So far it's been a bomb/shooting/violence free pride ❤️ #Pride #PrideSpokane #Spokane #LGBT #gay #lesbian #transgender #bisexual #nonbinary #they #them #theythem #noviolence #violencefree (at Spokane Riverfront Park)
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from India

seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy
seen from Taiwan
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Taiwan
seen from Türkiye
seen from France

seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from France
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from China
So far it's been a bomb/shooting/violence free pride ❤️ #Pride #PrideSpokane #Spokane #LGBT #gay #lesbian #transgender #bisexual #nonbinary #they #them #theythem #noviolence #violencefree (at Spokane Riverfront Park)
It's violence prevention week! What can you do? Stay cool when things heat up. Text ANGER to 97779 for a few tips to break the cycle of violence and be #violencefree
The beauty of trees (made from wire and beads) ...
Key to Building Safer Communities: Continuity, Culture
By Keri Blackwell, Deputy Director, LISC Chicago At a recent safety symposium, Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn boiled it down into seven simple words: "Investing in community development IS crime fighting." But what does that mean? And how do you do it? For more than 10 years, LISC Chicago has been working with neighborhood partners to support comprehensive community development, which means doing a hundred things at once to help a neighborhood become safer, better educated, healthier, more attractive and more sustainable. Safety is one of the toughest places to show progress, but we’ve learned a lot over the years about how to make a difference. It takes time and consistent effort, of course, but most importantly, it requires a conscious effort to build organizational capacity and expertise around safety: a neighborhood network engaged in a culture of peace. Case study The Little Village neighborhood on Chicago’s West Side is a densely populated, young, mostly Mexican neighborhood with many strengths, but also challenges in the areas of gang involvement and gun violence. Homicides are a brutal reality, claiming 109 lives since 2007. It’s discouraging, yes, but that number has to be balanced against the accomplishments made by local organizations and police, working together to change the neighborhood’s future. It’s a slow process, but one with clear indicators of progress. Over ten years ago, the breakthrough was getting 23 different neighborhood groups, churches and youth organizations to form the Little Village Violence Prevention Collaborative to empower residents with violence prevention strategies and to improve community-police relations. That led to a series of workshops that brought Chicago Police and neighborhood leaders together, not just for beat meetings, but to talk about the nature of their work and help each participant understand the others. It led to new partnerships with gang outreach organizations, and to something called B-Ball on the Block, a Friday-night basketball league that took over hotspot streets for evenings of basketball, barbecued burgers, arts activities and fellowship among neighbors in a safe environment. And it fostered development of numerous community-building activities, at schools, in churches, at youth centers and among police leaders, all aimed at “healing the hood.” The result is a network of networks collaborating and communicating to promote a culture of peace. Most recently, for instance, more than a dozen neighborhood groups have worked together to consciously target recreational and mentoring resources to more than 300 at-risk youth in the 5th to 8th grades, when they are most vulnerable to gang recruitment. Stream of activities All of these things are good, but none is sufficient on its own. What Little Village and other neighborhoods in the LISC network have learned is that this stream of activities, over a period of years, creates something essential to eventually licking the crime problem, and other problems too. The essential element is continuity. By creating a large and diverse group of participants working on the safety issue, talking about it regularly with each other and sharing their methods, Little Village has been able to grow and maintain a culture of peace even when the leadership changed at local organizations, or when the police commander was reassigned to another district, or when a supportive school principal was promoted and replaced. This organizational infrastructure – this culture of peace – meant that such transitions could be weathered as a matter of course. When a new commander comes into the district, neighborhood leaders request a meeting to talk about safety, and the meeting takes place, because that’s how it’s done in Little Village. Every year the summer calendar is filled with community-building activities, not always sponsored by the same groups, but always happening because it’s part of the culture. Lately, new community gardens have been built; basketball and boxing continue; little league is a hit with younger kids; there are multiple arts programs; mothers have organized a church network called Padres Angeles (Parent Angels); the Chicago Police Department honored a neighborhood request for data that could help steer youth onto the right path; and, community-police collaboration was recognized by a national foundation. It’s a process. You create shared tables in a neighborhood where different types of people can come together, voice their concerns, set priorities, and create actions. It takes time and money, yes, but most of all it requires continuity, so that a culture can be built. Because investing in community development IS crime fighting. LISC Chicago’s Keri Blackwell has been working on safety programs with neighborhoods and Chicago Police for the past 10 years. Only this final day of National Youth Violence Prevention Week, SCY wants to thank Keri Blackwell, LISC, and all of its partners this week for helping to spread the word about youth violence prevention and for all of the admirable work they do and change they initiate every day. Stay inspiring and #violencefreeCHI!
Common Sense Approaches to Gun Violence Prevention
SCY would like to thank Dr. Marjorie Fujara from John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County for contributing this thought-provoking and highly relevant post this National Youth Violence Prevention Week. Tweet or post about how to #preventgunviolence for a #violencefreeCHI! #NYVPW “Public health is the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting health through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, public and private, individuals and communities.” --Charles-Edward Armory Winslow, 1920 Bacteriologist, Public Health Leader On the third day of National Youth Violence Prevention Week, I'd like to highlight two public health successes: ● Reduction in motor vehicle crashes: between 1966 and 2010, automobile fatalities were cut by a third ● Decrease is rates of smoking: between 1966 and 2010, rates of smoking were cut in half What can we learn from these public health successes? Dramatic reductions in smoking rates is credited to increased public awareness around the health hazards of smoking and the deleterious effects of second hand smoke on nonsmokers. Additionally, increased regulation of automobile safety standards (i.e., mandatory seat belts and airbags) as well as increased penalties for driving under the influence and graduated licensing requirements for adolescent drivers is thought to contribute to the lives saved on the road. Moreover, in recent years, gun violence has become a more pressing public health endemic. How can we apply lessons learned to contribute to Common Sense Approaches to Gun Violence Prevention? Homicide and suicide by firearms ranks in the top five causes of death throughout the lifespan. Firearms are the leading cause of death amongst males of color between the ages of 15-24 yo. In our quest to make a similar impact on gun violence as we have made in these other realms, we have faced some unique challenges not faced by other public health campaigns: 1. Challenges to collecting and sharing important public health information. In 2005, Congress voted to prohibit the CDC from doing any federally funded research on gun violence. Although President Obama lifted the ban in 2013, congress needs to fund the research, 2. Government intervention and regulation which prohibited cigarette sales in vending machines has failed to require the oversight of guns by the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Further, federal law, like the Tiahrt Amendment prohibits sharing of gun trace data used to commit various crimes. 3. Finally, social and economic policies ensure that the liability for a potentially dangerous product is shared by its manufacturers. Unfortunately, the Protection of Lawful Commerce In Arms Act prohibits manufacturers and dealers from being held accountable for their product. In addition to supporting important legislative regulation, there are things you can do that make a difference. 1. Just ASK...because Asking Saves Kids. Pediatricians and parents alike need to be asking “Is there a gun in the home where your child plays?” Did you know… ● 1 in 3 homes with children have a gun ● Nearly half are not securely stored, they are either unlocked or loaded ● The average 4 year old is strong enough to pull the trigger on a loaded firearm Be proactive, ASK. Make sure guns are stored safely, unloaded and locked, with gun and ammunition locked separately. And finally, you’re in good company if you stand with 2. Leading medical societies, like the AMA and the American Academy of Pediatrics, both have issued formal policy statements that call for : ● An assault weapons ban ● Universal Background Checks ● Limiting magazine capacity to 10 rounds The National Council of Churches, The Children’s Defense Fund, and the National Parent Teacher Association (PTA) also supports these measures. Get involved! There are a large number of gun violence prevention groups looking for your special talents. Whether it’s writing a personal essay to describe how gun violence has affected you in your life or tweeting your support of background checks to your legislator, you voice needs to be heard. There is likely to be a gun violence prevention organization just suited to your interests. Check these out: ● Brady Campaign ● Moms Demand Action ● Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence ● Gun Victims Action ● United Power for Action and Justice ● People For a Safer Society Marjorie Fujara MD, FAAP Division of Child Protective Services Department of Pediatrics John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County The Chicago Children’s Advocacy Center Member, Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America