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VPR: Fresno advocates push city for an unconventional gun violence prevention program


Aaron Foster stands outside Wayne's Liquor store on East California Avenue: There’s a park across the street buzzing with people, a taqueria around the corner, and a library a few blocks away.

“This is the heart of Southwest Fresno,” he says. “There’s rival gang members that come by but they know this is a safe zone.”

Foster has lived in this neighborhood since he was 16 years old. Before that, he visited every summer. He says this area is a place where people can coexist without problems; it’s not gang territory.

“There’s honor amongst thieves,” says Foster, who works with Faith in the Valley Fresno. “Criminals don’t come around here and shoot because of the old people that live here. So we call this the old man park, it’s called Pride Park, but we call it the old man park.”

After losing two children to gun violence, Foster says he’s been on a mission to stop shootings from occurring in Fresno. He says his 21-year-old son and 18-year-old daughter were shot in the back of the head on Memorial Day weekend four years apart.

“My daughter went to her brother’s memorial that morning and she died that night,” Foster says. “Before I lost children I was part of the problem. I’m a gang member, ex-gang member.”

On average 75 to 80 percent of homicides in Fresno are gun related, according to Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer. He says 70 to 75 percent of those shootings involve gangs.

In 2017, 41 out of the 56 murders in the city involved guns and gang members were involved in 30 of those cases, police data shows. Last year, 26 out of the 32 murders involved guns and 21 of those involved a gang member.

Two years ago Foster reached out to Advance Peace, a nonprofit that has a controversial approach at reducing gun violence. Ever since then he’s been trying to get them to come to Fresno.

“I wouldn’t be having a conversation with the City of Fresno and the community of Fresno if the city and community of Fresno thought they were achieving optimal results around gun violence reduction,” says DeVone Boggan, the CEO of Advance Peace. “Particularly as it relates to how much the city is currently spending to get results.”

Advance Peace works with people who are most likely to be, or already are, involved in gun violence. Those who enroll in the 18-month Peacemaker Fellowship receive mentoring, behavioral therapy, life skills training, and internships. Every fellow is assigned a case manager and a so-called life map that outlines their goals.

Boggan started this fellowship model in 2010 at the Office of Neighborhood Safety, or ONS, in Richmond, a Bay Area city that was notorious for shootings. From 2010 to 2016, 84 people went through the fellowship, Boggan says, and 94 percent are still alive.

“Eighty-three percent of them haven’t been injured by a firearm today and 77 percent of those individuals have not been named as a suspect in a new firearm crime since becoming a fellow,” he says.

After fellows hit their six-month mark, they can get paid up to $1,000 a month based on their progress and achievements. Some critics see that as a bribe, paying people not to shoot each other. The program manager for ONS, Sam Vaughn, says that criticism is misleading.

“It’s a fellowship,” he says. “Just like any other fellowship a Stanford graduate goes to.”

The difference is ONS and Advance Peace work with a group of people who live and operate in the shadows around institutional racism, Vaughn says. Some fellows have only known rejection for their entire lives, he says, whether it be from their parents, teachers, or employers.

To try and better understand the lives of fellows, Vaughn tells people to “take away every caring thing that’s happened in your life. Take away every caring parent and try to understand what your life would look like.”

“If people say their lives would be the same, they are fooling themselves,” Vaughn says.

Fellows also have a chance to travel internationally and around California, Boggan says. It’s a way for them to see there’s another world outside of their city

“When we travel outside of California or outside of the United States of America, which we do several times a year, the only difference is they have to be willing to travel with someone they have a challenge with, someone they would consider their enemy so to speak,” Boggan says.

Gun Violence in Richmond continues to steadily decline, Boggan says, but “you got to be invested over the long term. Any city who thinks you’re going to crack the code in the short term is sorely mistaken.”

Advance Peace asks cities for a five-year commitment that costs $3 million. Those first five years Advance Peace pays for half of the program, making it $300,000 a year for cities. After that, the city needs to pay for the program in full.

“They (the city) need to have skin in the game,” Boggan says. “We’re basically saying this is your responsibility too. We believe that we’ve got to do more than policing and incarceration. We believe it takes more than that to create and sustain safe and healthy communities.”

Last year, Stockton and Sacramento adopted Advance Peace. Boggan says in both cities the mayors were the main supporters of the program.

For this to happen in Fresno, city budget funds need to be allocated for it first. Then four council members need to vote in favor of it. At least one council member says he’s open to supporting Advance Peace.

“I’m definitely open to supporting it,” says District 3 Councilman Miguel Arias, which includes parts of Southwest Fresno. He says he’s been to a couple of meetings with community members who support Advance Peace coming to Fresno.

“I think as council members our job is to respond to community feedback,” Arias says. “This clearly has a lot of community support in my district.”

Arias says supporters need to sit down with the mayor to see if he’s willing to include funding for Advance Peace in his proposed budget. With the mayor's support, he says the program could have “sufficient” council support.

Faith in the Valley Fresno, Fresno Boys and Men of Color, and Stop the Violence are all local groups that support of Advance Peace.

“If they’re (Advance Peace supporters) unable to do that, then we’ll have to see whether from the council we can make that proposal,” Arias adds.

In an emailed statement, Mayor Lee Brand says it’s too early to discuss funding a program like this. He says Fresno has “never funded anything like Advance Peace.”

The mayor will release his proposed budget next month, the city's spokesperson Mark Standriff says. The final budget needs to be approved by June 30.

Advance Peace is also designed to save cities money. Boggan says the cost of one homicide is far greater than what the program costs in full for five years.

Dyer says it’s difficult to pinpoint what one homicide in Fresno costs, but “it’s a significant cost. Violent crime is very, very expensive. Not only financially, but it takes a toll on families.”

A study from Iowa State University using data from 2003 found a homicide on average costs society $17.25 million if you consider the financial impact to the family, the government, the courts, the hospital, the police department, and more. A 2010 study by the RAND Corporation, a nonprofit research center, found the cost averages around $8.5 million.

Although it’s up to the council to vote Advance Peace in, law enforcement is an important supporter to gain. Boggan says the decrease in gun violence Richmond has seen is attributed to law enforcement and other community organizations all working together.

Dyer says he is “more than willing” to work with organizations like Advance Peace that have a common goal of reducing violence and working with gang members to leave their lifestyle.

“As long as that’s their true motive and their motive is not driven by money because I have seen over the years there are far too many organizations that are in it for the wrong reasons where they begin to chase the money,” Dyer says.

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