Craig Smith is KGUN 9's Southeast side reporter. Send your story ideas to Craig at craig.smith@kgun9.com.
The City of Tucson is trying to do more to prevent violence. There’s a recognition that a lot of it comes from young men in their 20s or even younger. Now they’re trying to work on a more coordinated effort to help pull together programs that work to prevent violent behavior by that group.
Isaac Durgen is a City of Tucson employee who works to cool down angry young men now. But he remembers when he was 17. He saw swarms of police at a friend's house and heard his friend Lalo was dead.“I remember the first thought in my mind was ‘Oh, I got a gun’, and I went home. I got the gun. I met up with these other teenagers. We all had guns. We had beef with other neighborhoods, and we were all in that car with our guns, and we're going to go over there. We're going to go because we knew it was them, right?”He says they stopped short of shooting when they learned it wasn’t a gun that killed their friend, it was drugs.The City of Tucson says young guys with guns are behind a large share of the shootings.Tucson Police say last year 46 percent of homicide suspects were 25 or younger.Most were 18 or 19.A new effort called Scaling Safety from the Alliance for Safety and Justice brings a national organization’s support to help coordinate and pay for a wide range of organizations working to steer young people off the road to violence.Boys to Men has mentor programs in 24 local schools. Counselors like Jah Hopkins give young people a place to talk out their issues so they don’t act them out with violence.He says, “They have the opportunity to express their emotions, what's going on, to talk about things that are maybe triggers. This is a way we kind of get them before the violence intercedes.”Flowers and Bullets teaches young people to care for a small farm—and care for themselves in the process.Jacob Robles with the group says, “I've noticed that when you introduce these concepts of like, caring for caring for something, caring for the land, kind of trickles into caring for those around you, right?”The organization behind Scaling Safety says the strength of Tucson’s violence avoidance programs made it one of five cities chosen for more help.Mayor Regina Romero says she wants to build towards a safer city with systems that reach far into the future.
KGUN9 Tucson Police Youth Violence Sacling Safety
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Space Force launches unit at Davis-MonthanCraig Smith is KGUN 9's Southeast side reporter. Send your story ideas to Craig at craig.smithkgun9.com.
Read more »
More families turning to Casa Maria Soup Kitchen as SNAP benefit enrollment dropsJacqueline Aguilar joined KGUN 9 as a multimedia journalist in February of 2024.
Read more »
Tucson Samaritans bring East Coast college students to Arizona-Mexico border for firsthand look at borderlandsMarc Monroy is a multimedia journalist for KGUN 9, arriving from KGUN 9’s sister station, KXXV, in Waco, Texas.
Read more »
Sam’s Club planned for near Davis-MonthanCraig Smith is KGUN 9's Southeast side reporter. Send your story ideas to Craig at craig.smithkgun9.com.
Read more »
'No Bigger Motivation': Palo Verde Chases 3A Crown Against Reinstated CoolidgeJason Barr is KGUN-TV's sports reporter and anchor, and he appears regularly on KGUN newscasts.
Read more »
Water barrel vandalism in Sonoran Desert puts migrants, hikers at risk, organizations sayMarc Monroy is a multimedia journalist for KGUN 9, arriving from KGUN 9’s sister station, KXXV, in Waco, Texas.
Read more »
