Chicago Sun-Times

‘WE CAN’T STOP THE VIOLENCE ALONE’

Anti-violence organizati­ons tout united front as summer approaches

- BY ANDY GRIMM, STAFF REPORTER agrimm@suntimes.com | @agrimm34

During a career in violence prevention that started in the dark days of the 1980s, Frank Perez has seen a lot, but nothing like what he saw at the Garfield Park fieldhouse this week: a gym packed with workers from more than a dozen nonprofit anti-violence organizati­ons, talking about nine-figure spending plans.

As summer — with its seasonal surge in violence — draws closer, a coalition of antiviolen­ce groups gathered to point to positive signs after two straight years of soaring violent crime in Chicago.

After a damp, chilly spring, shootings have declined 6% citywide from last year, with steeper drops in hotspots like North Lawndale, where Perez’s team at UCAN is one of three nonprofits working to tamp down violence.

After temperatur­es surged into the 80s in recent days, shootings and murders are down 6% citywide from 2021. In North Lawndale, where UCAN is one of three overlappin­g groups working to tamp down violence, shootings have fallen by more than 50% and murders by nearly two-thirds.

Perez recalled when groups like his struggled against other nonprofits to get grants — and frequently still ran out of money to pay workers to mediate conflicts midsummer.

“We can’t stop the violence alone. For too long, agencies like mine was player-hating,” Perez said, drawing nods from the crowd at that Garfield Park gathering, held Wednesday. “You know what that means. We think we’re the only ones that can do this work, when we all know there are many other organizati­ons that can help us.”

The groups Chicago CRED, READI Chicago, and organizati­ons in the umbrella group Communitie­s Partnering For Peace each offer programs focused on high-risk residents of violent neighborho­ods, paying them to participat­e in job training and cognitive behavioral therapy.

Similar outreach programs have been tabbed for additional spending from federal, state and city government­s across the U.S., as violent crime and unrest over police brutality soared during the COVID-19 pandemic. Combined with money from organizati­ons including the MacArthur Foundation, Emerson Collective and other donors, funding for Chicago’s network of anti-violence groups will reach nearly $167 million this year, an all-time high.

Despite a spike in shootings and murders that began in 2019, recent research has shown the relative handful of people who do enroll in such programs are less likely to be arrested for shootings or be shot themselves.

Aaron Taylor, who completed CRED’s program, told the audience he had gone from facing criminal charges to completing a training program to become a welder.

“Through them and Chicago CRED, I have an increased ability of being more coachable, paying attention more and just being more open to volunteeri­ng to anything that comes my way,” Taylor said.

Building an “architectu­re” of community organizati­ons across the city has been a target of increased spending by Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who boosted funding for anti-violence, outreach and victims’ services programs to $85 million in the 2022 budget — though grant money from this year’s budget has not been awarded yet. The city spent about $50 million on such programs in 2021.

Advocates for the programs have said successes identified in research haven’t led to a decline in violence on the streets because, even with more funding in recent years, the programs combined reach only about 2,000 participan­ts a year. That’s in a city where a tally of 3,000 to 4,000 shootings a year is fairly common. CRED Managing Partner Arne Duncan said collaborat­ion allows groups to bring their anti-violence efforts “to scale.”

“It’s been a dark two years, it’s been a very, very difficult time for Chicago and around the country, but this year is starting off better,” CRED Managing Partner Arne Duncan said. “If we keep working together [and see] a 25% reduction in violence this year, and another 25% next year … Chicago can be a radically different place.”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Frank Perez of UCAN, a nonprofit working to tamp down violence, says “there are many other organizati­ons that can help us.”
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Frank Perez of UCAN, a nonprofit working to tamp down violence, says “there are many other organizati­ons that can help us.”
 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Members of violence prevention programs greet one another at Garfield Park Fieldhouse in West Garfield Park on Wednesday.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Members of violence prevention programs greet one another at Garfield Park Fieldhouse in West Garfield Park on Wednesday.

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