ICJIA Receives Federal Award to
Improve Illinois Service Collaboration for Child and Youth Victims
of Violence
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[October 27, 2017]
CHICAGO
Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority (ICJIA)
Executive Director John Maki on Thursday announced the agency
received a $500,000 federal award to help children and youth
suffering from trauma.
The U.S. Department of Justice Office for Victims of Crime’s (OVC)
Vision 21 Award will be used to develop a coordinated statewide plan
to serve children and youth who have been directly victimized or
exposed to violence in their homes, schools, or communities.
“As one of just two states that received the Vision 21 award, we are
honored that the Office for Victims of Crime chose to invest in
Illinois,” said Executive Director Maki.
Unaddressed trauma can contribute to mental, physical, and
developmental consequences for children and adolescents. While a
host of systems exist to respond to these issues, states are
challenged to effectively communicate and collaborate.
This award will bring together a coalition of government agencies,
victim service providers, law enforcement personnel, health services
practitioners, educators, and criminal and juvenile justice
stakeholders who will work to strengthen early trauma identification
practices and enhance system responsiveness through a 15-month
strategic planning process.
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The group will identify areas ripe for improvement and set goals
for the agencies and service providers. Particular emphasis will be placed on
strengthening communication and collaboration, expanding service practices that
are trauma- and evidence-informed, and creating a single trauma screening tool
for use by service providers across Illinois.
“This award reflects the decades of work that stakeholders inside
and outside of government have done to establish a trauma-informed work force
and outcome-driven system for children and youth impacted by trauma and
victimization,” said Dr. Colleen Cicchetti, Clinical Director of the Illinois
Childhood Trauma Coalition.
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“The Vision 21 Award will help the State of Illinois and its providers ensure
that victimized children and youth don’t fall in the cracks that often exists
among disparate systems of care,” said Billie Larkin, Executive Director of the
Children Advocacy Centers of Illinois.
Subsequent annual grants of $500,000 over five years will be available to
Illinois from OVC to support its statewide implementation of the plan.
ICJIA is dedicated to improving the administration of criminal justice through
work in the areas of grants administration, research, analysis, policy and
planning, and information systems and technology. Visit
www.icjia.state.il.us.
[Illinois Criminal Justice
Information Authority] |