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McElderry Park Revitalization Coalition

Award Information

Award #
2012-AJ-BX-0014
Location
Congressional District
Status
Closed
Funding First Awarded
2012
Total funding (to date)
$938,773

Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2012, $938,773)

The goal of the Byrne Criminal Justice Innovation (BCJI) Program is to improve community safety by designing and implementing effective, comprehensive approaches to addressing crime within a targeted neighborhood as part of a broader strategy to advance neighborhood revitalization through cross-sector community-based partnerships. Research suggests that crime clustered in small areas, or "crime hot spots," accounts for a disproportionate amount of crime and disorder in many communities. In times of limited resources, local and tribal leaders need tools and information about crime trends in their jurisdiction and assistance in assessing, planning, and implementing the most effective use of criminal justice resources to address these issues. They also need a core foundation of resources and tools to support data-driven strategy development, community-driven capacity building for collaborative problem solving, and assistance to identify and implement evidence-based and innovative strategies to target these drivers of crime. A multi-faceted approach like the BCJI Program targets crime in the locations where most crime is occurring. This approach can have the biggest impact while also building the capacity of the community to deter future crime.

This new program is a part of the Administration's larger Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative (NRI) that supports local and tribal communities in developing place-based strategies to change neighborhoods of distress into neighborhoods of opportunity. Recognizing that interconnected solutions are needed in order to resolve the interconnected problems existing in distressed communities, the BCJI Program is designed to provide neighborhoods with coordinated federal support in the implementation of comprehensive place-based strategies to effectively reduce and prevent crime by connecting this support to broader comprehensive neighborhood revitalization efforts. The FY 2012 program will fund planning and implement grants, as well as enhancement grants.

The city of Baltimore will utilize this grant to address the needs of the McElderry Park Neighborhood. This project will address three primary goals: 1. Reduce incidence of juvenile crime in McElderry Park neighborhood; 2. Reduce incidence of violent crime in McElderry Park neighborhood and; 3. Provide alternatives to criminal activity for residents of McElderry Park. Grant funds will be used to: provide overtime to officers to conduct law enforcement and community policing efforts; perform data analysis, problem assessments, and a project evaluation; identify best practices; and pay for personnel to administer the project.

CA/NCF

Date Created: September 24, 2012