There
is growing momentum in response to the potential elimination of CDC’s youth
violence prevention activities in the federal budget proposals. We have
received over 600 signatures on our letter asking congress to protect this
critical funding. There is more than funding at stake; this is about saving
lives.
We
have a very small window in which to affect this process, and we need every
voice to make a difference. We'd like to reach at least 750 signatures in the
next week. Help us send a clear message to lawmakers: We cannot eliminate youth
violence prevention at CDC. Please
sign-on to a letter to Congress that asks members to protect federal youth
violence prevention funding at CDC. You will be joining national
partners such as National Association of City and County Health Officials
(NACCHO) and the Safe States Alliance and local efforts such as the Violence
Prevention Coalition of Greater Los Angeles when
you sign on.
We
have learned over the past 30 years how to help maintain community safety,
reduce deaths and injuries and strengthen the environment needed for
communities to thrive. Wiping out this funding threatens the entire public
health approach to preventing violence and everything we have learned over the
past decades. We cannot leave our children’s safety solely in the hands of the
criminal justice system.
A
public health approach to violence saves lives and supports thriving
communities. Reducing violence is a powerful way to stimulate economic
development in communities. The public health approach brings a method and
approach to the table that is grounded in the science that has confirmed that
violence is preventable. We must not wait until after-the-fact for more
expensive responses and needless suffering. The federal funding level for youth
violence prevention activities is a small but vital investment in the safety
and future of our young people and our communities.
Among
the efforts at stake is Prevention Institute’s UNITY
(Urban Networks Increasing Thriving Youth) Initiative. UNITY works with cities
all over the country to enhance their efforts to prevent violence. UNITY has
also informed efforts to address violence as a contributor to chronic illness,
the major contributor to skyrocketing healthcare costs. (See: the UNITY
Fact Sheet: Links Between Violence and Chronic Diseases.)
Thank you for your continued action and for forwarding this
email to your networks.
For
additional information, including fact sheets, visit Prevention Institute’s new
Preventing
Violence Advocacy page.
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