| Jay explained that “People who get shot or stabbed are vastly more likely to have been excluded from systems—kicked out of school, kicked out of housing, to have some history of criminal legal system involvement so that it’s harder for them to get a job… [but as the VIAP data demonstrates] when people’s basic social and emotional needs are met, they are far less likely to be involved in violence…”Related: In a recent two-year study from UCLA’s Luskin School of Public Affairs, researchers examined the impact of the Newark Community Street Team—one of the country’s most prominent community violence intervention programs—to determine whether NCST’s model of community-based violence interruption works and whether it is scalable for other cities looking to launch or enhance their CVI offerings. The researchers concluded that NCST’s model “provides rigorous evidence that community-led violence intervention can significantly reduce violent crime” and “offers a scalable blueprint” for cities around the country. The full 200-page report and executive summary are worth your time, but here are some of the topline findings:Intervention Teams Deploy At The Same Time The Threat Of Violence Rises: Researchers found a “significant moderate correlation between high risk interventions and violent crime at lag 0,” indicating that NCST interventionists are deployed “simultaneously with violent incidents rather than operating on a delayed response model.” The analysis shows the program is “reactive and responding to an immediate need,” validating NCST’s strategy of “responding to, intervening in, and mediating community conflicts in real-time.”Resources Were Directed To The Communities With The Most Violence: Ward-level analysis confirms NCST directs resources to the neighborhoods most affected by violence—the South and West Wards, where violent crime rates are “approximately 2.5 times the national average,” receive the most concentrated programming. Researchers write the analysis “affirms NCST’s strategy of allocating resources to neighborhoods experiencing the highest burden of community violence” and reflects the program’s “decade-long evolution from pilot project to established practice.”Program Expansion And Community Engagement Growing: The study documents significant growth in the program’s activity and reach—“high risk interventions doubled between 2022 and 2023,” while participation in the Public Safety Round Table increased “from 2,207 participants in 2022 to 2,560 in 2023.” Researchers conclude this reflects “increased community engagement” and shows NCST is “building a generally more robust infrastructure” while continuing to “expand programming and outreach.” |