San Diego Union-Tribune

‘INVEST ... IN US,’ LEADERS URGE

Groups from Mountain View, Stockton call on city to budget $3M to fund two youth centers in communitie­s

- BY EMILY ALVARENGA

Raised in the Stockton neighborho­od in southeaste­rn San Diego, Memee Hernandez was just 12 years old when she joined a gang and 16 when she had her first child.

In neighborin­g Mountain View, Lanell Brown has lost neighbors, friends and family — including his only brother — to gang violence.

Now, both are working to give others in their underserve­d communitie­s the resources and opportunit­ies they need to be spared those hardships — Hernandez with

PHATCAMP, the girls’ sports program she founded, and Brown with his nonprofit Giving Hands, which provides educationa­l programs to Mountain View youth.

“We are violence interrupte­rs,” Brown said. But “in order for this area to thrive and prosper, we need you to invest and believe in us.”

On Thursday morning, Hernandez, Brown and other community advocates gathered outside the County Administra­tion Center to call on city leaders to do just that.

They want the city to fund two youth and young adult drop-in centers in Districts 4 and 8 — home to some of the city’s highest concentrat­ions of violence and poverty — to help curb violence before it occurs.

The centers would offer a safe place for young people to go in their own communitie­s, with supervisio­n and resources including job-skills training, housing assistance, mental health services and more, said D’Andre Brooks, a commission­er with the San Diego Gang Commission on Prevention and Interventi­on.

“These are simple examples of major needs that our community is lacking,” Brown added.

A youth care and developmen­t program was included as a priority item in the February independen­t budget analyst’s report for the city council’s proposed 2024 fiscal year budget. The draft budget will be released next month.

That program, supported by five council members, would boost resources focusing on mental health, job training and after-school education. Four members proposed $3 million be allocated toward these efforts.

Community leaders want that funding to be split between the two

proposed drop-in centers as a line item in the city budget so that the funds are secured each year.

Those leaders haven’t always been aligned — some are former members of rival gangs affiliated with the Crips and the Bloods — but they came together in solidarity Thursday under a common goal.

“You would never see something like this (normally),” said Cheri Hampton, founder of Issa Vibe,

which connects people with mental health and other support services. “But the drop-in centers will bring unity to southeaste­rn San Diego.”

Advocates say they’ve already been working in the neighborho­ods to provide these services, but with city funding, they can create a permanent resource.

“We have already done so much in our community just to make the difference, often out of our own pockets,” Hampton added. “This situation is definitely personal to us … If given the full financial support, imagine what

we could do with the coordinate­d effort.”

Laila Aziz, director of operations at Pillars of the Community, a Muslim faithbased community organizati­on that advocates for southeaste­rn San Diego, says such evidence-based programs could also help give formerly incarcerat­ed community members a way to come back into their neighborho­od and share the positive work that rehabilita­ted them with youth.

“We need to hire within the community to make this work, people that can relate to make this mission personal, because we want better for our children, your children and our families,” Hampton said.

“If you want to bring some type of unity to our community, bring healing, bring progress … then put the power back in the people’s hands that have the power to make the change,” added Tonantzin “Cina” Sanchez, vice president of PHATCAMP and secretary of the Chicano Park Steering Committee.

 ?? EMILY ALVARENGA U-T ?? Lanell Brown, president of the nonprofit Giving Hands, stands with 4-year-old Trinity and Cheri Hampton (right), founder of Issa Vibe, at a rally held at the County Administra­tion Center on Thursday.
EMILY ALVARENGA U-T Lanell Brown, president of the nonprofit Giving Hands, stands with 4-year-old Trinity and Cheri Hampton (right), founder of Issa Vibe, at a rally held at the County Administra­tion Center on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States