Gainesville and partners make progress with Community Gun Violence Prevention Alliance

Press release from City of Gainesville

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – With two meetings under its belt, the Community Gun Violence Prevention Alliance is making progress in the effort to turn the tide on gun crime and neighborhood violence in Gainesville, Alachua County, and the surrounding municipalities. Participants are focused on three broad objectives: to cooperate and strengthen efforts to address gun violence; to improve outcomes for survivors and those at risk; and to spearhead a collaborative group of community stakeholders.

The Alliance is the result of an agreement between three main partners: the City of Gainesville, Alachua County, and Santa Fe College. The collaboration was formalized through a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) signed in May, and meetings began in June. Attended by stakeholders, policymakers, and neighbors both in person and online, these gatherings are a direct outcome of priorities set by local elected officials.

“Last year, the Gainesville City Commission and the Alachua County Commission declared gun violence a public health crisis,” said Gainesville City Manager Cynthia W. Curry. “In June, the United States Surgeon General did the same. The Alliance uses the basic tenets and tools of public health to convene experts able to develop, test, and adopt strategies to help prevent violent crime in our community.”

This approach reflects the vision of IMPACT GNV, the framework that guides the City of Gainesville’s gun violence intervention and prevention initiatives. Under the leadership of City Manager Curry, IMPACT GNV has partnered with the B.O.L.D. program (Brave, Overt Leaders of Distinction) to provide assistance and case management to individuals, often justice-involved, in need of guidance and support. The City also has teamed with the Willie Mae Stokes Community Center for community outreach and violence interruption in areas hardest hit by gun crime.

“Our team has attended multiple community meetings and events since forming in March,” said Gainesville Gun Violence Intervention Program Manager Brittany Coleman. “Public education is key to our work, and we use a trauma-informed approach because so many people have been impacted by violence. So far, we have engaged with more than 200 neighbors, and about 80 children and families have taken our gun safety pledge.”

Meetings of the Alliance are open to the public and provide community members with an opportunity to share opinions and ask questions that will shape future programs and services. To register to attend an upcoming meeting, contact Dr. Asha Brunings, Santa Fe College Interim Executive Director of Organizational and Community Engagement.

To subscribe to the City of Gainesville’s IMPACT GNV quarterly newsletter visit www.GainesvilleFL.gov/IMPACTGNV.

  • ““Our team has attended multiple community meetings and events since forming in March,” said Gainesville Gun Violence Intervention Program Manager Brittany Coleman. “Public education is key to our work.”

    Did you have any meetings with thugs, gangbangers, and inmates? I didn’t think so. However, if it tickles your virtue bone and YOU ‘feel’ better then by all means proceed,

    • Cynthia, you will gain absolutely nothing but a really swell income by sitting in yet one more meeting and virtue signal with your cronies. Take on the thugs with illegal guns. Get out on the street and face these offenders as our police and first responders do. Stop throwing anti-violence parties on my tax dollars. This is a serious situation. Stop making it one more tragedy that is swept away with pizza and Coke.

  • They’re not making progress. They’re making meetings. That’s it! And please stop calling it gun violence. They’re SHOOTINGS. A gun can’t commit violence…it’s an inanimate object!

  • Teach basic civil courtesy, such as NOT STEALING guns or anything else. Where are the many District 1 church pastors in this, to teach the 10 Commandments and how it was a major part in civilizing European vandals and nomads into what it became later?

    • By “what it became later”, you mean WWI and WWII?

      Powerful stuff those 10 Commandments, especially

      “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.” …
      “Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image.” …
      “Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain.” …
      “Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.” …

      Gosh darn it that’s good stuff.

      • 36 “Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?”
        37 Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’[a] 38 This is the first and greatest commandment. 39 And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’[b] 40 All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.” Matthew 22:37 – 40

        Guess we’re all failing.

        • Love G*d, love your neighbor, love yourself. In that order. That sums it up.

    • That won’t work. You can’t get some of those individuals in school – much less church.

    • The district one pastors are getting arrested for sleeping with their flock.

  • Meetings aren’t going to solve our young black violence issue unfortunately.

  • Ms. Coleman was partially right. Meeting with families. As I am certain this commandment has been preached, it takes a mother AND father to raise the child!
    And no, the baby daddy stopping by to steal your EBT card doesn’t count as a family bonding time.
    Until the family unit makes it more desirable to hang with ‘the parents’ and not the gang, nothing will ever change.
    Baby momma, get off your a#$ and that Obama phone, spend quality time with your kids.
    If you don’t, there is one who roams the earth seeking and devouring children such as yours. And no, you don’t get a second chance once you are in HELL.

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