Star-Telegram

Making Stop 6 a safe area is important for this nonprofit

- BY KAMAL MORGAN kmorgan@star-telegram.com Kamal Morgan: 817 -390-7167

Teena James remembers when, in 2003, a woman told her the Stop 6 neighborho­od of Fort Worth was dangerous.

The gun violence, gangs, and crime scared the woman, who wouldn’t visit the neighborho­od.

James, taken back, told the woman she had built a house and raised four children with her husband in the neighborho­od.

“I kept telling people how safe it was and how I believed in it,” James said. “We just had to get involved and be a part of it.”

James has always been involved in her community, serving, for instance, as the PTA president for her children’s schools at W.M. Green Elementary and Dunbar High School. In 2003, she started a nonprofit organizati­on, Safe in the Six, that provides resources and collaborat­ive opportunit­ies such as mental health events, clothing distributi­on and help with transporta­tion.

At 10 a.m. April 27, Safe in the Six will have its 2nd Annual Human Sex-Traffickin­g and Mental Health Walk for Awareness. It will start at Dunbar High School at 5700 Ramey Ave. and end at Eastover Park at 4300 Ramey Ave.

To participat­e, register online at safeinthes­ix.org at no cost.

Participan­ts will include students from the Young Men’s Leadership Academy and Dunbar High School and representa­tives of the Fort Worth Police Department. Last year, over 50 people attended.

James wants the event to help educate the community on sex traffickin­g and the importance of mental health support for those touched by it.

The walk is held in collaborat­ion with the 5 Stones Foundation, an anti-traffickin­g nonprofit organizati­on that works with law enforcemen­t and organizati­ons that deal with sex traffickin­g. The Tarrant County 5 Stones Task Force was establishe­d in 2016 to connect law enforcemen­t with organizati­ons that provide services such as shelter, counseling, job training, and more.

Karen Wiseman is president of the 5 Stones Foundation and met James four years ago at a school board meeting. Wiseman saw James’ passion and wanted to be a part of her community efforts.

Wiseman says traffickin­g happens anywhere that people are abused, malnourish­ed and financiall­y controlled. Every child deserves to be valued and understand their selfworth, and it starts with parents, Wiseman said.

“Parents need to be aware of what to look for so that they can protect their kids,” Wiseman said. “Because these kids are growing up in an environmen­t where the music, the culture, everything kind of glorifies the whole pimp life and they make traffickin­g sound like it’s a glamorous life, and it’s not.”

James also wants to change the perception of her neighborho­od.

She says Stop 6 has a stigma attached to it because of the gangs that have been associated with it. She referred specifical­ly to Eastover Park, where she said gang related activities occurred.

The park is one of the many beautiful areas that needs more amenities, such as lights, and to have the trees and grass better taken care of, James says.

Her vision is to one day open a place called One Stop Safe Spot where children can feel protected. It would offer tutoring services and meals and be a place for local college students to find volunteer opportunit­ies in the community.

“That’s pretty much my fight, that every child will receive an equal opportunit­y of receiving high quality education and a safe community where you can raise your family and walk in without feeling threatened, or being harmed,” James said.

 ?? COURTESY Safe in the Six ?? Teena James, center, poses with other participan­ts during last year’s Human Sex Traffickin­g and Mental Health Walk for Awareness in the Stop 6 neighborho­od.
COURTESY Safe in the Six Teena James, center, poses with other participan­ts during last year’s Human Sex Traffickin­g and Mental Health Walk for Awareness in the Stop 6 neighborho­od.

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