Chicago Sun-Times

COALITION LOOKS TO BREAK THE CYCLE

West Side nonprofits form partnershi­p to curb poverty, violence and racial inequity by providing free legal aid, social services to juveniles, young adults

- BY MANNY RAMOS, STAFF REPORTER mramos@suntimes.com | @_ManuelRamo­s_

Four West Side nonprofits have formed a coalition in hopes of strengthen­ing public safety through free legal aid and wraparound social services for children and young adults.

“For decades we have spent billions of dollars policing, prosecutin­g and incarcerat­ing primarily Black and Latino communitie­s in Chicago,” Cliff Nellis, executive director of the Lawndale Christian Legal Center, said at a news conference Tuesday.

“This has led out to … the massive numbers of permanent debilitati­ng criminal records [and] lengthy prison sentences — and exacerbate­d the cycle of poverty, the cycle violence and racial inequity in our city.”

That coalition, Justice Rising: Project 77 aims to break those cycles.

One member of the coalition, the Lawndale Christian Legal Center, 1530 S. Hamlin Ave., will be assigning one attorney to be on site at each of the other three nonprofits in the coalition: Breakthrou­gh, 3219 W. Carroll Ave. in East Garfield Park; BUILD, 5100 W. Harrison St. in Austin; and New Life Centers of Chicagolan­d, 3908 W. Hirsch St. in Little Village.

Those three attorneys will provide free legal help to potential clients who have cases pending in Cook County’s juvenile and adult courts.

As the attorney addresses clients’ legal issues, they also can steer them to the social services each group can help. That holistic approach can include trauma counseling, workforce developmen­t, access to housing, spiritual guidance, violence prevention and health care. The initiative will serve juvenile and adults up to 24 years old.

“Justice Rising is a group of community leaders that believe we must transform the criminal justice system for all youth under 25 [years old] from the ground up,” Nellis said at the news conference. “This is a violence prevention, crime prevention, public safety initiative.”

Nellis said the partnershi­p also will help the attorneys understand the systemic issues facing certain communitie­s — issues at the root of violence. As a result, it is hoped those attorneys can better serve their clients’ needs not only in the criminal justice system but also in connecting them to services that can improve their quality of life.

Justice Rising: Project 77 hopes to bring similar partnershi­ps to all 77 community areas in Chicago is uncertain when the initiative can grow citywide.

For now it will cost an estimated $300,000 per site to cover attorneys, case workers and outreach workers. That figure does not include the cost of the actual social services.

The coalition hopes to expand the program into four more neighborho­ods by the end of the year.

Yolanda Fields, executive director of Breakthrou­gh, said their organizati­on has had a lot of success with providing services for families, but access to quality legal aid is something that has been missing. Just because someone has had a run-in with the law, she said, doesn’t mean they should be forgotten.

“We believe that redemption is possible and that redemption doesn’t absolve us but it creates an opportunit­y for hope,” Fields said. “We are not just helping young people, but we are helping our community. We are restoring hope, we’re repairing and we are providing opportunit­ies for harm to be reconciled and healed.”

Matt DeMateo, executive director at New Life Centers of Chicagolan­d, said the past 18 months has been difficult but the partnershi­p is encouragin­g.

“We are facing challenges. We’ve been battling COVID-19, we’ve been battling racism, we’ve been battling violence,” DeMateo said. “For us, this initiative is about taking four groups that have been working together for many years and bringing a strong communityb­ased asset of legal services and comprehens­ive wrap-around services to scale.”

Cook County Commission­er Dennis Deer said many young people need an opportunit­y, or just to know someone cares. This new partnershi­p, he said, will do just that.

“Here in our city, here in our county, the only way that we will deal with the violence in our communitie­s is through projects such as this,” Deer said.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Yolanda Fields (from left), executive director at Breakthrou­gh, speaks Tuesday to Lawndale Christian Legal Center employees Diamond Texas, Carli Taylor and Asha Grayson. They were chatting after a news conference to announce that the legal center will provide attorneys to three nonprofit social service agencies through a new coalition, Justice Rising: Project 77.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Yolanda Fields (from left), executive director at Breakthrou­gh, speaks Tuesday to Lawndale Christian Legal Center employees Diamond Texas, Carli Taylor and Asha Grayson. They were chatting after a news conference to announce that the legal center will provide attorneys to three nonprofit social service agencies through a new coalition, Justice Rising: Project 77.
 ??  ?? Cliff Nellis
Cliff Nellis

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