Support for Children Exposed to Gun Violence

With orange balloons flanking the stage at our Watts campus, Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer, Childrenā€™s Institute and the Los Angeles Police Department announced the REACH TEAM, a new program to support children exposed to gun violence in the Watts community.

In 2017, there were approximately 110 calls made to LAPD in Watts reporting shots fired, with over 40% of the calls coming from local housing developments.

When gun violence occurs in a community, children are often witnesses to the event and its aftermath. The impact of gun violence exposure is associated with learning, health, emotional and behavioral issues, as well as substance abuse later in life. Early intervention and emotional and social support are key in preventing and healing the symptoms of trauma.

Setting the tone for the announcement, actor/poet/activist and Watts native Kyland Turner performed one of his original pieces of poetry.

Following his performance, Turner commented, “Iā€™m 23 and Iā€™ve lost more friends than I can count on both of my hands to violence and I donā€™t think thatā€™s normal. I donā€™t think itā€™s normal to experience this thing of literally living in a war zone, and I had to find a way out. For me it was poetry, it was art, it was spoken word, it was writing.”

L to R:Ā Kyland Turner, Actor/Poet/Activist; Yvette Martinez, Children’s Institute AdministrativeĀ Assistant; Dennis Kato, Deputy Chief Operations-South Bureau,Ā LAPDĀ 

ā€œChildren deserve safe and secure childhoods, and when violence erupts into their lives, we have to step in and act, and thatā€™s just what we are going to do,ā€ said Feuer. ā€œI have put Deputy City Attorney Lara Drino, who has years of experience working with abused children, in charge of our efforts to work with our partners to intervene quickly and effectively to reduce the long-term trauma children exposed to violence suffer.ā€

The REACH TEAM aims to ensure children and families exposed to gun violence receive appropriate and timely crisis intervention and support services through Childrenā€™s Institute and partner organizations.

ā€œChildrenā€™s Institute is so pleased to be partnering with the City Attorneyā€™s office and LAPD on this important initiative that is a natural extension of our work offering trauma-informed services and support to children and families in the Watts community and throughout Los Angeles. In addition to providing early intervention and follow up care through our REACH TEAM, we also hope to increase community awareness around the possible long-term effects of gun violence exposure and encourage outreach for support,ā€ said Martine Singer, President & CEO, Childrenā€™s Institute.

“Shots fired in our community tear at the very fabric of our emotional security, especially for our children,ā€ said Michel Moore, LAPD Chief of Police. ā€œThere is no excuse for a child in our city to be exposed to gun violence, and the Los Angeles Police Department will work diligently to ensure our most vulnerable residents are safe and supported.ā€

When a gunshot is reported in the Watts community, LAPD will assess the scene and notify the REACH TEAM, comprised of Childrenā€™s Institute staff, who will provide an initial crisis response to the families involved as soon as possible. From there, children identified for follow-up support will be referred to Childrenā€™s Institute to receive trauma-informed health services, as well as other family services and support.

Children’s Institute staff member Yvette Martinez closed the event with her personal account of growing up in South Los Angeles in the midst of gun violence. “Once you are connected to the effects of one bullet whether by sight, sound or because you knew the individualā€™s family, you are never the same. The support of my family has always kept me going. But once again I ask, ‘should we have to cope without professional help?'”

As a part of the program, the LA City Attorneyā€™s office and Childrenā€™s Institute will regularly conduct community outreach within Watts schools, housing developments, community organizations and nonprofits. Children and families in Watts who have been exposed to gun violence in the past can also reach out for support.

This initiative has received guidance and support from the Watts Gang Task Force and The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles.

Daniel Beaty’s “emergency” and The Healing Power of the Arts

On Saturday, September 8, an eager crowd gathered at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills for multi-talented artist Daniel Beatyā€™s powerful one-man show ā€œemergencyā€ presented by Childrenā€™s Institute.

Foster youth from CIIā€™s Individualized Transitional Skills Program (ITSP) and high school students from Santee Education Complex arrived on school buses and were treated to a pre-show Chipotle feast before taking their seats in the Bram Goldsmith Theater.

The lights dimmed, cell phones were silenced, and Beaty immediately commanded the room through poetry, song, humor and an array of characters ranging from two young brothers with a mentally ill father to a little girl living with AIDs.

Following the performance, Beaty was joined by Judy Belk, President & CEO of The California Wellness Foundation, for a conversation about his personal journey and the power of art to heal.

ā€Similarly, art creates a relatedness and a shared experience that touches us on a soul place. Who would think that I, as this big black guy, would be playing a little girl with AIDS? But I do that and thatā€™s consistently a character that moves people the most,ā€ said Beaty who continued,ā€œIn our core, despite all of the illusions of separation that are so pervasive in our society, we know weā€™re connected to each other. We know weā€™re made of the same stuff and we desperately need artists to remind us of that.ā€

As the young people exited the theater, many were moved by the performance and shared their reactions:

ā€œI thought that Daniel was very inspiring for his strength and his way of expressing his lifestyle, what heā€™s been through. He really made an impact on the youth today, like how we can get through a lot of things through art. It doesnā€™t have to be what weā€™ve been through, it can be what we want to be or what we want for our future. He really models strength and creativity and thatā€™s not something that Iā€™ve ever seen before.ā€

ā€œI thought it was incredible. I liked all the characters that he played, but when he talked about not having his dad around…his mom was the primary caregiver. The roles for me are reversed but I still understand what he was trying to say. I thought it was beautiful how he incorporated everybodyā€™s life situation.ā€

In Beatyā€™s words,Ā ā€œItā€™s so important for young people to be exposed to different worlds and different experiences, such as coming to a beautiful theater like The Wallisā€¦When I got to Yale and began to see how other people were living, I discovered that the trauma that was normalized in my childhood was not necessarily what everybody else was dealing with. And so my question became, How do I start to get free?”

Thank you once again to the sponsors who made this event possible:
The Ralph M. Parsons Foundation, The California Wellness Foundation, David Bohnett Foundation,Ā Southern California Grantmakers and The Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts.

 

Back to School Week

It is Back to School Week at CII, and it is great to see the early childhood services programs moving ahead at ā€˜full speedā€™.

As you know, the CII ECS division offers parents a number of early childhood program options. They include part day/part year center based services, full day/full year center based services, full year home based services (children up to 3 years of age), and full day/full year services in family child care homes under contract to CII. Our overall goal is to ensure that all children in our care and their parents, regardless of program option, are ready for a successful school experience by the time the children enter kindergarten.

So what are we looking like this year? ECS projects will serve nearly 2,500 children up to 5 years of age in the current year. Approximately 500 of these children are in our home based program, including First 5LA funded Select Home Visitation in SPAā€™s 6 and 8, almost 200 are receiving services in contracted family child care homes, and the rest are placed in one of CIIā€™s 30 early education centers. We are excited this year to have added two new preschool buildings: Ā Our Compton Blvd. facility will serve 30 children: 6 infants and 24 toddler age children; our Western Avenue facility will serve 8 toddlers and 20 Head Start age children. Both centers recently began operations.

Summer months are important to ECS program operations, and this year was no exception. A number of key events took place: Ā recruitment and enrollment of new children and families, hiring of new staff ā€“ over 40 new staff were hired in the last four months, restocking classroom supplies, refurbishing playgrounds and classrooms, and finally, comprehensive training for classroom and non-classroom staff. Thank you all for your contributions to all of these efforts. They are not only very much appreciated, they are essential to our success.

This year ECS, in line with ā€œOne CIIā€ strategic initiative, is already working on two key program efforts that will involve collaboration with CIIā€™s Early Childhood Behavioral Health Services and Project Fatherhood. Ā Our goal for the current program year is to assess, refer and serve 100 children/families through our mental health services and to initiate a series of program activities with Project Fatherhood staff that will engage fathers currently enrolled in ECS. Ā We look forward to two very successful collaborations that will benefit the children and families that we serve.

Stay tuned! We are always working on something!!

– Manny Castellanos, Jr., Ed.D., LCSW, Senior Vice President Programs