FY 2022-23 Proposed Policy Budget
VIOLENCE PREVENTION
Mission Statement
The Department of Violence Prevention pursues a public health approach to dramatically reduce violent crime through community-led violence prevention and intervention strategies for individuals, families and communities most-impacted by violence.
Learn more about who we are and what we do here.
SERVICE IMPACTS &
EQUITY CONSIDERATIONS
Enhancements
Public Safety & Violence Prevention
- The deletion of 1.0 FTE Case Manager I position and the addition of 1.0 FTE Program Analyst III position will provide a dedicated staff member to coordinate direct service work across the three focus areas of gender-based violence, group and gun violence, and community healing.
- Equity Consideration: The Program Analyst III will identify and implement coordinated approaches to direct service delivery across the department’s strategies of group/gun violence, gender-based violence, and community healing. There is extensive overlap between these categories of work in the communities served by the DVP and thus prevention and intervention activities must be integrated to achieve maximum impact. The 12 OPD police beats primarily served by the DVP’s three categories of work are overwhelmingly composed of residents of color and low-income residents.
- Adds 1.0 FTE Health & Human Services Program Planner - The addition of a Health and Human Services Program Planner will ensure that the department’s life coaching and employment models are well designed and implemented by internal staff and contracted providers.
- Equity Consideration: The addition of an HHS Program Planner will allow the department to more consistently implement life coaching and employment services with fidelity to designed models. The department’s life coaching and employment services primarily engage residents of color, all of whom have been impacted by violence.
SIGNIFICANT BUDGETARY CHANGES
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