Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Anti-extremism effort slow-going

U.S. grant money mostly unused in LA, Boston, Minneapoli­s

- PHILIP MARCELO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Amy Forliti of The Associated Press.

BOSTON — Federally funded efforts in Boston, Los Angeles and Minneapoli­s to combat extremist recruitmen­t have been slow to start since they were announced a year and a half ago.

Few municipal programs have been directly created by the “Countering Violent Extremism” pilot initiative, with officials in those cities just starting to distribute more than $500,000 in Department of Justice grant money to jump-start new local efforts.

Minneapoli­s appears to be further along, but Boston and Los Angeles are months away from distributi­ng their share of the money — if at all.

“It’s a little frustratin­g,” said Los Angeles Deputy Police Chief Michael Downing, whose department had been looking forward to federal support to enhance long-standing efforts that include outreach to help prevent radicaliza­tion. “We haven’t seen a dime. We’re clearly at the point where we want to put our money where our mouth is.”

Recent attacks — including in Paris in November, San Bernardino, Calif., in December and Brussels on Tuesday — make the programs all the more critical, suggests Robert Trestan, who has been involved with the Boston pilot as regional director for the Anti-Defamation League, which fights anti-Semitism.

“It’s been disappoint­ingly slow, but we have to give it a chance before it’s too late,” he said.

Wyn Hornbuckle, a spokesman for the Department of Justice, said the agency is generally “encouraged” by what it sees from the pilot efforts, including “community-driven efforts to address youth prevention and interventi­on, mental and behavioral health, and radicaliza­tion in prisons, among other areas.”

He would not provide specifics or comment on whether the department had expected local programs to be running by now.

But he noted the funds — $216,000 each to Boston and Minneapoli­s and $100,000 to Los Angeles — were obligated in September and are good through this September, with limited extensions possible beyond then.

The pilot effort in Boston, Los Angeles and Minneapoli­s — with wider rollout possible based on its success — was announced in September 2014 and spotlighte­d during a three-day conference on global extremism convened the next February by President Barack Obama.

But observers say it has been underfunde­d and hobbled by a vague mission that has sown confusion and fueled strong opposition from civil-rights and community groups that fear the programs will amount to government spying on law-abiding Muslims.

The pilot program in the three cities is just one piece of the administra­tion’s broader “Countering Violent Extremism” agenda.

Top White House officials met in recent months with Silicon Valley tech giants in an effort to block or limit social-media distributi­on of extremist propaganda from the Islamic State and other groups. Secretary of State John Kerry also has met with Hollywood executives to enlist their help in social-media campaigns.

The FBI recently rolled out an online classroom resource on extremism called “Don’t Be a Puppet” and provided a guide to school administra­tors that addresses “concerning behavior” and how to intervene.

The Department of Justice started seeking applicants this month for some $3.5 million in grant money to develop, replicate or evaluate programs to reduce violent extremism.

And researcher­s at UCLA, Harvard and the University of Illinois at Chicago have $1 million in Department of Homeland Security money to help enhance efforts to counter extremism in Boston and Los Angeles, specifical­ly.

Supporters in Boston, where bombs killed three people and injured hundreds at the 2013 Boston Marathon, said they still hope the effort will bear fruit.

“I wouldn’t call this a failure,” said Brandy Donini-Melanson, a coordinato­r in the office of Boston U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz, which had initially led the effort there. “Let us get to a point where we have some funded programs and where there is some level of measuremen­t to determine whether these efforts are successful or not.”

In Minneapoli­s, officials point to at least one newly created but still not operationa­l effort: a privately financed mentorship program working with youth in the city’s sizable Somali community, which has been a target of extremist recruiters over the years.

Six other organizati­ons there also recently received $300,000 in federal and private money to develop programs addressing mental health, employment and parenting issues among the Somali community and other refugee population­s.

In Los Angeles, the situation is less clear: a spokesman for Eileen Decker, the U.S. attorney for central California that’s administer­ing the city’s grant money, couldn’t provide an update.

And in Boston, the Massachuse­tts Department of Health and Human Services, which is now leading that pilot effort, is taking tentative steps this month to distribute its $216,000 in federal money.

But the soonest any city organizati­on could expect to see the money under the current timeline is the fall.

 ?? AP/CHARLES KRUPA ?? Muslim, Christian, minority-group and government leaders in Boston watch a video last year as part of the federal pilot program “Countering Violent Extremism.”
AP/CHARLES KRUPA Muslim, Christian, minority-group and government leaders in Boston watch a video last year as part of the federal pilot program “Countering Violent Extremism.”

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