In Los Angeles, 1,100 street gangs and their 150,000 members commit an average of one gang-related killing and 10 drive-by shootings per day. In my Santa Barbara County, we don't have that level of violence. But this county is also being impacted by its local gangs and their evolving rivalries, which have resulted in the killing of many perceived enemies and the arrest, prosecution, and incarceration of their killers.
The number of local gang killings is low, and it's our common belief that one is too many. Whenever one of our children becomes a victim of gangs, it affects all of us. Specifically, when we personalize this problem and perceive the murdered child as a part of our family, it wounds our existence forever.
With this in mind, the South Coast Task Force on Youth Gangs was established to develop effective gang prevention, intervention, and suppression initiatives to serve and protect the lives of our children, youth, and families.
Gang prevention targets children and youth attending local schools who are at risk of joining gangs. Prevention includes teaching children character education to clarify the basic definitions of respect, responsibility, honesty, integrity, empathy, and loyalty. Prevention education also covers the definition of a gang, choices and consequences, refusal skills, conflict management, and how to achieve success outside of gangs.
Best practices in this arena include the evidence-based
Gang Resistance Is Paramount Program (GRIP)
. This program offers a curriculum of 15 gang prevention lessons for students in elementary and secondary schools. Each 50-minute lesson can be taught by trained teachers or community facilitators. Based on current evaluations of this program, more than 80 percent of students who participate in its educational and recreational activities stay out of gangs. The success of the program deserves attention and replication at local needy schools.