Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

A safer Connecticu­t starts with a stronger Connecticu­t

- By state Sen. Kevin Kelly Senate Republican Leader Kevin Kelly represents the 21st Senate District including Monroe, Seymour, Shelton and Stratford.

All people deserve to live in a state where they feel safe.

Safe walking down the street, driving in their car, or sleeping in their home.

Many people do not feel that way in our state today. A baby was shot while sitting in a car, a jogger hit and killed by teens driving a stolen vehicle, a woman murdered while cooking dinner. The Red Cross is facing a severe blood shortage in Connecticu­t because demand from trauma cases is so high. Juvenile crime is in the news every day. And our biggest cities are seeing their largest upticks in violent crime in years.

While conversati­ons have been happening at the state Capitol on some reforms, Democratic leaders have limited those conversati­ons and kept them closed to the public. It’s time to open them and broaden the range of topics being discussed beyond just juvenile crime. We must not only improve how we respond to all crime, but also how we prevent it.

The solution to stopping crime is not going to come from a group of political elites sitting under the golden dome. We need to look outside the Capitol and into our communitie­s. We have community leaders who no one is listening to. Democrats who have controlled our state for decades are out of touch and have allowed problems to fester, especially in our cities.

Some Democrats have even dismissed concerns about rising crime, accusing people of rooting for failure and peddling fear and hiding behind the excuse that the issue of growing crime is a national trend. The reality is there is a problem. That problem is here in Connecticu­t. And it is even worse in our Democratic-controlled cities.

Some say the pandemic is to blame for causing more crime. But we cannot pretend that any problem worsened by the pandemic did not also exist before the word “COVID” entered our vocabulary. If anything, the pandemic shines a brighter light on the fact that current policies are not working and it’s time for change.

Connecticu­t is at a crossroads when it comes to making our state safer. We can choose quick fixes and nibble around the edges. Or, we can start down a new path to not only establish appropriat­e consequenc­es to combat crime, but also to prevent crime, to create opportunit­y and hope, and to rehabilita­te by looking at the big picture.

We must broaden conversati­ons to address the root cause of rising crime. We must look at consequenc­es for repeat offenders, and we also must create opportunit­y,

We must broaden conversati­ons to address the root cause of rising crime. We must look at consequenc­es for repeat offenders, and we also must create opportunit­y, jobs and a ladder out of poverty. We cannot ignore that Connecticu­t is dead last in job growth and income growth and Connecticu­t’s economy is failing our kids and failing our cities.

jobs and a ladder out of poverty. We cannot ignore that Connecticu­t is dead last in job growth and income growth and Connecticu­t’s economy is failing our kids and failing our cities. We need to create good paying jobs for all families.

We need to involve police, community leaders, prosecutor­s and youth advocates. We need to consider pro-city proposals Republican­s have offered such as creating community investment boards to empower residents to make decisions about how to invest in their communitie­s and our plan to build a pipeline to jobs that connects local businesses with local high schools to train the future workforce. We need to open communicat­ion and empower community members to be part of the solution.

A safer Connecticu­t starts with a stronger Connecticu­t. It starts with an economy that can support jobs, build hope and create a path to success for young people. It starts with proactive policing, appropriat­e consequenc­es for repeat offenders and ensuring our justice system has the tools to successful­ly rehabilita­te.

We cannot settle for a quick fix and call it success.

It’s past time to broaden the conversati­on and open it to the public. We have a call to action. We have an opportunit­y for change. We must not let comprehens­ive reform slip away.

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Senator Kevin Kelly, R-Stratford, during the opening session of the state legislatur­e at the Capitol in Hartford in 2018.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Senator Kevin Kelly, R-Stratford, during the opening session of the state legislatur­e at the Capitol in Hartford in 2018.

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