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Understanding Boston:

 

Community Safety

The Boston Foundation believes that the children and families of Greater Boston deserve to live in neighborhoods that are safe, clean and free of violence.

As such, it works with its partners in the nonprofit and public sectors to develop positive activities for our city’s young people and strengthen neighborhood-based organizing designed to create safe and healthy communities.

In close cooperation with the Crime and Justice Institute, the Boston Foundation’s Understanding Boston series has published two major reports on the state’s Criminal Offender Record Information (CORI) system.  Both reports were released at forums.

 Community Safety Spotlight:
StreetSafe Boston Initiative
On December 17, 2008, the Boston Foundation, Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, the Boston Police Department and a broad partnership of leaders from the city, the private and civic sectors, and organizations that serve Boston neighborhoods launched an ambitious $26 million, multi-year strategy to cut violent crime among 16 to 24-year-olds in Boston by focusing on five neighborhoods (see map at right and list below) that are responsible for a significant percentage of the youth homicide, assaults and gun violence.
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Indicators-related research:
October 08, 2009
October 08, 2009
October 10, 2008
 
Selected grants:
June 10, 2010
March 30, 2010
October 08, 2009
  
Recent Community Safety Reports:
Priorities & Public Safety II report cover
Over the past six months, the Massachusetts criminal justice system has come under scrutiny due to the budget growth in its corrections agencies. This growth combined with the state’s budget crisis has compelled a closer examination of the oversight, decision-making and outcomes of one particular agency: the Probation Department.  Recent reports have highlighted the Department’s hiring practices, lack of oversight and reluctance to share important public safety data and has led to calls for significant change in its structure, management and oversight.
Priorities and Public Safety cover
New research identifies rapidly growing state corrections costs as an economic burden at a time of budget cuts forced by the ongoing economic crisis. According to the report, the Commonwealth could ease this burden by adopting strategies proven to shrink prison populations and reduce rates of recidivism.
CORI Report cover
The Boston Foundation and the Crime and Justice Institute have released a report recommending changes in the way the Criminal Offender Record Information (CORI) is used, in order to remove unnecessary barriers to employment for men and women with criminal histories.  At the same time, the report calls for retaining the system’s ability to maintain the safety of the workplace.   
CORI: Balancing Individual Rights with Public Safety cover
As our society becomes increasingly focused on security as a key national and civic issue, we inevitably face the recurring dilemma of balancing the desire for public safety with the need to preserve individual rights. The conflict between public safety and individual rights is at the essence of the current debate around Criminal Offender Recorder Information, or CORI.   
  
Community Safety Forums:
December 15, 2008
On December 4th, a front-page story in The Boston Globe announced a new youth anti-violence initiative—an unprecedented partnership of the Boston Foundation, Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino, the Boston Police Department, other public and private civic leaders and organizations that serve Boston’s neighborhoods.Called StreetSafe Boston, the ambitious initiative was formally launched on December 15th at the Sportsmen’s Tennis Club in Dorchester.
May 02, 2007
The Boston Foundation and the Crime and Justice Institute continued their focus on reforming the state’s CORI system with the release of a second report on the topic in early May. CORI stands for the Criminal Offender Record Information system, which is seen by many as placing unfair barriers to employment for men and women with criminal histories.
 
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