Thursday, January 12, 2017

Saving Our Youth: Cure Violence New York, 'Operation SNUG'


Born out of the tragic shootings in Buffalo, Harlem, Queens, Westchester and other areas in New York, Operation SNUG (guns spelled backwards) became the second statewide implementation of the Cure Violence model. (Yonkers is also supported by city funding, and some New York City sites have other funding sources.)

A project of the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services, SNUG was launched 2009 with $4 million allocated from the New York State Legislature, which covered 7 cities. SNUG is currently funded at $2.9 million by the state (NY Governor Cuomo added additional funding in Fall 2014 for three new sites) covering a total of ten cities: Albany, Buffalo, Mt. Vernon, Nassau County (opening in 2015), Jacobi Medical Center in NYC, Rochester, Syracuse, Troy (opening in 2015) and Yonkers (Yonkers is also supported by city funding).  Suffolk (opening in 2015) will be using a different violence prevention model.  New York City also supports eight sites across five boroughs through its Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.

The New York City Department of Health program have met with great success, including an independent evaluation of the program in Crown Heights, Brooklyn that showed a 20% lower rate of shooting due to the program and a year without a shooting or killing in East Brooklyn.  Due in large part to the strong results achieved at the SNUG and NYC supported program sites, NYC Mayor Bill DeBlasio announced an additional $12.7 million in funding that will allow the total number of Cure Violence partner sites in NYC to triple in 2015.  The NYC Department of Health is working closely with Cure Violence to hire and train site managers, violence interrupters and outreach workers. 

Click here for additional information. 

Source: Cure Violence of New York

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