WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Senate has passed a bill introduced by U.S. Senators Gary Peters (D-MI) and John Cornyn (R-TX), the Project Safe Neighborhoods Grant Program Authorization Act of 2018, which would authorize a nationwide law enforcement program focused on the reduction of violent crime. A companion bill sponsored by U.S. Representative Barbara Comstock (R-VA-10) unanimously passed the House of Representatives in March.
“It is critical that we do all we can to help communities in Michigan who have seen firsthand the toll of gun violence and drug crimes,” said Senator Peters. “Project Safe Neighborhoods has worked with law enforcement and the communities they serve to create measurable results in Michigan by decreasing violence and crime throughout the state. I’m pleased that the Senate has approved this bill, so Project Safe Neighborhoods can continue to make communities safer in Michigan and around the country.”
“I learned from my time as Texas Attorney General that one of the keys to reducing crime rates and fighting violent crime in Texas is fostering partnerships and developing task forces between federal, state, and local law enforcement,” said. Senator Cornyn. “The Project Safe Neighborhoods program gives law enforcement on all levels the tools they need to collaborate, reduce violent crime, and keep our children safe.”
In Michigan, Detroit Project Safe Neighborhoods helped reduce gun crime in two high violent crime precincts on the west side of Detroit. In 2015, Saginaw received a Project Safe Neighborhoods grant that according to a Research Partner Final Report, helped the City of Saginaw dramatically reduce violent crime like homicides and robberies.
Project Safe Neighborhoods is a nationwide partnership between federal, state, and local law enforcement and prosecutors that uses evidence-based and data-driven approaches to reduce violent crime. Under the Project Safe Neighborhoods program, law enforcement agencies cooperate and focus their enforcement efforts on the organized criminal networks and repeat offenders who are driving the crime rates in a particular community. The program also works to build trust and partnerships between law enforcement and the communities they serve through coordinated outreach, public awareness, innovative tactics, and collaborative interventions. Since its inception in 2001, Project Safe Neighborhoods has been successfully deployed to reduce violent crime in large cities and smaller communities across the country.
According to a Michigan State University (MSU) study funded by the Department of Justice in 2013, Project Safe Neighborhoods led to a 13.1% decrease in violent crime in cities with a high-rate of program participation, including double-digit reductions in total firearms crime and homicides in every city examined by the study.
Specifically, the Project Safe Neighborhoods Grant Program Authorization Act of 2018:
The following organizations support Project Safe Neighborhoods Grant Program Authorization Act of 2018: the Fraternal Order of Police, the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association, the Sergeants Benevolent Association, the National Association of Police Organizations, the Major County Sheriffs of America, the National District Attorneys Association, the National Sheriffs’ Association, the National Criminal Justice Association, and the National Narcotic Officers' Associations' Coalition.