The Columbus Dispatch

Bar Foundation gives grants for racial justice projects

- Eric Lagatta

Black community leaders and law enforcemen­t agencies in four Northeast Ohio counties will soon work together to review and revise existing police training procedures as part of initiative­s funded by grants through the Ohio State Bar Foundation.

The foundation, which began awarding grants in 2020 for organizati­ons leading racial justice projects, announced this week a new wave of $91,042 in funding for two organizati­ons, including for the Kent State University Foundation to spearhead the police reform effort.

The grant for $49,642 will fund the first year of a multi-year project in which community forums will be held to evaluate and change existing police training in areas related to diversity and equity through the Kent State Basic Police Officer Training Academy, a regional training provider for the Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy (OPOTA). Called “Leveraging Community Voices to Advance Racial Equity in Police Training,” the program is intended to increase the competency of cadets as well as to develop their communicat­ion skills during interactio­ns with Black community members.

The announceme­nt comes amid days of outcry, protests and clashes in Akron after 25-year-old Jayland Walker, a Black man, was shot and killed by Akron police following a traffic stop and vehicle pursuit. Summit County, where Akron is located, is among the four Ohio counties (the others are Portage, Mahoning and Columbiana counties) that will be served by the police reform project.

Though the applicatio­n process for this round of grant funding took place well before the fatal shooting, the reaction

to Walker's death underscore­s the ongoing importance of rebuilding trust between police and residents, said Lori Keating, executive director of the Ohio State Bar Foundation.

“The first and most important step was the conversati­on between the Black community and law enforcemen­t agencies, and that seemed like a dialogue we'd be willing to fund,” Keating said. “This grant, like all of our grants, really reaffirms that we still need to take a critical look at our justice system and how it works, and how we can improve it.”

In addition, the Mental Health & Addiction Advocacy Coalition, a nonprofit organizati­on that advocates for adequate financial and political support for mental health and addiction treatment, received $41,400 from the Ohio State Bar Foundation. The grant will fund research to either confirm or refute the existence of racial and ethnic inequaliti­es

in the state's community behavioral health system.

The project's focus will be on collecting and analyzing data in order for researcher­s to make recommenda­tions to improve data collection in such a way as to eliminate any identified disparitie­s that result in inequitabl­e outcomes for minority population­s, said Joan Englund, executive director of the Mental Health & Addiction Advocacy Coalition, which has regional hubs in Cleveland and Cincinnati, as well as a state office in Columbus. Partnering organizati­ons include Central State University, Multiethni­c Advocates for Cultural Competence, and Ohio University.

“Making a conscious commitment to racial and ethnic equity in behavioral health is critical to addressing the systemic racism in the health care system as a whole as well as other tangential systems such as the criminal justice system and decreasing the disproport­ionate representa­tion of BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) communitie­s,” Englund said in a written statement.

The Ohio State Bar Foundation establishe­d the grant program, known as the Racial Justice Initiative, in response to the protests that broke out in the summer of 2020 across the nation after the murder of George Floyd.

“We looked at the current conversati­on around us in 2020 and we wanted to be a part of that conversati­on,” Keating said. “We wanted to address injustices that are happening to the best of our ability.”

The initial intent was for the Ohio State Bar Foundation to eventually provide grant funding totaling $500,000 to support various projects across the state addressing systemic racism. However, the nonprofit organizati­on has so far awarded more than $350,000, and Keating said that the foundation's board has approved awarding another $300,000.

Among the programs that have been funded are the University of Cincinnati College of Law's Ohio Innocence Project, Case Western Reserve University's School of Law Racial Justice Fellowship­s and the Kirwan Institute's Opportunit­y Map for Inclusion.

The initiative also provided a $50,000 grant to the Innovation Ohio Education Fund's Justice Agenda for Black Women and Girls in Ohio. That project is intended to examine how systemic racism within the criminal justice system impacts Black women and girls in order to identify legislativ­e solutions.

Organizati­ons across the state are encouraged to apply by Sept. 2, 2022 for the next round of funding. More informatio­n can be found at osbf.org/racialjust­ice. elagatta@dispatch.com @Ericlagatt­a

 ?? MIKE CARDEW/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL ?? James Crawl, 25, waves a “No Justice No Peace” flag at the entrance of the Summit County Jail on Tuesday during protests in response to the shooting death of Jayland Walker by Akron police and the arrests of protesters last weekend who were being held at the jail. Crawl said he was a friend of Walker’s and was a year behind him at Buchtel High School, where they were on the wrestling team.
MIKE CARDEW/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL James Crawl, 25, waves a “No Justice No Peace” flag at the entrance of the Summit County Jail on Tuesday during protests in response to the shooting death of Jayland Walker by Akron police and the arrests of protesters last weekend who were being held at the jail. Crawl said he was a friend of Walker’s and was a year behind him at Buchtel High School, where they were on the wrestling team.

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