Safe Streets Sandtown-Winchester and Brooklyn-Curtis Bay
Safe Streets is an evidence-based violence prevention and interruption program that works to reduce shootings and homicides in high violence areas, operated by Catholic Charities in collaboration with the Baltimore City Department of Health and the Mayor’s Office for Neighborhood Safety and Engagement.
Safe Streets is based on the premise that violence is a disease that can be prevented using disease-control methods. Violence interrupters connect with high-risk individuals to defuse potentially violent situations, and link community youth with services, working within targeted neighborhoods with historically high levels of gun violence. By linking individuals and their families with educational opportunities, employment training and assistance, mental health services, substance abuse treatment and other crucial services, Safe Streets helps to provide young people with alternatives to a life of crime and violence.
Safe Streets employees deliver a unified message that violence is not acceptable.
Mission: To reduce violence in Baltimore City using a health approach and behavior change methods. –Adapted from Cure Violence
Vision: A safe Baltimore through the reduction and possible elimination of violence. –Adapted from Cure Violence
Who we are: Credible messengers; healthcare workers
In 2021, Safe Streets mediated 534 conflicts that would otherwise have resulted in gun violence.
Contact us
Sandtown-Winchester: 667-218-2001/443-912-3093
Brooklyn-Curtis Bay: 667-600-2289/443-912-3085
Safe Streets Baltimore in the News, Stories & Testimonials
State budget surplus opens opportunities to serve our most vulnerable neighbors
As the Maryland General Assembly began meeting for the 2022 session, the legislature homed in on a host of issues, including COVID, climate and care for loved ones. "This is the year of the Cs!" [...]
“There’s more DaShawns out there that we can save.”
The chant rose up as the crowd walked purposefully east on Monument Ave. Saturday just after noon, toward the spot where four men had been shot on Wednesday. "What do we want? Safe Streets! When [...]
Not your typical back-to-school celebration
"I thank God for Safe Streets," said long-time Brooklyn Homes resident Charlene. "If it wasn't for Safe Streets, I really don't know where I would go for help." Charlene was one of nearly 300 community [...]