act to reduce that harm.

For Julia only:

Because of the rules for social workers where Julia lives, the only time she has a legal obligation to contact the authorities is if you bring her a concern specifically in her role as a social worker (“Julia, I’m telling you this because you’re a social worker”) AND if the concern is about

  • A child under 18 who is being abused or neglected

  • A person with an intellectual disability (mental retardation) who is being abused, or

  • A person 60 or older who is being abused.

Other options

We’re not the only options for help in the community. For problems that arise in an EA group, it may be helpful to talk to the organizers of that group.

If you’re a group organizer or online moderator and would like help preparing to handle community problems or handling a problem that has already arisen, feel free to contact us.