Baltimore Sun

Youth ‘thrive’ in new Maryland violence reduction initiative

- By David Muhammad David Muhammad (info @nicjr.org) is the executive director of the National Institute for Criminal Justice Reform, a technical assistance and training partner to the Maryland Thrive Academy and Baltimore’s Group Violence Reduction Strateg

In early 2023 an increase in serious crime by young people was creating panic in Baltimore and throughout Maryland. While the hysteria may have been somewhat exaggerate­d, data from the first quarter of the year did show a significan­t uptick in some kinds of youth crime, including serious offenses like juvenile-involved shootings and armed robberies.

Around that same time, the state’s juvenile justice system was getting a new, reform-minded secretary of the Department of Juvenile Services (DJS), Vincent Schiraldi. Secretary Schiradli responded to the moment by launching an innovative program that sought to reduce gun violence among justice-involved youth. It is critically important that state residents know about and understand this program, which is part of an increasing­ly successful, multi-faceted effort to increase public safety in Baltimore and across Maryland.

The new program, called the Thrive Academy, is a data-informed, youth developmen­t and violence interventi­on program that provides intensive community-based services to DJS-supervised youth who are at very high risk of being involved in gun violence.

Whenever a youth under DJS supervisio­n is flagged as being at very high risk of being a victim or perpetrato­r of gun violence, they are enrolled in Thrive and quickly assigned a Case Management Specialist from DJS and paired with a Life Coach from the community-based organizati­on We Our Us.

Most Thrive Coaches have lived experience­s similar to those of the youth they are serving. They are from the same neighborho­ods. Some have been previously incarcerat­ed

and turned their lives around, and they now serve as examples, guides and mentors who intensivel­y engage with the youth, their families and their schools. Their work includes daily communicat­ion, multiple in-person engagement­s every week, school check-ins and home visits — all to develop positive and trusting relationsh­ips that can help young people make choices that do not involve guns. The process also includes the developmen­t of a comprehens­ive Life Plan that identifies

needed services and supports intended to help participan­ts see and pursue a more promising path for themselves.

My organizati­on, the National Institute for Criminal Justice Reform (NICJR), played a key role in this process by conducting a comprehens­ive assessment of youth involved in gun violence throughout the state and of all youth known to

DJS who were victims or suspects in shootings in the past three to five years. Our study found that:

Nearly two-thirds of youth who are involved in shootings had previously been charged with a felony crime of violence;

Many had clear and immediate risk factors for violence, such as recent physical confrontat­ions with other youth and/or family members, or involvemen­t in a violent crew or gang conflict;

Most were unable to attend traditiona­l schools due to learning disabiliti­es and/or school discipline;

And perhaps most importantl­y, lengthy delays in court processing resulted in months or even years passing between when youth were arrested and when they received any type of direct services.

DJS and NICJR used these findings to develop a screening tool and expedited process for enrolling youth in Thrive.

Today, the Thrive Academy is being implemente­d in four Maryland jurisdicti­ons: Baltimore City and Baltimore, Anne Arundel and Prince George’s counties. It is part of a growing ecosystem of gun violence interventi­on that is succeeding in making our streets safer. Baltimore and all of Maryland ended 2023 with a decline in homicides and injury shootings. Thrive was somewhat modeled after the Group Violence Reduction Strategy, a program that NICJR is also a part of that was credited with helping to drive down violence in the city’s Western District.

And one of the neighborho­ods in Baltimore’s flagship violence prevention program, Safe Streets, achieved a full year without a single homicide.

Too many people continue to get shot in Baltimore and throughout Maryland. And too many youths are part of that number, even if they constitute a small portion of the overall victims. Because even one life lost to gun violence is too many, we must continue to expand and improve our efforts to prevent gun violence. But we must also recognize the tremendous progress that has been made — not only so we can continue building upon this progress, but so that the residents of Baltimore and all of Maryland know what is being done to protect them and begin to feel justifiabl­e optimism about a safer future for themselves, their community and their entire state.

 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/STAFF ?? Richard Lewis, talking, sits with, Gregory Gee, from left, James Gaymon III, Clarence Young Jr. and Brandon Wilson during an interview at Langston Hughes Community Center with life coaches participat­ing in the Maryland Department of Juvenile Services’ Thrive Academy program, which provides support services to youths at the highest risk of gun violence.
KARL MERTON FERRON/STAFF Richard Lewis, talking, sits with, Gregory Gee, from left, James Gaymon III, Clarence Young Jr. and Brandon Wilson during an interview at Langston Hughes Community Center with life coaches participat­ing in the Maryland Department of Juvenile Services’ Thrive Academy program, which provides support services to youths at the highest risk of gun violence.

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