Awful Ideas That Worked!

These terrible ideas actually worked.

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These terrible ideas actually worked.

A City Pays People Not To Kill One Another

Ten years ago, Richmond, California, USA, a city of 1,04,000, had one of the highest murder rates in the country. Millions were spent on crime-prevention programmes, but nothing worked. The city council declared a state of emergency.

But since the town instituted a plan to pay the toughest gang members to follow a Life Map that would keep them out of trouble, the city's murder rate dropped 77 per cent from 2007-when the programme was initiated-to 2014. During that period, homicides in the rest of the county rose.

The idea was the brainchild of DeVone Boggan, 49, the CEO of a youth-mentoring consultancy in nearby Oakland. Once his plan was approved by the city council, Boggan created the Office of Neighborhood Safety.

ONS staff members, most of them former felons, use police data as well as intelligence they gather on the street to determine the gang members most likely to kill or be killed.

Up to 50 gangbangers [members of a street gang] are offered a monthly stipend for nine months, ranging from $300 to $1,000, to stick to their Life Map. Staff members help gang members attain a driver's licence or high school equivalency diploma. They also arrange job training and classes such as anger management. The better they do at avoiding trouble, the more money they make.

The thinking is simple, criminologist Barry Krisberg told the The Washington Post: "If you can't stabilize their financial situation, they'll go back to dealing dope, a dangerous business."

To be sure, other factors, such as gentrification and a new police chief who put a priority on community policing, are cited as contributing to the drop in crime. All these influences have combined to recast Richmond's image.

"Young men who are historically responsible for gun violence in this city are making better decisions about how they negotiate everyday conflicts," Boggan told the Contra Costa Times...

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