East Bay Times

Richmond's standout strategy in fight to reduce gun violence

- By Elinor Simek Elinor Simek is a masters in public health candidate at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health.

Richmond, 2006: A man is shot in the face at the funeral of a teenager who was gunned down. The City Council is on the verge of declaring a state of emergency. Comparison­s to Iraq are drawn by a state senator. The year sees 42 homicides and will go on to see 47 more in 2007.

Richmond, 2023: Eight homicides, the city's lowest number since they started keeping record.

The city was home to one of the nation's worst homicide rates. What happened?

Richmond implemente­d Advance Peace in 2007, a program that treats urban gun violence as a public health crisis. Its model consists of an intensive strategy called the Peacemaker Fellowship, an 18-month mentoring interventi­on for young people involved in gun violence.

Oakland's Ceasefire program also focuses on high-risk individual­s, but Advance Peace goes one step further to create pathways to healing from trauma.

The backbone of the Richmond program are the community-based violence interventi­on workers, people from the community with the same lived experience as the youth they work with. They mediate conflict in the neighborho­od in real-time and — here is where the public health approach comes in — are trained in trauma-informed care. They don't just stop youth from committing violent acts but actually help adolescent­s at the margins of society to understand their trauma — and to heal.

Just 10 years after implementa­tion, Richmond saw its lowest number of cyclical and retaliator­y firearm assaults and homicides in more than four decades. Some could argue that this is due to other anti-crime initiative­s. However, no other city experience­d a similar drop despite the existence of those same programs. One major difference is Advance Peace.

Sacramento, Fresno and Stockton have experiment­ed with Advance Peace, but none has committed to this proven route to violence reduction.

Sacramento's gun violence was reduced by 22% after its first 18 months in 2019 and by 39% in Del Paso Heights, an area known for prevalent gun violence. Sacramento also went two full years without suffering a single youth homicide.

Despite these outcomes, the city of Sacramento ceased funding Advance Peace in December 2021, thus experienci­ng a significan­t uptick in gun violence in 2022 and 2023.

Stockton gun violence was reduced by 21% over its first two years of implementi­ng the Peacemaker Fellowship and by 47% in Council District 1. Stockton and Fresno still have Advance Peace operations, but their local government­s do not give the program full funding support.

Let's call on these cities to follow these strategies that work and institutio­nalize funding to Advance Peace. The funding is now independen­t in these cities, mostly from the state and one-time grants. Onetime funding will not give the same results as ongoing consistent funding.

Richmond's standout success lies in institutio­nalizing Advance Peace into the city budget like any other public safety program. Advance Peace is actually housed in a government agency called the Office of Neighborho­od Safety — the nation's first city office dedicated exclusivel­y to gun violence prevention. Richmond is the model of what other cities could accomplish by putting sustainabl­e funding into policy.

This does not mean replacing police but a compliment­ary expansion that also offsets costs. Police investigat­ions, emergency services, court time and other government services lead each shooting to cost Stockton taxpayers $962,000 and each gun homicide $2.5 million. Investing in Advance Peace can disrupt these costs. For every dollar spent on the program, the public received $47-$123 in return in Stockton and $18-$41 in Sacramento.

Imagine the change if these cities gave real support. This would be a huge step in building the sustainabl­e and community-based public safety infrastruc­ture that we know works and that California cities need.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States