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Northeast Tennessee ACEs Connection (TN)

We acknowledge and address life experiences due to hardship and trauma, and build resilience. We collaborate to serve our citizens and disseminate information to create a trauma-informed community.

30 people can end ACEs in your county. Why aren’t they?

 

No, we don’t need the president nor congress.

We do need the following people in your county to stop business as usual and focus on preventing adverse childhood experiences (ACEs).

  • City mayors
  • City counselors
  • County commissioners
  • School board members

These local elected leaders—many of them your neighbors and colleagues—have the capacity to collectively understand the emotional and financial costs of ACEs and trauma. We can’t have family-friendly cities and counties while we live in an epidemic of childhood trauma that’s hiding in plain sight.

We have the data, research, technology and collaborative strategies to achieve collective innovation in each county—and create and strengthen the services shown to prevent ACEs, strengthen families and improve student achievement. We know exactly which policies and programs each school needs to keep students with ACEs from being marginalized and told to suffer in silence through the day.

We need our local elected officials to go from saying this, “Well, preventing ACEs is not really what we are set up to do with your tax dollars,” to, “Our priority will now be the safety, health and education of every child—all while ensuring the city, county and schools do a great job serving all residents.”

Yes, it requires reimagining how city hall works—in partnership with county and school leadership. It means being data-driven and cross-sector. It means reaching across departments and agencies. It means the public sector reaching out to the private sector. It means transparency.

We must motivate our elected officials and their staff to commit to measurable and meaningful change. We need them to understand that from a third to two-thirds of our kids, depending on the neighborhood, are living in homes where abuse, neglect, substance misuse and untreated mental health challenges are the norm. 

It’s really as simple as that. 30 humans, sworn to public service, can radically change the trajectory of ACEs in your county. It’s time to ask them to do so. We must politely not accept excuses as a response.

We must also show compassion with our leaders, as many of them have untreated childhood trauma due to ACEs. That’s the irony of it all.

It’s been twenty years since the ACEs Study was published.  We can’t wait another twenty to finally address the abuse, neglect and trauma. We need to be courageous as we disrupt city, county, and school systems that continue to completely fail our most vulnerable families. Our children’s lives depend on it.

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Hello Dominic,

Thanks for your encouraging and challenging post.  In Philadelphia many people would resonate with what you, Becky Haas and your entire team are accomplishing in NE Tennessee.  We wish you well!

You may be interested to know that our Philadelphia City Council held public hearings on the subject of secondary trauma and staff resiliency programming on Dec. 7, 2018. Excellent preparations for these hearings were made by the Philadelphia ACE Task Force in consultation with two leading City Council Members.

There is indeed active interest in how to create programs of peer and supervisory support that will help to sustain our many professsional caregivers who provide services to traumatized clients and patients.  It is our belief that trauma informed services need to be actively undergirded with well defined programs of emotional support for the professionals who are to carry out the TIC programs.

At the the recent public hearing we heard from experts such as Dr. Sandra Bloom and Executive Deputy Attorney General Robert Reed (State of PA), along with representatives of child protection, behavioral health, police and fire, and unions of Philadelphia.

Following is a link to the full hearing:  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezOfK4_eRmo 

With best wishes,

Vic Compher, MSS, LCSW

Director of CAREgivers documentary film

www.caregiversfilm.com  

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