Two council members are pushing back after being the target of an opinion piece written by the former director of the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement as questions surrounding the agency’s operations and protocols for programs.
Shantay Jackson led MONSE from 2022 – when the agency was first formed – until her departure on June 30. One of the programs overseen by MONSE is Safe Streets, Baltimore’s flagship gun violence prevention program.
During a council hearing on July 13 discussing the Brooklyn mass shooting, several council members questioned MONSE leaders about the protocols for Safe Streets and the workers. Four Safe Streets workers were at the Brooklyn Day block party from 9 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. and mediated five conflicts, according to MONSE leaders. The conflicts took place before the shooting took place that left two young people dead, and 28 others injured.
Councilmembers Isaac “Yitzy” Schleifer and Eric Costello are targeted in the op-ed by Jackson; the two leaders questioned interim MONSE Director Stefanie Mavronis about the policies in place for Safe Street works when it comes to notifying other agencies about potential threats and what the details were surrounding the mediations completed before the shooting took place.... Read More: FOX45