Georgia uses $83.5 million in COVID relief money for public safety grants

Georgia uses $83.5 million in COVID relief money for public safety grants

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Georgia uses $83.5 million in COVID relief money for public safety grants

Georgia is giving out more than $83.5 million in federal COVID-19 relief money as grants to fund 118 public safety projects across the Peach State.

 

Departments can use the funds to augment law enforcement staffing and support violent crime reduction initiatives or intervention programs. They can also use the money to invest in technology and equipment to address the uptick in violence and personnel shortages stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

“We commend Gov. Kemp and the legislature for continuing their commitment to public safety, especially in an environment where we continue to see high crime rates in cities across the state,” Josh Crawford, director of criminal justice initiatives for the Georgia Center for Opportunity, said in a statement. “Ensuring safe communities requires involvement from all of us, including partnerships between state and local officials.”

Gov. Brian Kemp announced efforts to enhance public safety

Gov. Brian Kemp announced efforts to enhance public safety

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Gov. Brian Kemp announced efforts to enhance public safety

Today, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced preliminary grant awards totaling more than $83.5 million for 118 community safety projects, including for addressing staffing shortages for law enforcement.

The Georgia Center for Opportunity’s (GCO) take: “We commend Gov. Kemp and the legislature for continuing their commitment to public safety, especially in an environment where we continue to see high crime rates in cities across the state,” said Josh Crawford, director of criminal justice initiatives for GCO. “Ensuring safe communities requires involvement from all of us, including partnerships between state and local officials.”

Crawford recently wrote an op-ed for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution on a path forward in reducing Atlanta’s juvenile crime rate. Read it here.

Georgia uses $83.5 million in COVID relief money for public safety grants

Opinion: A path that could reduce Atlanta’s juvenile crime

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Opinion: A path that could reduce Atlanta’s juvenile crime

In January, Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens launched the “Year of the Youth” plan to combat juvenile crime rates in the city. The issue is a pressing one. Consider that in 2022, 19 of the 170 homicide victims in Atlanta were children. Deshon DuBose, a 13-year-old, is among the juvenile homicide victims already in 2023. He was gunned down while leaving Cascade Family Skating in January.

Meanwhile, Georgia Juvenile Justice Commissioner Tyrone Oliver says that around 50% of youth incarcerated in the state self-identify as gang members. Jayden Myrick, who was found guilty of murder in a 2018 robbery and fatal shooting at an Atlanta wedding, admitted under oath that he was recruited into gang life when he was just 9 or 10 years old.

Juvenile violence skyrocketed across the country in 2020, reversing decades of decline. But even before the increases, juvenile crime was reported in 2018 as 15 times higher in Fulton County than the national average.

Juvenile offending, like adult criminality, concentrates among a very small number of offenders. These juveniles are typically either associated with or being recruited into street gangs and often pressured by adults to commit serious violent offenses.

Thankfully, there are well-documented ways to reduce that kind of offending. Look to Louisville, Kentucky for a recent example of solutions.

In recent years, Louisville has experienced substantial increases in juvenile violence, with arrest rates for juvenile homicide suspects 50% higher than the national average and a majority of carjacking arrestees being under 18 in 2020 and 2021. This prompted Republican State Representative Kevin Bratcher to begin working on what would become House Bill 3, a comprehensive violent juvenile offender accountability and treatment bill. While some of House Bill 3 dealt with issues specific to Louisville, many of its provisions offer policies and best practices worth adopting in Georgia.

Most importantly, the bill required that any juvenile charged with a serious violent offense such as murder, rape, robbery, burglary in the first degree and so on, be immediately detained for a period not to exceed 48 hours. This mandatory detention serves two purposes. It not onlyprotects the public and the juvenile by disrupting the cycle of violence but it also ensures meaningful time for mental health and drug abuse evaluations and comprehensive evaluations of the risks posed by the juvenile before a judge ultimately determines long-term release conditions or pretrial detention.

They also funded a new detention center in Louisville and a myriad of treatment programs intended to get juveniles with one foot in the streets and one foot in civil society back on the right track. This includes funding cognitive behavioral therapy which is being used toeffectively get serious juvenile offenders back on a positive life course. Why fund programs in facilities and not just in the community? Treatment programs for high-risk juveniles are most effective after 200 hours of treatment.

Finally, the new law creates early intervention points for young people who showed no improvement in their diversion programs. It does so by allowing an interdisciplinary team to alter the treatment methods earlier. If parents are unwilling or refuse to comply with a child’s diversion plan, a judge has the authority to hold the parents accountable. Chronic, unexcused absences from schools are strong predictors of future juvenile delinquency.

Unresolved truancy is strongly predictive of future juvenile delinquency and even adult criminality. So, getting it right with those kids today can help a child escape being preyed on by adult gang members and prevent serious violence in the future.

We didn’t get here overnight, and the reasons for the spike in juvenile crime in Atlanta are multifaceted. But the bottom line is that policy solutions similar to those enacted this year in Kentucky can help the city move forward and create a safer community and a more just and fair system.

Josh Crawford is the director of criminal justice initiatives at the Georgia Center for Opportunity.

Read the full article here

This opinion editorial was originally published by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on June 6, 2023. 

Georgia uses $83.5 million in COVID relief money for public safety grants

Les procureurs progressistes et la volonté démocratique qui dérange

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Les procureurs progressistes et la volonté démocratique qui dérange

“La punition n’est jamais destinée à “réussir” à un degré élevé.” Une société qui “a l’intention de promouvoir une conduite disciplinée et le contrôle social se concentrera non pas sur la punition des contrevenants mais sur la socialisation et l’intégration des jeunes citoyens”.

Telle était l’expression optimiste de David Garland, le professeur de la NYU qui a lancé le mouvement pour l’abolition de la punition en 1990.

Au cours du quart de siècle suivant, cependant, l’agenda abolitionniste n’a jamais dépassé l’élite radicale. Puis, au cours des dernières années seulement, un changement stratégique s’est produit pour exiger uniquement l’abolition des prisons. L’objectif est de “construire une société plus humaine et démocratique qui ne dépend plus de la mise en cage pour répondre aux besoins humains et résoudre les problèmes sociaux”.

Appeler à abolir les prisons revient pratiquement à plaider pour la fin totale des peines – cela évite simplement d’être explicite à ce sujet.

Mais l’expérience humaine et les études empiriques montrent clairement que s’assurer que les actes répréhensibles graves sont punis est essentiel pour une société ordonnée. Toute tentative de société sans punition s’est effondrée, même lorsque les idéalistes les mieux intentionnés la tentent dans des communes expérimentales. Et des études empiriques montrent clairement que les gens ordinaires de tous les groupes démographiques partagent une intuition profondément enracinée selon laquelle les actes répréhensibles graves doivent être punis. L’imposition d’une punition aux malfaiteurs est si importante pour les gens que même les observateurs non impliqués des méfaits, qui n’ont aucun lien avec les parties impliquées, sacrifieront volontairement leurs propres intérêts personnels pour voir une punition méritée imposée.

 

As Juvenile Crime Skyrockets To Record Levels, States Seek To Crack Down

As Juvenile Crime Skyrockets To Record Levels, States Seek To Crack Down

In The News

As Juvenile Crime Skyrockets To Record Levels, States Seek To Crack Down

As juvenile crime has skyrocketed across the nation following the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, state lawmakers are looking to pass laws to curb rising youth violence and lawlessness.

Juvenile homicides nationwide increased by 44% from 2019 to 2020 and increased by 83% from 2013 to 2020, according to data from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, as school closures and police reforms have contributed to rising youth crime. Lawmakers in Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Florida and New Jersey have introduced bills to implement measures such as penalty enhancements for juvenile gang members, as well as mandatory holding periods for juveniles charged with violent crimes, to address the rising violence.

“The year 2020 saw a reversal of decades-long reductions in juvenile violent crime,” Josh Crawford, Director of Criminal Justice Initiatives at the Georgia Center for Opportunity, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “Kids not being in school due to government shutdowns and reductions in proactive policing during COVID-19 played a role.”