One Teen's Take on Putting More Cops on the Streets
I’m writing a profile about Shanita Talton, an 18-year-old youth advocate. Through Teens on Target,
an Oakland-based youth advocacy program, she teaches middle and high
school students how to prevent violence before it starts.
In
my 2.5-hour long interview with her, she shared with me what life was
like for her growing up in East Oakland and being exposed to violence.
She told me about her home life living with a drug addict and high
school dropout for a mother and an absentee father. She talked candidly
about the responsibility that she assumed at a young age caring for
herself, raising her four younger siblings and being shipped to a
foster home.
“No apologies ever came from my parents,’’ she
said. “My mom was strung out on crack and coming home was not a
priority. Her home was the streets.’’
shanita
I plan to write a longer story about Shanita and the Teens on Target program. It's scheduled for publication in the Oakland Tribune on March 31.
Shanita said something interesting that's worth bringing up now. She told me about her goals of attending UC Berkeley next year and creating her own major. She told me that she wanted to become a community therapist.
It’s a career, she said, where she plans to help people receive free
social services. She said that her approach to helping combat crime in Oakland and change some of the socio-economic conditions are in stark contrast to Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums solution of putting more cops on the streets.
Recently,
Dellums' proposal to use $7.7 million to recruit and train more police
officers to beef up the city’s efforts to
confront crime was approved by the city council.
Shanita disagrees. She said that she and many of her peers see police as mainly law enforcers and not role models.
“People
aren’t afraid of the police like they used to be,’’ she said. “They
take forever to respond to a call, and by the time they do, we could be
have World War VI and VII on our hands.’’
Shanita said the best way
to promote violence prevention is to “habitually be in somebody’s face
about it.’’ In the workshops, she talks to students about the root
causes of violence, gun and gang violence and family and dating
violence.
When Shanita becomes a community therapist she said she doesn’t want to hand out business cards.
“I want to be the person who is standing in the gap for the community,’’ she said. “It’s not about business. It’s about life.’’
-- Kamika Dunlap, Oakland Tribune
In response to "another ignorant child" post
In Response to "another ignorant child" - Kirk Schuler
Shanita rocks!!!
Keep on keepin' on
Another ignorant child from the inner city
Ignorant Adults Don't Enlighten Young Learners
Thank You ??Anonymous??
It works like this
Ignorant child? Surely you jest.
Just another judgemental, self-righteous crank.
Response by Kirk Schuler
Shanika Article by Karnika Dunlap