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It takes a community to tackle gangs
Saturday, October 11, 2008
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Here we go again — gangs on the loose in Napa! Despite the online comments expressing surprise at their existence here in this paradise, it’s not new! From when I worked the streets in American Canyon as a deputy in the mid ‘70s to recent events that I’ve seen happen 32 years later, from my perspective as undersheriff, gangs in one form or another have always been here.

I had a sergeant once who likened waning gang issues in the media as “Water goes up, water goes down,” meaning that enforcement can force them to keep a lower profile, but like water they will eventually surface again if you do nothing to change their behavior from the start.
Law enforcement has always been the spearhead in combating the problem, but the police and sheriffs can’t do it alone. We need to collaborate with a lot of other agencies and most importantly with the families. In Napa we have been lucky to throw egos and self interests aside and collaborate with other agencies to help resolve this issue. For the most part, this anti-gang effort has been a joint operation since the beginning.

At least as early as 1989, then-Sheriff Gary Simpson had us start teaching the DARE program in county schools and Napa Police Chief Monez in the city schools. This later included the GREAT program, which taught gang resistance education. The sheriff’s department has had personnel assigned to the gang issues since at least 1995. Simpson also started a diversion-type program in association with Napa State Hospital in the mid-‘90s. The Sheriffs Activities League has expanded to include free activities for all kids during those “after-school hours” when many of the problems occur because there’s no supervision in the home. Under current Napa County Sheriff Douglas Koford’s leadership, we now have more than 700 participants in our SAL programs, many of whom could be considered “at risk.”
In the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, the Napa Police Department put officers in the high schools. Sheriff Simpson authorized deputies to work in Liberty High School and the junior high school in American Canyon; Sheriff Koford and Chief Melton have continued that commitment with the Napa Office of Education and the Napa Valley Unified School District. Both of our agencies communicated well on what the “gangs” were up to. This communication was helpful in solving not only the Michael Arreguin homicide, but several others as well.

The Napa County Sheriff’s Department, the Napa Police Department, and the Napa District Attorney’s Office partnered with many other groups: Napa Juvenile and Adult Probation, the Napa courts, nonprofits like the Wolfe Center, CLARO, Aldea and others, to name a few. When public outcry finally occurred as a result of increased media attention and we had public support, we created gang task forces to address the issue on a multi-pronged level. These groups still meet on a regular basis in trying to address the issues. Unfortunately, it’s not enough.
What’s needed is not just more enforcement alone. What’s needed is the multi-pronged approach of education, enforcement, intervention, prosecution and counseling. What’s needed is families willing to step up and take responsibility for their own kids and seek help if they can’t handle the problems themselves. What’s needed are resources from government and private funding to provide the ability to deliver a planned multi-pronged approach. What’s needed is for us to elect leaders who know what the problems are and recognize what their citizens see as priority issues. What’s needed is to make those leaders address the issues with proper funding and accountability measures to carry out a plan to resolve this issue. What’s needed is less apathy about the problem from the community. Bottom line: It’s up to us as a community to collectively step up to the plate and deliver for our well-being and that of our kids.

(Loughran is Napa County Undersheriff.)
6 comment(s)

musikluvr wrote on Oct 11, 2008 8:12 AM:

" We are priveleged to have a man in yor position with such experience and elocution.

This community has hired you and the many other qualified officials working with you and we ask that you do your job - take down the gang bangers - so we can be apathetic.

We don't know what to do regarding gangs, you do and you have our permission to take care of it. "

freeport56 wrote on Oct 11, 2008 12:31 PM:

" Mike-

Thanks for the background and the big picture view. What can we do to help? "

amigo wrote on Oct 11, 2008 1:05 PM:

" They is a lack of male leadership in these guys life is my opinion.
We need the communtiy of men in these kids area to band together in some group form and lead by example.

You can throw money or expensive studies or education at this issue but not one alone or all combined could do more than address only a symptom of this problem.

Male leader ship is the answer in my opinion. "

justnana wrote on Oct 11, 2008 9:56 PM:

" amigo...you are exactly right! I know from family experience that the right connection with the right mentor can bring a young man from potential gang membership to a scholarship to a four year college. There are MANY good men in the community where the most help is needed, but there has to be some sort of organization and funding, and this is hard to come by. I wonder if the churches could volunteer with either organization or fund-raising help? Awareness of the problem is our first step. "

steph wrote on Oct 11, 2008 10:34 PM:

" Bring back occupational education classes (shop classes, home ec, etc.) so young men and women will have good role models in schools, in classes that will interest them and give them good life or marketable skills. Also fund afterschool sports (more than one select team that serves a handful out of hundreds of kids) and clubs more adequately so kids have something to do with thoughtful adults in charge. Amigo is right--our kids need better role models, both the young men and young women. Young women need to be taught to respect their lives and set high standards so that they don't perpetuate the situation by having more fatherless children--as if it's admirable or even acceptable. It's tragic and hazardous and sad, and should be seen as such instead of being seen as heroic. "

cellsitegod wrote on Oct 12, 2008 7:15 AM:

" For once I agree with Steph. I'm sure lack of/cut school programs have contributed to the problem.
We need a multi-prong approach.
1. Worry about prevention of gangs forming.
2. Worry about the here and now of eradicating these gangs.
The problem may be, each solution will have very different political approaches and will be hard to get everyones support.
We can be understanding and patient while implimenting prevention.
But, we need to be forcefull and tough right now to stem all this gang crime. "

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