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Kelly Jadon

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Hometown Heroes

A news blog about ordinary people making extraordinary contributions to their communities.

Scott Armstrong: Stopping the Shooters

June 9, 2018 Kelly Jadon
Scott Armstrong, CEO and President of The Bridge Effect Foundation

Scott Armstrong, CEO and President of The Bridge Effect Foundation

“October 18, 1985 Detroit, Michigan: During halftime of the homecoming football game between Northwestern High School and Murray-Wright High School, a boy who was in a fight earlier that day, pulled out a shotgun and opened fire injuring six students.” (K12 Academics)

School shootings are nothing new. They’ve occurred at various times since the 1700s.  What is new is the amount of media attention given to such incidents.  What isn’t new is the lack of intervention when a student exhibits signs of escalating the situation, for example, the fight earlier in the day.

Escalation of violence is in part egged on by the media—news which circles around repeating itself like an earworm (a song in the head which doesn’t stop). Media outlets use sensationalism to drive viewers and clicks online in order to beat out the competitor and raise advertising revenue.

Social media is an additional avenue of escalation—videoed homicides, suicides, threats, bullying, even online harassment among neighbors.

Today’s stressors coming through these mediums ramp up community anxiety, person by person: racial tensions, war and rumors of war, cultural shifting in values and morals, the stock market, hurricanes, volcanos, Ebola, politics, etcetera.

In both cases, what was initially meant for good—news, media, talk shows and social media, have turned sour and bitter. In many cases, it has caused us to hate one another.

There are also homegrown stressors affecting families: mental illness, cancer and other illnesses, rising autism rates, the cost of food and medicine, access to medical care, debt, crime, work, aging, divorce, housing needs, domestic violence and abuse, etcetera.

Cumulatively, these outside and inside stressors affect individuals, families and homes. Scott Armstrong, President and CEO of The Bridge Effect Foundation (TBEF) states, “Children are the stress indicators of what’s happening in a community.”

Armstrong is creating TensionTrac which will map a community’s tension levels based on consistent locally collected data. It will check how much serious crisis events affect a community. Government intervention resources will be given the data about specific hot-spots and crisis de-escalation can begin.

Similar types of TensionTracs have been used successfully in Wales to cut down soccer fan violence and by Yale University identifying what people believe about climate change.

Cindy Bridges, wife of a youth pastor, is Director of Child and Family Initiatives at TBEF states, “What’s not measured can’t be managed.”

 

Scott Armstrong with his family's Great Dane, Keira

Scott Armstrong with his family's Great Dane, Keira

Armstrong has a Masters in Quality Systems Management and is a Lean Six Sigma Blackbelt, this is not judo or karate, but a high-level certification of a professional who leads improvement projects.

Begun in 2016, TBEF has de-escalation specialists in place. Director of Community Outreach, Robert Campbell, already offers a free program to teach crisis de-escalation skills to caregivers for emotionally volatile adults and children thus avoiding incidents with emergency responders. “The Bridge Effect has identified serious training gaps in law enforcement, nursing and emergency health care skills training,” he states.

Incidents like the Sandy Hook Elementary and Parkland shootings impacted Armstrong as the father of an 11-year-old daughter. He adds, “I can only imagine their families’ eternal regret.  We must all do what we can to prevent these horrible episodes from reoccurring in our communities.” Armstrong began TBEF after working in the mental health industry and noticing many gaps--holes where service didn’t get to the person who needed it most.

Armstrong decided to make a difference in the world in a new way, by doing something that mattered. Armstrong, Bridges and James Lamb, are working together with an advisory board and a team of volunteers to raise funds to open a Center for the Arts where at risk children may come and participate free of charge. Early intervention is key. Problems left unattended worsen. Armstrong states that these problems create overwhelming anxiety, an inability to communicate to teachers and police, thus feeling the need to lash out and resort to violence.

Teaching a child a performance art builds self-confidence without the need to have a gun and assert himself over others. Use of the Arts relieves stress, irritability, helplessness, anger and frustration in a fun way that is beneficial to a child’s future. Arts are also a means of speaking out about the hurt experienced in childhood from neglect, abuse, abandonment and emotional needs not met.  TBEF plans to begin with two areas of performance art and add from there.

Armstrong has already been in talks with the city of Fort Pierce, Florida, the mayor of nearby Port St. Lucie and other government officials regarding the use of a building to house the center.

Armstrong works with the Treasure Coast Forensic Treatment Center population in Indiantown, Florida, one of only two maximum security facilities in the State of Florida for those incompetent to stand trial by reason of insanity. With over 200 beds, the facility is always full. His role is as the performance improvement and compliance administrator, monitoring the care, safety and treatment management processes performance to the Department of Children and Families and Forensic Department of Justice level.

He sees the result of untreated mental health illnesses and understands how the crimes these individuals committed could have been headed off with early childhood intervention. Today’s shooters were yesterday’s children.

Most of America’s shooters have been on prescription drugs for mental health illnesses. In October 2017, Austin Frank, former Hill staffer of Today in Politics wrote, “And the result is that a significantly higher percentage of mass shooters were on antidepressants than in the U.S. population at large… The number for teens and young adult mass shooters on antidepressants is well over a majority...Too many modern-day mass shooters and murderers have been on these meds to call it a coincidence.”

The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, a mental health watchdog, has investigated school violence, revealing in February 2018, “that at least 36 school shootings and /or school-related acts of violence have been committed by those taking or withdrawing from psychiatric drugs resulting in 172 wounded and 80 killed.”

Armstrong believes it is imperative that the signs of potential violence, known as leakage, be understood, discussed and given attention before an incident occurs. Lives are at stake.

In June 2018, the FBI released the Study of Pre-Attack Behaviors of Active Shooters which covered shooter incidents between 2000 and 2013. It states, “The most frequently occurring behaviors were related to the active shooter’s mental health, problematic interpersonal interactions and leakage of violent intent.”

Leakage comes through social media, video, text, phone calls, email or even in person. Such threats can also come through student assignments, passed notes or artwork.  Leakage can be intentional or unintentional to a third-party.

Prevention, the FBI states, is not and cannot be a passive process. It needs strong and ongoing commitment by the community. This includes the adoption of programs and policy “to support targeted violence prevention efforts,” building of threat assessment teams, and education.  Everyone must be on board.

TensionTrac is the first of its kind, no other exists like the one Armstrong is creating for monitoring community tension. Armstrong refers to it as “an innovation in community health management.” Armstrong and his team have devoted their time and money to this community without cost, for the purpose of saving lives. Maybe even your child’s.  Armstrong intends to see the use of TensionTrac nationwide. Won’t you support him and The Bridge Effect Foundation, filling the gaps, finding the children, keeping citizens safe. 

 

Contact Scott Armstrong:  2scottarmstrong@gmail.com or info@bridgeeffect.org

*Mr. Armstrong’s comments on this site are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Correct Care, LLC.

© 2018 "Hometown Heroes"  Kelly Jadon  Contact: kfjadon@gmail.com

In Florida, Jensen Beach, Martin County, Fort Pierce, Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County, Stuart, Treasure Coast Tags shooter, parkland, the bridge effect foundation, mental illness, school, media, stress, tensiontrac, crisis, intervention, de-escalation, prescription drugs, leakage
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Jensen Beach Woman Goes Pro in Sweden

May 29, 2018 Kelly Jadon
taylortownsend.jpg

Soccer, also known as football overseas, originated in the Old World, both in Ancient China and Japan and also in Europe’s Roman and Greek cultures.  Boys kicking balls became men kicking balls with fierce competition and wild masses which thronged playing fields.

By 1800 women got into the game in Europe.  It became a serious sport during the 20th Century.  At times, civil authorities and church authorities spoke against women participating in the game.  Crowd size matters though.  The Football Association of London became threatened in 1921 when a women’s game attracted a crowd of 53,000 people.  The Association placed a ban on women playing soccer lasting 50 years.   After World War II the ban was lifted because of outside European criticism.  Sweden was a country which took off running with women fiercely kicking the ball.

Today, Sweden is host to Taylor Townsend, a Jensen Beach, Florida native who plays professional women’s soccer.

taylortownsend2.jpg

At six-foot-tall, the beautiful red head stands out on the field and always has since age seven when she began playing with the Jensen Beach Soccer Club.  A home-school student, Taylor studied independently and continued kicking with the Team Boca Soccer Club, which won her scholarships to the University of Central Florida and Florida Atlantic University.

Taylor has also played on a semi-pro team in Canada and professionally in Peru during 2016.  Only a few months ago, she was picked up for a professional team in Lidköping, Sweden, where the women’s sport packs stadiums more than many of the men’s games do.  At times, Taylor has played in very cold temperatures, once at 15F. 

On the field Taylor plays center-middle and has a dynamic kick.

In Sweden Taylor rooms with another player, a Chicago native.  The women are provided housing, meals, travel expenses and a small stipend. 

Taylor states that approximately 10 percent of United States women’s soccer athletes continue on to the professional level after university, due to injuries, exhaustion and lack of finances.  A woman can only play a few years before she ages out.

Currently, in the United States, there are only nine professional women’s soccer teams. Only housing is provided with a very small monthly stipend.  For these reasons, professionals sign with foreign teams.

When Taylor was 14 Taylor told her mom, Jeanie, “I want to play soccer, I mean, really play soccer.”  Travel clubs began and her father took her to a local park field to practice every day.

It hasn’t been easy to travel so much, completing school assignments on the road, and now being so far away from her parents, but Taylor says her faith in God, who gave her the passion to play soccer, has gotten her through some dark times.  Her mother, Jeanie, has been available to give her moral support, and her father has always encouraged her.  In addition, Tom Power of Power Coaching in South Florida has provided coaching support to Taylor.

Taylor states her goal is to play at the highest level possible and end on a right note, so that her body doesn’t get abused by playing for too many years. 

At Florida Atlantic, Taylor studied communications and coached soccer.  After she retires she plans to use her soccer skills to continue coaching.

Taylor Townsend is a shining light from Jensen Beach, a member of First Baptist Jensen Beach, who at age 24 has accomplished her dream. Her motto is: “I don’t live for the world, I live for the King!”

Contact Kelly Jadon at:  kfjadon@gmail.com

(C) 2018 Kelly Jadon

In Florida, Jensen Beach, Boca Raton, Treasure Coast, Sweden Tags soccer, jensen beach, lidkoping, sweden, women
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