The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Care and community reduce violence, promote safety

- By Michael McBride and Shalena Cook Jones Pastor Michael McBride is a nationally recognized gun violence prevention leader and director of LIVE FREE. Shalena Cook Jones is the district attorney for Chatham County.

As the reports of the marked rise in violence over the past year continue to dominate headlines, so does the tired narrative that combating community violence requires greater funding for police and more law enforcemen­t on the streets. From public officials to talking heads, detractors have been all too eager to blame last summer’s nationwide protests against police violence on the rise of deadly gun violence in 2021, using the deaths of thousands to justify increasing already bloated police budgets – including in Atlanta.

Conspicuou­sly absent from this narrative, however, is how police shootings are contributi­ng to this rise in violence. The Washington Post recently found that police shootings are at a record high since beginning to track fatal police shootings in 2015. On average, police fatally shoot three people every day. That figure doesn’t include the many survivors of police violence who are physically and mentally traumatize­d from these encounters, nor does it factor in the devastatin­g impact police violence has on survivors’ loved ones.

We also know that increased police presence – particular­ly in poor, underprivi­leged communitie­s – does not increase public safety. Over-policing, coupled with the use of military-grade weaponry and tactical SWAT-like strategies, breeds distrust and contempt between the police and the policed. This level of hostility has turned Atlanta’s streets into battlegrou­nds where standoffs, police shootings and avoidable deaths become the norm, and citizen onlookers are trapped in between.

There is a way forward – one that Atlanta would be well-suited to adapt, given it too is experienci­ng a rise in violent crime. For decades, local leaders have implemente­d community-led strategies such as violence interventi­on outreach, hospital-based interventi­on programs and therapeuti­c programs supporting those most traumatize­d. When adequately supported, these strategies have produced significan­t reductions in gun violence in our most vulnerable communitie­s. Not to mention they are overwhelmi­ngly supported by voters across the political spectrum.

Just this year, the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that public health strategies in Atlanta – rather than greater policing – have been effective in preventing gun violence. And in June, local leaders with the Fund Peace campaign convened to call on state and local officials to allocate American Rescue Plan funds toward these proven methods of gun violence prevention.

Community violence, especially gun violence, is interperso­nal in nature. All of the informatio­n needed to end the cycle of violence can often be found in the pillars of the community. This includes neighbors, family members, community workers, neighborho­od watch, faith leaders, coaches, landlords, teachers, mail carriers, candy ladies and babysitter­s, all of whom have their finger on the pulse of the community and know what is occurring and, most importantl­y, what people need to thrive.

What makes these solutions different from others is that they empower communitie­s closest to the pain and, through authentic community investment, build partnershi­ps between public safety officials and communitie­s from the inside out. The adage goes that “hurt people hurt people.” When we invest in healing, we can stop violence linked to poverty, gang activity, drug dependence and mental health crises at the source.

Imagine a world in which everyone is cared for and has the resources they need to thrive. When a person is having a mental health crisis, a trained counselor is called to de-escalate the situation and get the person the assistance they need, because we pushed our elected officials to invest our taxpayer dollars into care. Victims of gun violence are given the space, resources and counseling to heal and be productive members of the community, because we pushed our elected officials to invest our taxpayer dollars into care. Individual­s who have hurt others are able to undergo an accountabi­lity process that is not solely punitive, but also rehabilita­tive, so that they can give back to their community and not fall back into cycles of crime.

Such a world can be possible as long as our public officials have the political will to reimagine safety to include all of us.

 ??  ?? Shalena Cook Jones
Shalena Cook Jones
 ?? Michael McBride ??
Michael McBride

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