Advocates are calling for Durham County Commissioners to reduce the sheriff's department budget by 10% and invest more in mental health.
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The topic came up Thursday night on the Durham Joins Together to Save Lives Task Force and the majority of people on the call agreed it would be detrimental to programs across the Bull City.
"It could severely hinder our ability to do the great work we're doing inside the detention center and out," said Clarence Birkhead, the Durham County Sheriff.
Sheriff Birkhead said a budget reduction might affect peer support programs in the Durham County jail. They run 26 in the detention center designed to acclimate people back into society once they are released.
Just this week, inmate Lucion Green completed his high school education while on the inside.
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"We should be championing all the good work we're doing in Durham," Birkhead said. "I think it's an opportunity for us to lead the state if not the nation in addressing some of the ills that plague mostly our black and brown communities."
Dr. Wanda Boone, executive director of the nonprofit Together for a Resilient Youth, is on the "Saves Lives" committee.
She didn't know what programs would be affected specifically if the budget is cut, but she would be most worried about Crisis Intervention Training which teaches officers about how to respond to someone in mental crisis and to reduce arrests for non-violent offenders.
Durham County Commissioner Wendy Jacobs is the chair of the task force but didn't respond to comment as of late Friday night.
The task force meeting happened the same night as another shooting on Elm Street in Durham and three other separate shootings in Raleigh.
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"I react with concern, I react with where are we going, I react with what steps can be taken," said Boone, who is trying to stop the violence before it happens. "This is really about community engagement and going to where people are and with data and a real understanding of what's going on."
Her organization works to prevent substance abuse among youths in the Bull City.
Boone has helped publish the "Durham County Guides for People Who Use Substances" as well as the "Durham County Use Summary."
"There is a link between substance abuse and crime -- we need to think about that in terms of crime reduction and overdose in the Black community," said Boone, who also sits on a wellness task force in Durham. "The difficult thing is that these answers are not immediate but we're talking about how to prevent, how to intervene and what needs to be done."