Keyon Jackson-Malone got involved in violent activities when he was a young man even though, earlier, he had helped resolve disputes as a peer mediator at Morse Middle School.
Seven years ago, he "had an epiphany" and resolved to turn his life around. Since then, Jackson-Malone, now in his early 40s, has been working as a "violence interrupter," first at a grassroots level and now in the Office of Violence Prevention’s 414 Life program. His past is an important part of what makes him effective in that role, he said.
Reggie Moore, the city health department’s Office of Violence Prevention director; Jeanette Kowalik, Milwaukee health commissioner; and other city and program leaders announced last week new partnerships with Froedtert & the Medical College of Wisconsin and Ascension Wisconsin to combat gun violence. They also introduced the first team of interrupters at a news conference at the Froedtert Cancer Center.
Ten interrupters trained by Cure Violence, a successful violence prevention effort based in Chicago and implemented in multiple cities around the world, started working in the Old North Milwaukee and Garden Homes neighborhoods on the city’s north side in November.
On call 24/7, they have interrupted 26 potentially violent situations and have built a caseload of 35 individuals who receive mentoring, said Derrick Rogers, the site director leading the team.
Cure Violence, founded as "Ceasefire" in 2000, takes a public health approach to "curing" violent behavior. Milwaukee’s Blueprint for Peace, released in November 2017, also is rooted in the proposition that violence operates like a contagious disease.
"If people are not safe from physical, psychological and emotional trauma, everything else in irrelevant," Kowalik said.
The Cure Violence model employs community members such as Jackson-Malone, who have relationships with neighborhood residents and can relate to people struggling with violence.
Through the new partnerships, violence interrupters will be trained to provide support to families, friends and survivors of gun violence in hospitals and the surrounding communities.
The cost for 414 Life is estimated at $500,000 annually at its current scale and is funded on a year-to-year basis, Moore said. The city has budgeted $280,000 and an additional $200,000 has been raised from foundations this year, he said.
Moore aims to expand the program to the Hampton Heights neighborhood on the north side and to neighborhoods on the east and near south sides by 2021.
This work is about individuals helping those at the highest risk for violence change their behaviors and the community’s norms, said Jackson-Malone, adding, "I was once a destroyer. Now I’m a rebuilder."
Andrea Waxman is a staff reporter at the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service. A professional writer, she is completing a graduate certificate in Digital Storytelling at Marquette University's Diederich College of Communication. Previously, she worked as a reporter and editor for a community newspaper and taught English and Japanese in several area middle and high schools.
Waxman has lived in Milwaukee since 1981, but spent most of her early years living in Tokyo, where her father was stationed at the American embassy. She returned to Japan in 1986 and again in 1993 when her husband was there as a Fulbright scholar.
In her free time, Waxman enjoys theater, movies, music, ethnic food, cities, travel, reading - especially the news of the day - and all kinds of people. She is interested in working for social justice and contributing to the vitality of the city.