Pomona's plan to battle gangs slow to fruition
Saturday, December 04, 2004 - POMONA - City streets have quieted down since the
April killing of a California Highway Patrol officer outside
Pomona Superior courthouse, but the lure of gang life remains.
The April 21 shooting of Officer Thomas Steiner, allegedly
at the hands of a 16-year-old boy out to impress a local street
gang, shocked and horrified those within the community and
beyond.
City officials, however, remain dedicated to fulfilling a
promise made to residents that curtailing youth violence would
become a top priority. In response, the Mayor's Youth and
Family Task Force was established to boost outreach into the
community.
"This task force is not going away," said City Councilman
Dan Rodriguez, who helped create the initiative along with
Mayor Eddie Cortez. "We have seen the monster in the stories
published about our city and we have to face reality that we
have a serious problem. This thing, our committee, will not
die."
In two weeks the task force plans to unveil a resolution
that will lay the groundwork for tackling youth violence within
the city. It is expected to serve as the backbone for a future
youth master plan for the community, said Bernardo Rosa,
director of the Community Wellness Partnership, an organization
addressing youth in crisis within the city.
"People have to trust this is the right progress," Rosa
said. "Any community development process takes time. This way
you just don't add a Band-Aid to the problem. The process of
community prevention entails studying different models that
have worked in the past. There is no cookie-cutter approach to
this."
But the effort has been slow to evolve - too slow, say some.
"The city has done nothing since the Mayor's Task Force was
formed," said Juan Nievez with Sandlewood Rehab and
Development. "There are many people in the community that
believe this task force is just show and no action."
But Cortez contends that more time is needed to solidify a
lasting solution.
"It's been difficult, but I am not giving up," Cortez
said. "This is a gang issue. We need to focus on the wannabes,
the kids on the edge, the kids in gangs."
The resolution is the culmination of efforts by various
volunteers, including city activists, officials and residents
who have taken part in various task force meetings.
A community policing program, education and referrals for
at-risk children to the right programs will take priority under
the resolution, Cortez said.
Two weeks ago, federal facilitators with the Community
Policing Program, a component of the U.S. Justice Department,
came to the city at the invitation of Police Chief James Lewis,
who heads the law subcommittee of the task force, to train task
force volunteers.
The Community Policing Program focuses on partnerships
between law enforcement and the community, Lewis said.
"The Mayor's Task Force is going to need some minor
victories," Lewis said. "This group has got to focus on
something that they can accomplish. People need to be on the
same page and eventually we've got to stop having these
meetings and ... make something happen."
Since the task force's inception, a number of public
meetings have been fraught with debate, often leading to
dissension. Programs, ideologies and personalities clashed as
possible solutions were bandied about.
Meanwhile, the city's gang problems remain.
But task force leaders maintain the open debates and
discussions are needed to develop real solutions.
"I didn't spend so much time planning this out to have it
fizzle out," Cortez said. "I hope it becomes a model for how
to address gang problems in other cities. There will always be
hard-core gang members, but we just want to lessen the impact
and save the kids that can be saved."
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Task force will unveil program in two weeks
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