New York Daily News

SAVING STUDENTS

Adams pushes ‘violence interrupte­rs’ for schools

- BY MICHAEL ELSEN-ROONEY

A technique that Mayor Adams has championed as part of his efforts to curb gun violence on city streets may also play a role in his approach to addressing conflict in schools, budget documents show.

Adams has cited “violence interrupte­rs” — trusted community members who fan out into neighborho­ods to identify and quash conflict before it turns deadly — as key to his plans to turn the tide on rising gun violence.

Tucked into his April executive budget is a proposal to experiment with a similar approach in city schools.

The Education Department is allotting $9 million in federal funding next year to “contract with community-based organizati­ons that specialize in violence interrupti­on techniques (e.g., deescalati­on, mediation, conflict resolution) to make students feel safe and supported in their schools,” budget documents show.

It’s still unclear what that will look like, and an Education Department spokeswoma­n offered no further details, saying, “We are making continued investment­s in student safety programs, including violence interrupti­on, and look forward to sharing more soon.”

Experts who have studied the city’s neighborho­od-based violence interrupti­on efforts, called “Cure Violence” programs, and community groups experiment­ing with the technique in schools say it can help curb classroom conflicts — as long as it’s implemente­d carefully.

“If we don’t do this type of a program … the only thing we have is police and formal policies and protocols, and that’s no way to run a society,” said Jeffrey Butts, a professor at John Jay College who has studied the Cure Violence programs.

One Bronx-based Cure Violence organizati­on, Bronx Rising Against Gun Violence (BRAG), offers a preview of what violence interrupti­on could look like in schools.

The group has been sending conflict mediators into four Bronx schools — two middle schools and two high schools — for several years to identify kids at high risk of getting drawn into violence, and working with them to find alternativ­e ways to deal with conflict.

Yadira Moncion, the program supervisor, said the schools she works with find the mediators a valuable resource, especially this year as reports of physical fights and weapons in schools have increased.

“They look for us — they want us to be there,” Moncion said.

Key to the success of the initiative in schools is finding adult mediators who kids can relate to — and don’t view as part of the school, Moncion said.

“Sometimes our students can’t relate to educators,” said Moncion, a former city teacher. “You want the credibilit­y, that’s what makes it unique.”

Butts said finding “credible messengers” is a core component of violence interrupti­on, whether on the streets or in the classroom.

“You want someone who knows what you’re going through,” he said. “You don’t to be lectured by someone who has no clue what your life is like.”

Elijah Corporan, one of BRAG’s school mediators, said his work looks a little different each day.

Sometimes, it involves stepping into the middle of a crisis to deescalate — like when a sixth-grader got so upset at a teacher in a hallway outside Corporan’s office last week that he began “yelling, flailing his arms, crying,” Corporan said. “I was like, ‘take a second to breathe ... take step back, what happened?’ ” he recalled.

Other days, it means working on relationsh­ips with students so they’ll trust him enough to alert him to brewing conflicts in time to intervene, he said.

Moncion said that if BRAG gets wind of a more serious conflict, the organizati­on stations neighborho­od-based violence interrupte­rs outside school during dismissal, when violence is often most likely to erupt.

 ?? ?? From left, violence interrupte­rs Elijah Corporan, Tomar Alston, Yadira Moncion, Jailene Diaz, David Caba and Laila Friday at the Bronx Rises Against Gun Violence office on Jerome Ave. in the Bronx.
From left, violence interrupte­rs Elijah Corporan, Tomar Alston, Yadira Moncion, Jailene Diaz, David Caba and Laila Friday at the Bronx Rises Against Gun Violence office on Jerome Ave. in the Bronx.

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