How did a state funding cut-off affect youth homicides?
Illinois went two years without a full budget. Thanks to the order of a county judge in the Metro East part of the state, state employees got paid. But those agencies with whom Illinois contracts for social services — like preventing violence, and addressing trauma — they did not get paid. Many had to cut programs and staff as a result. All that, in turn, seems to have been a big factor in a spike in homicides in Chicago — which is the subject of a recent report from the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University. It suggests a correlation between the state’s two-year budget impasse and a spike in young people being murdered in 2016. We were joined by the study's author and the CEO of an Illinois anti-violence group to talk about her research and its implications.
GUEST:
Maryann Mason, PhD
Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University | Director, Illinois Violent Death Reporting System Director, Illinois Statewide Drug Overdose Reporting System | Faculty Associate, Institute for Policy Research
Andrea Durbin
CEO, Illinois Collaboration on Youth
Big spike in 2016 Chicago #youth homicides linked to pause in #statefunding @northwesternu @BMJ_Open https://t.co/NsyS5FlXks
— Medical Xpress (@medical_xpress) January 24, 2022
Prepared for web by Owen Henderson
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