If Salt Lake City truly wants to address the gang problem, city leaders and the community need to develop a plan and then continue to follow-up on it.
That was one of the conclusions reached Thursday in a meeting among Mayor Ralph Becker and more than a dozen law enforcement and community leaders, including Salt Lake Police Chief Chris Burbank, head of the Salt Lake Metro Gang Unit Lt. Steve Anjewierden and former state lawmaker Duane Bourdeaux, now with the Colors of Success program.
On the heals of the tragic drive-by shooting death of 7-year-old Maria Del Carmen Menchaca and the killing of the manager of the Family Dollar Store in March, Becker called the group together to discuss the city's recent gang activity.
Concerns ranging from incarceration to deportation to education and intervention were discussed during the meeting, which lasted a little over an hour. But one of the key points the group agreed on was that whatever was decided, there needed to be follow-through.
"I can't tell you how many of these meetings I've been to over the years," said Salt Lake City police Capt. Rick Findlay, head of the department's gang unit.
Once the city comes up with a game plan on how to address the gang issue, "We need to push and push and push until it rolls on its own," he said.
Bourdeaux agreed that too many times in the past, the community let programs addressing gangs slip through the cracks during low periods of violence.
"We have to work on this 365 days a year," he said. "When crisis like this happen, everyone jumps on the bandwagon."
Outcry over gang violence in the city is nothing new. In the early '90s, Gov. Mike Leavitt called on lawmakers to address the gang issue during a special session of the legislature. Salt Lake Mayor Deedee Corradini reacted similarly by proposing several new city ordinance to curb gun violence and in 1992 formed the Midnight Basketball League in an effort to keep at-risk juveniles out of gangs.
Findlay said what's needed is a one-stop shop for gang members and at-risk kids to go to if they have questions or concerns or need help escaping gangs. He pointed to programs such as West Valley's Project 180.
"We don't need to re-invent the wheel," he said. "We don't need to go thousands of miles away to find (a model plan)."
Bourdeaux also called on the different community leaders and councils to work together, noting that gangs aren't just a Hispanic problem or a Tongan problem.
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