Information on Safety Gaps
The Alliance for Safety and Justice and the National Coalition for Shared Safety conducted a 2020 Survey of likely voters across the country about their experiences with and preferences for public safety policy.
The results showed strong support for investing in new preventive and public health-focused safety measures among voters across the political spectrum and across cities, suburbs, and rural areas.
When asked, “when it comes specifically to public safety, which two of the following are most important to fund?”
Mental Health Care
0
%
Job Training
0
%
Violence Prevention
0
%
Trauma Recovery
0
%
Jails or Prisons
0
%
Through surveys, focus groups, and community conversations about the drivers of crime and what communities need to prevent them, we find core unaddressed issues that contribute to the cycle of crime.
Any attempt to improve safety must take these safety gaps into account.
