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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Area Weed and Seed programs may be in danger

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We received the following notice from the Ferguson Road Initiative, but it is relevant to all area Weed and Seed programs:

Weed and Seed Committee Members:

Funding for FY 09 Weed and Seed program is in danger (ed note: Again!).

The House Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies (CJS) Subcommittee on Appropriations is tentatively scheduled to begin marking up its version of the FY 2009 CJS Appropriations Bill, which contains funding for the Weed and Seed program, on June 11, 2008.

The Weed and Seed program is one of the many programs that the President has recommended consolidating into the Byrne Public Safety and Protection Program. As a result, no specific dollars were allocated to this program in the President's FY 2009 Budget Request.

The Community Anti-Drug Coalition (CADCA) recommends using this link to contact your representative:

When you use the CADCA link above, the following sample letter will be automatically faxed to your representative:

RE: FY 2009 CJS Appropriations Bill and Weed and Seed program

I am writing to request that you support the highest possible funding level, but not less than $52 million for the Weed and Seed program in the FY 2009 Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies (CJS) Appropriations bill. The Weed and Seed program has historically received its own appropriation within the CJS Appropriations Bill. However, for the second year in a row the President's FY 2009 Budget Request recommends consolidating a number of programs, including the Weed and Seed program, into one competitive grant program, the Byrne Public Safety and Protection Program. As a result, the President's Budget Request does not allocate any specific dollars to the Weed and Seed program. If this recommendation comes to fruition, it will be detrimental to the program.

The Weed and Seed program, a U.S. Department of Justice community-based initiative, is an innovative and comprehensive multi-agency approach to law enforcement, crime and drug prevention and community revitalization. In collaboration with local law enforcement and community residents, the program develops local capacity and promotes community participation which:

  • enables communities to reduce drug and violent crime,
  • strengthens community capacity to increase the quality of life, and
  • promotes long-term community health and vitality through direct funding and support to nearly 300 communities across the country.

Anti-drug coalitions, local law enforcement and other state and community-based organizations rely extensively on this program to assist in the implementation of their anti-drug programs.

The Weed and Seed program has achieved great success in reducing crime communities throughout the country. For example, between 2003 and 2006 (after the implementation of Weed and Seed) the proportion of major crimes within these high crime areas decreased by 2.1% overall. Further, the Weed and Seed program contributed to proportional reductions in four out of six specific major crime categories, including an 8.3% decrease in the proportions of drug arrests. These decreases at Weed and Seed sites were achieved at a time when crime levels were increasing at the national level.

Please ensure that the Weed and Seed program receive the highest possible funding level in the FY 2009 Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations bill, but not less $52 million. This is critical in order for the program to maintain its unique, multi-sector, community-based approach to preventing crime and drug abuse prevention. Thank you for considering my request.

According to the US Department of Justice:

Weed and Seed, a community-based strategy sponsored by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), is an innovative, comprehensive multiagency approach to law enforcement, crime prevention, and community revitalization. CCDO oversees the Weed and Seed initiative.

Weed and Seed is foremost a strategy—rather than a grant program—that aims to prevent, control, and reduce violent crime, drug abuse, and gang activity in designated high-crime neighborhoods across the country. The more than 250 Weed and Seed sites range in size from several neighborhood blocks to several square miles, with populations ranging from 3,000 to 50,000.

The strategy involves a two-pronged approach: law enforcement agencies and prosecutors cooperate in "weeding out" violent criminals and drug abusers and public agencies and community-based private organizations collaborate to "seed" much-needed human services, including prevention, intervention, treatment, and neighborhood restoration programs. A community-oriented policing component bridges the weeding and seeding elements.

At each site, the relevant U.S. Attorney's Office plays a leadership role in organizing local officials, community representatives, and other key stakeholders to form a steering committee. The U.S. Attorney's Office also facilitates coordination of federal, state, and local law enforcement efforts so that sites effectively use federal law enforcement partners in weeding strategies. In some instances, the U.S. Attorney's Office helps sites mobilize resources from a variety of federal agencies for seeding programs.

The Weed and Seed strategy is a multilevel strategic plan that includes four basic components: law enforcement; community policing; prevention, intervention, and treatment; and neighborhood restoration. Four fundamental principles underlie the Weed and Seed strategy: collaboration, coordination, community participation, and leveraging of resources.

In most Weed and Seed sites, joint task forces of law enforcement agencies from all levels of government aim to reduce both crime and fear of crime, which gives back hope to residents living in distressed neighborhoods and sets the stage for community revitalization. Community policing embraces two key concepts—community engagement and problem solving. Community policing strategies foster a sense of responsibility within the community for solving crime problems and help develop cooperative relationships between the police and residents.

The prevention, intervention, and treatment component concentrates an array of human services on the designated neighborhood and links law enforcement, social services agencies, the private sector, and the community to improve the overall quality of services to residents. Every Weed and Seed site is required to establish a Safe Haven, a multiservice center often housed in a school or community center, where many youth- and adult-oriented services are delivered. Through coordinated use of federal, state, local, and private-sector resources, neighborhood restoration strategies focus on economic development, employment opportunities for residents, and improvements to the housing stock and physical environment of the neighborhood.

Communities interested in becoming Weed and Seed Communities (WSCs) must submit a Notice of Intent to the U.S. Attorney’s Office (USAO). WSCs must be developed in partnership with many local organizations to reduce crime and improve the quality of life in a community primarily through the redeployment of existing public and private resources into the community.

Promoting the long-term health and resilience of the community is a true goal of Weed and Seed, so sustainability must be a key part of a site's structure. The foundation for sustainability involves maintaining the steering committee as a mechanism for ongoing implementation of the Weed and Seed strategy beyond the life of the grant and identifying and securing existing and new resources and funding sources.

The FRI Weed and Seed was a major inspiration for Pegasus News.


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TJ Callaway Verified

Please take the time to follow the CADCA link mentioned in this article and send a letter in support of the Weed & Seed programs to our representatives.

3 months, 3 weeks ago ( Link to this comment | Suggest removal )

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