Artwork stating 'Education Destroys Barriers', 'We Demand Treatment', and 'I Need A Chance'

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  • VigilanS, le dispositif anti-suicide qui résiste au Covid

    Depuis 2015 dans le Nord-Pas-de-Calais, des infirmières et des psychologues assurent un suivi pendant six mois des personnes ayant commis une tentative de suicide. Cet outil de recontact a été étendu à l’ensemble de la France en raison de ses très bons résultats. Les tentatives de suicides ont baissé de l’ordre de 10 à 12 % en trois ans.

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  • What can East Lansing expect from its police oversight commission?

    When Ann Arbor created a citizen panel overseeing its police department, it chose the approach that research shows is the one best suited to having real authority, and thus the most likely to reduce racial disparities in arrests and police shootings. It's too soon to know if the agency's investigations of complaints against police and review of police budgets and policies will achieve the ultimate goal of improving community trust in the police. But its chair says it is in a position to press for more accountability and transparency. East Lansing has just adopted the same model.

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  • The Car Crashes That Go Undetected

    The Vision Zero program many cities use to reduce traffic deaths depends on data to inform where to target safety measures like redesigned streets and speed limits. But, when significant numbers of crashes, particularly involving pedestrians and bicycles, go missing in the data, the interventions miss the problems. Racial disparities in unreported crashes or unresponsive police mean that the problems are compounded in under-served areas. Data improvements in D.C., San Francisco, and other cities aim to fill the gaps so that the benefits of Vision Zero can extend to places where they're needed most.

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  • How Mental Health First Responders in an Oregon City 'De-escalate' Conflict and Save Lives

    CAHOOTS has become a national model because of its uncommon partnership with the Eugene Police Department. The police chief says CAHOOTS' unarmed first responders to mental health crises can de-escalate crises before crimes occur or someone gets hurt. That's the idea behind the decades-old agency that takes calls where police can sometimes cause worse outcomes. The crisis intervention workers and medics treat people on the scene or transport them to places where they can get the help they need. Police are available but rarely needed for safety on those calls.

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  • Quel bilan pour l'école du socle à Jussey ?

    Le passage de l’école primaire au collège peut être source de difficultés pour certains élèves. A Jussey, en Haute-Saone, l'école du socle est expérimentée depuis 2019. Ce système consiste à assurer une continuité pédagogique entre les niveaux de CM1, CM2 et 6e en impliquant les enseignants et en mutualisant des équipements scolaires. Si ses résultats restent difficiles à mesurer, ce système permet aux enseignants du collège de diagnostiquer les problèmes de leurs futurs élèves et aux élèves de mieux s'intégrer à leur arrivée au collège.

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  • Why are Black children removed from homes at high rate? L.A. County plans 'blind removal' pilot

    Based on its success in New York, ‘blind removal’ will be implemented in Los Angeles County’s child welfare system. The pilot project eliminates the child’s race from information available to social workers to prevent biases from affecting the decision-making process of removing a child from their home. The pilot was successful in decreasing the number of Black children in foster care.

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  • Tribes Are Leading the Way to Remove Dams and Restore Ecosystems

    After decades of collaboration between the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe in Washington state, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and other organizations, the Elwha River dams were taken down to restore fish populations and return the ecosystem to its natural state. Grant funding has helped tribal biologists partner with organizations and universities to implement their fish restoration plan. While the work is expected to take years and funding isn’t always guaranteed, the restoration work so far has seen native plants and fish return.

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  • How emergency workers are combating gun violence: 'We have to invest'

    Bridging the Gap is a violence prevention program at Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center that emphasizes treating more than the physical wounds of gunshot victims. Starting in the hospital and continuing afterward, the program gives victims case managers and mentors to link them to services that will change their life's trajectory, including job opportunities. The aim is to interrupt the cycles in which the same people get injured repeatedly, sometimes leading to their deaths. Since the program started in 2007, people it has helped experience far fewer repeat injuries.

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  • Tag team approach to healthcare reaches older adults in Bangladeshi community during COVID-19 pandemic

    Sakhi for South Asian Women in New York has significantly increased their outreach during the coronavirus pandemic, connecting clients to services and resources. The group conducted 1,500 wellness calls and needs assessments in local South Asian communities and increased their caseload and cash assistance to clients. The group, who publishes their content in nine languages, also helps clients who do not have documentation pay for groceries and medications through their Sakhi Solidarity Fund. For clients who need help with family law and immigration issues, Sakhi can connect them to pro bono legal partners.

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  • Philly should offer rewards for shopping local like they do in Akron, Ohio

    Shoppers who are given financial incentives to spend their money on mom and pop stores are boosting local economies. The city of Akron created an app, Akronite, to incentivize local business after the fallout from Covid-19.

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