The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Anti-violence groups may receive funding

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The Dekalb County government appears poised to allocate $1 million toward community-based violence prevention programs.

Dekalb CEO Michael Thurmond briefly referenced the new initiative during his state of the county address last week. A resolution that would make it a reality was presented to the county Board of Commission­ers on Tuesday and could be voted on in coming weeks.

The county has in recent years made similar investment­s in programs that aim to “interrupt” violence before it happens. But the new funding was driven at least in part by the April shooting of an 11-year-old at a local skating rink.

Thurmond called that incident “just the most recent example of senseless violence in our communitie­s.”

“The reality is there are hundreds of nonprofits, churches, community organizati­ons who have been laboring in the vineyard for years, scraping together nickels and dimes sometimes, dollars and quarters, to invest in our young people and to invest in our community,” the CEO said.

The new funding is not aimed at starting a program from scratch, but to “enhance existing strategies and to support those organizati­ons who you know ... have been out there doing everything they can,” Thurmond said.

The resolution envisions money being provided to groups “that educate, support, assist and employ teens and young adults, for the purpose of reducing and combating homicides and violent crimes” in that population.

“We can’t just deal with the symptoms,” Commission­er Larry Johnson said Tuesday. “We’ve got to get to the root.”

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