New York State has been awarded more
than $13.3 million in funding to help law enforcement agencies effectively
combat gun violence in the 17 counties participating in the state's Gun
Involved Violence Elimination initiative. Now in its fourth year, GIVE provides
technical assistance, training, equipment, and personnel – such as prosecutors
and crime analysts –to help communities reduce violent crime.
"This administration continues to
work tirelessly to combat gun violence in our communities and help prevent the
needless tragedy that comes with it," Governor Cuomo said. "The GIVE initiative provides law
enforcement with resources and training to bolster public safety, strengthen
communities that are hardest hit by crime and create a stronger, safer New York
for all."
The GIVE initiative provides funding for 20 police departments in the 17 counties reporting 83 percent of the violent crime that occurs in the state outside of New York City. The state Division of Criminal Justice Services administers the grant funding, which runs for 12 months beginning July 1, 2017, and ending June 30, 2018. These agencies and their county law enforcement partners – district attorneys' offices, probation departments and sheriffs' offices – receive funding.
A dozen counties received funding to specifically target gun violence: Albany, Erie, Monroe, Westchester, Onondaga, Suffolk, Nassau, Schenectady, Orange, Niagara, Oneida and Dutchess counties. Five other counties were awarded grants to target aggravated assaults, which drive crime in their respective communities: Ulster, Chautauqua, Rockland, Rensselaer, and Broome counties. The funding breaks down by region as follows:
The GIVE initiative provides funding for 20 police departments in the 17 counties reporting 83 percent of the violent crime that occurs in the state outside of New York City. The state Division of Criminal Justice Services administers the grant funding, which runs for 12 months beginning July 1, 2017, and ending June 30, 2018. These agencies and their county law enforcement partners – district attorneys' offices, probation departments and sheriffs' offices – receive funding.
A dozen counties received funding to specifically target gun violence: Albany, Erie, Monroe, Westchester, Onondaga, Suffolk, Nassau, Schenectady, Orange, Niagara, Oneida and Dutchess counties. Five other counties were awarded grants to target aggravated assaults, which drive crime in their respective communities: Ulster, Chautauqua, Rockland, Rensselaer, and Broome counties. The funding breaks down by region as follows:
Capital Region - Albany County: The Albany Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office and Probation Department will share $765,513.
Schenectady
County: The
Schenectady Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office
and Probation Department will share $800,000.
Rensselaer
County: The
Troy Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office and
Probation Department will share $476,703.
Central New York - Onondaga County: The Syracuse Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office and Probation Department will share $1,162,017.
Finger Lakes - Monroe County: The Rochester Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office and Probation Department will share $1,744,060.
Long Island - Suffolk County: The Suffolk County Police Department, Sheriff’s Office and District Attorney’s Office, Probation Department and Crime Laboratory will share $1,039,852.
Nassau County –
The
Nassau County and Hempstead police departments and District Attorney’s Office,
Sheriff’s Office and Probation Department will share $969,051.
Mid-Hudson - Dutchess County: The Poughkeepsie (city) Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office and Probation Department will share $341,350.
Orange County: The
Newburgh (city) and Middletown police departments and District Attorney’s
Office, Sheriff’s Office and Probation Department will share $829,592.
Rockland
County: The
Spring Valley Police Department, Sheriff’s Office and Probation Department will
share $102,500.
Ulster County: The
Kingston Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office and
Probation Department will share $219,925.
Westchester
County: The
Yonkers and Mount Vernon police departments and District Attorney’s Office,
Department of Public Safety and Probation Department will share $1,149,954.
Mohawk Valley - Oneida County: The Utica Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office and Probation Department will share $618,036.
Southern Tier - Broome County: The Binghamton Police Department and District Attorney’s Office and Sheriff’s Office will share $384,981.
Western New York - Erie County: The Buffalo Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office, and Probation Department will share $1,837,610.
Niagara
County: The
Niagara Falls Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s
Office and Probation Department will share $696,871.
Chautauqua
County: The
Jamestown Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff’s Office
and Probation Department will share $185,075.
In addition to funding, the GIVE initiative provides training to participating agencies so they can implement the following evidence-based strategies:
Hot-spots policing uses data to help law enforcement focus resources in areas where crime is most likely to occur. Police use incident reports, calls for service and other information about areas of persistent criminal activity in order to target, reduce and prevent crime.
Focused deterrence identifies chronic
offenders and targets them for enhanced attention, enforcement and prosecution.
Key to this approach is a partnership between law enforcement agencies,
community groups and social services organizations to communicate directly with
offenders and outline clear consequences for continued criminal behavior.
Crime
Prevention Through Environmental Design identifies and attempts to correct the
physical attributes of community – buildings, vacant lots, lighting, traffic
patterns or other environmental factors – that make certain areas conducive to
criminal activity.
Street outreach programs employ
community members who attempt to interrupt cycles of violence or prevent
retaliation. This strategy also employs case managers to connect individuals
involved in violence with resources to help them change their behavior.
GIVE agencies also must integrate procedural justice into their gun violence reduction plan. Procedural justice is designed to enhance police-community relations by ensuring interactions between law enforcement and individuals are fair, and that those who come in contact with police believe they are being treated equitably and respectfully during those encounters.
New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services Executive Deputy Commissioner Michael C. Green said, "GIVE is a partnership between DCJS and local law enforcement that encourages and supports evidence based approaches to reducing gun violence while at the same time helping communities heal. This is a long-term strategy that is starting to show results in areas of the state that are hardest hit by violent crime. We are supporting local law enforcement as they continue to build on the knowledge and training they’ve received through the GIVE initiative to effectively interrupt cycles of violence that tend to perpetuate crime in their communities.”
The Division of Criminal Justice Services also sponsors an annual, two-day symposium to provide participating agencies with training and practical information to help them implement these evidence-based strategies. The most recent symposium in the fall of 2016 featured 17 workshops, panel discussions and presentations on analyzing problems to reduce gun crime in New York State. The two-day forum provides training and practical information to help implement evidence-based strategies. This year, the symposium featured 17 workshops, panel discussions and presentations on analyzing problems to reduce gun crime in New York State. The event drew more than 250 police, prosecutors, probation officers and other law enforcement professionals from 72 agencies across the state. DCJS also coordinates jurisdiction-specific training and the exchange of best practices and promising strategies among all the agencies that participate in GIVE.
New York is unique among states for its work to help ensure that agencies use proven practices to reduce these deadly crimes. The state’s work with the GIVE initiative has been recognized by the federal Bureau of Justice Assistance and the National Network for Safe Communities.
Source: Press Office, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo
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