$1M Tow Foundation Grant Funds Research Project on Gun Violence Prevention Focused on Bridgeport

Fairfield University’s Center for Social Impact, Regional Youth Adult Social Action Partnership (RYASAP), and PT Partners have received a 3-year, $1 million grant from the Tow Foundation for a research project on gun violence prevention.

Although the number of gun homicides in Bridgeport are significantly lower today than they were in the 1980’s and 90’s, rates have plateaued, indicative of the intractable nature of gun violence in Connecticut’s cities, and cities across the U.S., according to officials.

By building on what has worked in Bridgeport through the Youth Gun Violence Task force, project "Amplifying Resident Voices,” launched in January, expands on previous research and will assess, design, and implement evidence-based solutions to persistent community violence.

The goal is to eliminate gun violence by working alongside resident leadership at the three main public housing communities in Bridgeport—PT Barnum Apartments, the Charles F. Greene Homes, and Trumbull Gardens—to learn from and build the capacity of community members most directly impacted by gun violence to identify and implement solutions, officials explained. This will be a replicable model that can be applied to other urban communities, they noted.

The uniqueness of this project is rooted in its community-based and community-building approach. Violence prevention measures that focus on increased policing alone, they explained, “tend to center people as the problem. Our approach centers residents as the solution.”

"We are deeply grateful for the Tow Foundation's generous support of the 'Amplifying Resident Voices' project," said Marc Donald, President and CEO of RYASAP. "The collaborative effort between RYASAP, Fairfield University, PT Partners, and residents is a powerful example of how, together, data and community engagement can create a safer and healthier future for Bridgeport."

“This is an incredible opportunity for Fairfield University students and faculty to participate in a community-engaged research project,” said Center for Social Impact Director Melissa Quan, EdD. “‘Amplifying Resident Voices’ positions academic and community members as true partners and co-researchers employing a transdisciplinary approach that integrates traditional fields (such as public health and sociology) with expertise rooted in community and lived experience.”

Fairfield University faculty and undergraduate research fellows will work with PT Partners to develop the survey, distribute the survey via a multi-pronged outreach, conduct ongoing data analysis, report key findings, and use data to inform interventions and prevention measures. Fairfield University and PT Partners will also develop and facilitate trainings for resident and youth leaders on data collection, analysis, and leadership for change.

Working with core leadership groups, PT Partners resident leaders and Youth Corps members will and seek to grow participation through on-going communication with residents, including collecting data from youth in the community.

“Between April and December 2023, PT Partners successfully convened 12 Community Conversations, with approximately 375 public housing residents in attendance. These meetings are exclusively for Bridgeport public housing residents and their allies/partners,” said PT Partners Co-Project Director Vanessa Monique Liles.

“We are proud that 175 unique individuals have come together during this time to discuss our community assets, issues relevant to our lives, and potential solutions to our challenges. PT Partners is uniquely qualified to bring residents together and build our capacity to become a powerful leadership block in Bridgeport, particularly regarding the issues of gun violence and safety,” Liles added.

PT Partners will lead the convening, designing, and facilitation of monthly meetings for residents, provide feedback on data analysis and reporting, and identify and facilitate resident leader involvement in research, in collaboration with RYASAP.

RYASAP’s Restorative Justice Programming will be an important resource to the intervention component of this project. Given the success of RYASAP’s school-led programs, the project will aim to expand this program to several new feeder schools that impact the public housing communities.

Data collected throughout will be used to create more responsive and transformational structural solutions to address safety and violence. Current resident leaders will train and develop the capacity of the greater public housing community to heal from, process, and prevent violence—with a focus on how we keep each other safe.