[From Our Partners] Evaluation of the West Harlem Community Reentry and Restoration Project

The West Harlem Community Reentry and Restoration Project (WHCRRP) is an initiative funded under CJII in response to the June 2014 law enforcement intervention (LEI) that led to the arrest and indictment of 103 individuals living in the Manhattanville and Grant public housing developments and surrounding areas. The LEI was a result of an ongoing violence between rival groups from those two housing developments; although it reduced criminal activity in the area, it has had lasting impacts on the community, including increased mistrust of the police, trauma, and challenges surrounding reentry for those who served time as a result of the LEI. As such, the WHCRRP focuses on the West Harlem community that was directly affected by the LEI with a goal of reducing the direct effects of the LEI on the community and its members.

The Osborne Association was funded to implement the initiative. Osborne partnered with the Tayshana Chicken Murphy Foundation (TCMF) and the Living Redemption Youth Opportunity Hub to provide direct services to those in the Manhattanville and Grant Houses and surrounding area. The WHCRRP focuses on (1) the 103 individuals who were arrested during the 2014 LEI, (2) family members of individuals arrested in the LEI, and (3) other members of the community affected by the intervention. The program employed three interventions aimed at invigorating community cohesion: credible messengers, restorative justice, and a capacity building incubator.

As part of CJII, RTI International was funded to conduct a comprehensive, mixed-methods evaluation of the West Harlem Project. . The overall goals for the evaluation are to understand how the program is implemented; determine the association between Program participation and risk factors for criminal justice system involvement; and identify the relationship, if any, between the Program and community perceptions of cohesion and reconciliation. This report documents the program’s implementation progress, successes, challenges, and recommendations as identified by the evaluation activities conducted from January 2021 through December 2022.

See our blog for a look at the important role credible messengers played in preventing violence and connecting community members to support.


ABOUT THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE INVESTMENT INITIATIVE

Under former Manhattan District Attorney Cy R. Vance, Jr., the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office created the Criminal Justice Investment Initiative (CJII) in order to use $250 million seized in international financial crime prosecutions to invest in transformative projects that will improve public safety, prevent crime, and promote a fair and efficient justice system. CJII is a first-of-its-kind effort to support innovative community projects that fill critical gaps and needs in New York City’s criminal legal system infrastructure.

CJII focuses on three investment areas—crime prevention, diversion and reentry, and supports for survivors of crime. The CUNY Institute for State & Local Governance manages and provides technical assistance to CJII contractors, and conducts oversight and performance measurement throughout the lifetime of the initiative.

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[From Our Partners] The Impacts of College-in-Prison Participation on Safety and Employment in New York State

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Reform in Action: Findings and Recommendations from a 3-Year Process Evaluation of New York's 2020 Criminal Legal Reforms