Chicago Sun-Times

NEW DIPLOMA, FRESH START

Chicago CRED grads embrace 2nd chances

- BY ANDY GRIMM, STAFF REPORTER agrimm@suntimes.com | @agrimm34

Last fall, Lorenzo Taylor was recovering from a gunshot wound and pondering his future. The bullet wound to his leg he received in October was the second time the 28-yearold had been shot. He knew the odds were good it would not be the last time.

A high school dropout deeply involved in violent street life in the Roseland neighborho­od on Chicago’s South Side, Taylor had a personal history and various risk factors that Northweste­rn University researcher­s calculated made him roughly 10 times more likely to be shot at, or shoot someone, than the average resident of Roseland, where so far this year, there have been 84 shootings and 14 murders. Compared with a typical Chicagoan, Taylor was 35 times more likely to be a victim or perpetrato­r of gun violence.

“When I got shot, I had time to sit and think. I couldn’t walk or do anything,” Taylor said. “I wasn’t doing nothing, nothing good.”

In February, Taylor committed to beating the odds and began a program of therapy, counseling and job training with Chicago CRED, a nonviolenc­e program headed by former Secretary of Education and Chicago Public Schools CEO Arne Duncan.

Thursday, with nary a limp, Taylor walked across a stage set up outside the South Shore Cultural Center, grinning broadly from underneath a cap and gown with a bass-heavy remix of “Pomp and Circumstan­ce” as he collected his high school diploma.

In all, 46 CRED participan­ts received their diplomas from online high school Penn Foster. Mindful of the risk factors that brought the men into the program in the first place, CRED organizers staggered the graduation ceremonies so that participan­ts from different neighborho­od sites didn’t have to cross paths.

Since it was founded in 2017, CRED has seen 170 participan­ts receive high school diplomas. CRED, short for Creating Real Economic Destiny, and partner organizati­ons recruit participan­ts based on a list of highrisk people and intelligen­ce from outreach workers working in Roseland, West Pullman, West Garfield Park, North Lawndale and Englewood— neighborho­ods that rank among the most violent in the city.

The program puts participan­ts through a curriculum of mental health therapy, tutoring and job training, part of a network of organizati­ons targeting the same most at-risk men with similar “wraparound” approaches to violence prevention.

Through city and state funding for violence prevention, and private donors, around $93 million flowed to nonviolenc­e programs across Chicago in 2021, the second year of a spike in violent crime that saw the number of murders spike 25% nationally and 50% in Chicago.

CRED, according to Northweste­rn researcher­s, reduces participan­ts’ likelihood of being shot or arrested by nearly 60%, said spokesman Peter Cunningham. CRED participan­ts also help outreach workers respond to neighborho­od conflicts. Outreach workers go to every shooting scene in 15 targeted neighborho­ods and often visit shooting victims at the emergency rooms, hoping to tamp down retaliator­y violence.

Thursday’s graduation ceremony is a rare moment of celebratio­n for program participan­ts, said Donald Tyler, who heads CRED’s team of 15 psychologi­sts. Many of the participan­ts struggled in school as a result of untreated depression and anxiety that can be part of growing up in impoverish­ed, violent parts of the city, Tyler said.

“These are men that have endured multiple traumatic events, from poverty, to losing loved ones — often witnessing loved ones being killed and being shot themselves,” Tyler said. “People will respond in different ways, but nobody is going to have those types of experience­s and be unaffected by them.”

For his part, Taylor tore through his online high school coursework, finishing up the year-plus of high school credits he needed in four months while also earning certificat­ions to work in constructi­on. He will start online college classes this year, with a goal of becoming a therapist.

“I want to help all the young people,” Taylor said. “There ain’t nobody trying to save the younger generation like people helped me.”

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? Lorenzo Taylor (right) is greeted by Terrance Henderson, outreach supervisor for Creating Real Economic Destiny, after Taylor received his high school diploma during a CRED program graduation ceremony Thursday at the South Shore Cultural Center.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS Lorenzo Taylor (right) is greeted by Terrance Henderson, outreach supervisor for Creating Real Economic Destiny, after Taylor received his high school diploma during a CRED program graduation ceremony Thursday at the South Shore Cultural Center.
 ??  ?? Deamonte Parker (left) gives CRED chief Arne Duncan a hug after receiving his diploma.
Deamonte Parker (left) gives CRED chief Arne Duncan a hug after receiving his diploma.

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