Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

READI anti-violence program is proof that crime prevention can work

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Three years ago, we were hopeful about the early success of READI Chicago, a relatively new anti-violence outreach program that targets high-risk men on the South and West sides.

That optimism has since grown. A recent study by the University of Chicago Crime Lab found that the initiative is highly effective at keeping those men, who live in some of the city’s most troubled communitie­s, from engaging in crime and violence, as the Chicago Sun-Times’ Andy Grimm reports.

The findings ought to be studied closely by elected officials, law enforcemen­t, activists and others who are wracking their brains to find solutions to the relentless gun violence that engulfs the city.

The big takeaway: Relying heavily on law enforcemen­t — arresting, jailing and boosting police presence — is not the wholesale answer to reducing crime.

Prevention, via education and other support, can be just as advantageo­us.

A focus on therapy

The study of READI, which stands for Rapid Employment and Developmen­t Initiative, used what’s considered the “gold standard” for scientific research: a randomized controlled trial that compared men who enrolled in the program with a control group of men who were turned away.

The U. of C. study is the first of its kind to evaluate a large group with the same statistica­l rigor and method used to evaluate medical treatments.

Altogether, 2,500 men were tracked. The findings were striking.

The men enrolled in the

18-month READI course were twothirds less likely to be arrested for a violent crime and nearly 20% less likely to be shot compared with the men who weren’t taking part in the program.

The men who were recruited by outreach workers — rather than community members or through other means — showed even more promise: Their arrests dropped by almost 80% and they were nearly

50% less likely to be shot.

Those statistics are especially noteworthy, given that a third of the men in READI had been shot at before they joined the program and racked up an average of 17 arrests.

READI offers job and educationa­l training, like many other organizati­ons designed to curtail violence.

But it stands out for its focus

on cognitive behavior therapy, a counseling treatment that aims to change a person’s thought patterns. Christophe­r Blattman, a researcher and economist at the U. of C.’s Harris Center for Public Policy who helped design and evaluate READI, has observed, for example, that the therapy has been beneficial in helping former child soldiers in Liberia.

Men tangled up in violence in the neighborho­ods targeted by READI — Austin, Englewood, North Lawndale, West Englewood and West Garfield Park — are likely to deal with similar trauma because of exposure to gang violence or involvemen­t in street gangs.

The city would do well to look to the READI model as a template for other violence interventi­on programs.

We’d also like to see those men who were turned away from the program — to provide for a control group — get a chance now to participat­e. Those men certainly lost out, and should get the opportunit­y to turn their lives around as well — like Sylvester, a participan­t who spent 13 years in prison and was recruited to READI when he returned home.

He earned $15 an hour to attend job training and therapy sessions. Now he’s working in outreach himself, taking college classes and planning to go into social work.

READI is funded by private donors, but Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s budget includes $14.5 million for similar programs.

It would cost Chicago $1 billion a year for violence prevention spending and increased policing, to reduce crime in Chicago by 50%, U. of C. Crime Lab Director Jens Ludwig said in a speech to the City Club of Chicago last month.

That’s quite a high tab. But the city spends hundreds of millions on police overtime and on anti-violence programs that may not have a track record of success.

At $20 million a year, READI is producing results to fix the city’s most intractabl­e problem.

Scaling it up would be money well spent.

 ?? TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Bryant Robertson, with the Institute for Nonviolenc­e Chicago, stands earlier this month in the computer lab at the headquarte­rs of READI Chicago. At the computer lab, participan­ts work to get their GEDs.
TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Bryant Robertson, with the Institute for Nonviolenc­e Chicago, stands earlier this month in the computer lab at the headquarte­rs of READI Chicago. At the computer lab, participan­ts work to get their GEDs.

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