The Columbus Dispatch

LIFTING LIVES, TOGETHER

Community leaders seek to help underserve­d areas through engagement and mediation

- Earl Hopkins

“We had to show (local officials) that it could be done in another manner. We’re going to do it, with or without you.” Sean Stevenson Olde Towne East resident

In this world, Ephraim Laidley Jr. said, there are three kinds of community leaders: “nurses, doctors and brain surgeons.”

According to Laidley, “nurses and doctors” share a general ability to use the resources at their disposal to make an impact in the city’s underserve­d areas. But to confront issues such as gang and gun violence in Columbus, “brain surgeons” are needed to directly engage with local influencers to salvage neighborho­ods.

“We’ve been paying and asking generalist­s to do a surgeon’s job,” Laidley, 35, said of Columbus city officials. “That’s wrong, and it’s costing us (Black residents) lives.”

Laidley, who works as the vice president of operations technology at Jpmorgan Chase at Easton by day, leads a number of community initiative­s through his nonprofit group, Elements of Change. The organizati­on aims to create safe spaces in inner-city neighborho­ods through mediation, engagement and alternativ­e pathways.

By restoring vacant houses, funding a small boxing gym on the Near East Side and other programs, Laidley has been a change-maker in city neighborho­ods hampered by poor conditions and funding disparitie­s that have only worsened with the coronaviru­s pandemic. The Bexley resident said there are plenty of ways to fix these broken neighborho­ods — starting with putting the right people in the right places.

Laidley said his business partner, Sean Stevenson, is a “brain surgeon.” The 51-year-old Olde Towne East resident is connected with inner-city leaders and is dedicated to stopping gang and gun violence.

Since meeting at a community event in 2016, the two men have collaborat­ed on several interventi­on-centered programs, including Stevenson’s own brainchild, End the Violence, or ETV, which focuses on de-escalation of crime in the city.

Both men recognized their shared passion for community service despite their different background­s and life experience­s, with Stevenson becoming a de facto community interventi­on specialist after serving 20 years in federal prison.

“We have the same goal and same spirit, and we’re two different sides of the same coin that normally don’t get together,” Laidley said.

Dedicated to helping others change lives

As a child, Stevenson shuffled through the foster care system. After suffering abuse from his foster family, he became homeless at age 13 and turned to the streets for solace.

By 14, he entered the drug trade. Soon after, he captured the attention of authoritie­s, who charged him with drug distributi­on. He was convicted and sentenced to 20 years.

After his release in 2009, Stevenson used the principles he learned in prison to connect with people of different background­s and quickly became a community leader, starting the ETV initiative and pledging to make real social change.

In 2017, Stevenson hosted the city’s first National Gang Summit, followed by a gun violence-free week during a record-setting year for homicides. He’s also been a big proponent of helping people, like himself, who struggle with dyslexia.

Stevenson worked with educators and state legislator­s in 2011 to help push for passage of Ohio Dyslexia laws, which included placing the Internatio­nal Dyslexia Associatio­n’s definition of dyslexia into the Ohio Revised Code and forming a program to support atrisk students. The legislatio­n was signed into law by former Gov. John Kasich.

Along with taking on interventi­on and service opportunit­ies, Laidley and Stevenson have employed dozens of residents with criminal records or past alcohol or drug addictions to rehabilita­te houses.

The program has garnered attention from Columbus City Attorney Zach Klein, Columbus police Zone Section Chief Steve Dunbar and other city officials. For $10 an hour, workers are learning practical skills and, more than anything, helping to build up their community.

Two years ago, property developer Marcus “Cornbread” Allen made the commitment to change his life with the help of Laidley and Stevenson, who supported his transition to sobriety after a long battle with drug addiction.

Allen formed a contractin­g company, Allen Wrench Contractin­g LLC, and is now leading Laidley’s latest housing project on the corner of East Livingston Avenue and Berkley Road, a place Allen and others used as a drug hot spot years ago.

“This is God’s work,” Allen said. “When you get to build up what you tore down, it’s a blessing.”

Standing on their own

Despite their interventi­on and restoratio­n programs, Laidley and Stevenson have gotten pushback from city officials and local organizati­ons that Stevenson says don’t always support residents in low-income areas.

“I ask them the questions they don’t want to answer,” Stevenson said of government officials. “In 2020, we’re still fighting racism. How is that? We address every issue but racism. We change every law for every group except Black people.”

For years, Stevenson has asked city and county officials for a potential job as an interventi­on specialist and additional funding for programs. Instead, he’s said he’s been put off because of his criminal history and inability to read and write.

Laidley said he’s uncomforta­ble naming the detractors, but rather than stand by idly as conditions worsen, he and Stevenson decided to take matters into their own hands.

Over the past five years, Laidley said he’s invested nearly $250,000 of his own money toward rebuilding the community — not only allocating money toward property renovation, but placing money in the hands of people he mentors to ensure they can support them

selves and their families.

“We had to show (local officials) that it could be done in another manner,” Stevenson said. “We’re going to do it, with or without you.”

Having witnessed Laidley and Stevenson’s leadership, Columbus City

Councilman Mitchell Brown said he’s worked alongside the duo on several community-focused projects.

“Sean and Ephraim have acted as credible messengers in our community for some time,” he said. “Sean works with young people to realize that violence is not the answer. He helps to lead them down a better path.”

Finding a path forward

Laidley and Stevenson have joined together a handful of organizati­on leaders and government officials to discuss the issues plaguing local neighborho­ods. During these meetings, Laidley said he realizes how unaware many of them are about the obstacles minorities face.

“They don’t understand fundamenta­ls; all the big stuff that leads to the circumstan­ces people are in now,” he said.

Columbus is on pace to set a new record for homicides in a single year year. In 2017, the city had 143 homicides and didn’t reach 98 homicides until November. As of Wednesday, there were already 136 homicides in the city this year.

“We don’t have to break another record this year,” Laidley said.

Under Elements of Change, Laidley and Stevenson look to continue using their influence and resources to end the violence across the city’s landscape.

Resident Torie Stivison, who’s worked to help rehab Laidley’s newest housing unit, said their work has shed light on the true beauty of the city and has given residents an opportunit­y through property renovation to feed themselves and their families.

“It’s absolutely wonderful because all these people need jobs,” she said. “This is beautiful.” ehopkins@dispatch.com @Earl_hopkins1

 ?? COURTNEY HERGESHEIM­ER/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Partners Ephraim Laidley Jr., right, and Sean Stevenson talk at their building on East Livingston Avenue, which used to be a hot spot for illegal activity.
COURTNEY HERGESHEIM­ER/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Partners Ephraim Laidley Jr., right, and Sean Stevenson talk at their building on East Livingston Avenue, which used to be a hot spot for illegal activity.
 ?? PHOTOS BY COURTNEY HERGESHEIM­ER/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Sean Stevenson spends time in his car, talking people out of bad decisions and giving them hope.
PHOTOS BY COURTNEY HERGESHEIM­ER/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Sean Stevenson spends time in his car, talking people out of bad decisions and giving them hope.
 ??  ?? Ephraim Laidley Jr., below, directs restoratio­n as workers prep a building on East Livingston Avenue to be painted earlier this month.
Ephraim Laidley Jr., below, directs restoratio­n as workers prep a building on East Livingston Avenue to be painted earlier this month.
 ?? PHOTOS BY COURTNEY HERGESHEIM­ER/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Trequan Callahan, 7, helps his father, Troy, paint trim on a building on East Livingston Avenue. Troy is an ex-felon and says it’s hard to find work with his record. Sean Stevenson and Ephraim Laidley Jr. hire people who otherwise have a hard time finding work.
PHOTOS BY COURTNEY HERGESHEIM­ER/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Trequan Callahan, 7, helps his father, Troy, paint trim on a building on East Livingston Avenue. Troy is an ex-felon and says it’s hard to find work with his record. Sean Stevenson and Ephraim Laidley Jr. hire people who otherwise have a hard time finding work.
 ??  ?? Robert Simpson Jr., 7, goes through drills during class at Elite Boxing Gym. Laidley and Stevenson balance several initiative­s under their non-profit, Elements of Change, including the small boxing gym.
Robert Simpson Jr., 7, goes through drills during class at Elite Boxing Gym. Laidley and Stevenson balance several initiative­s under their non-profit, Elements of Change, including the small boxing gym.
 ??  ?? Trequan Callahan plays out front while his father works, painting a building on East Livingston Avenue.
Trequan Callahan plays out front while his father works, painting a building on East Livingston Avenue.

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