Pennsylvania
Bucks County students help provide meals to seniors in community
In about two years, Cemantha Giulian’s class has helped distribute almost 15,000 meals.
YARDLEY, Pennsylvania (WPVI) — A particular training trainer in Bucks County is educating her college students invaluable life expertise whereas additionally serving to folks locally.
Cemantha Giulian teaches college students on the autism spectrum at Council Rock North Excessive College. She obtained concerned with the nonprofit, Caring For Associates, and determined to have her college students assist too.
Each week, her class, together with different pupil volunteers from the college pack containers of frozen meals that go to homebound seniors locally.
“It isn’t what you’d count on. It isn’t your typical college day. We’re writing and doing math and studying. We’re placing our useful expertise to make use of to assist different folks,” stated Giulian.
The magic quantity the scholars deal with is seven. Each journey from the fridge to the packing containers they ask for seven meals to hold. Every field has seven lunches and 7 dinners to go to every senior.
Volunteers from St. Andrew’s Church, positioned throughout the road from the highschool, cook dinner the meals.
“Now we’ve got a really well-oiled machine of packing up 400 to 600 meals a month and delivering to Philadelphia,” stated Giulian.
In about two years, Giulian’s class has helped distribute almost 15,000 meals.
“They do not actually all the time notice the magnitude of how huge this little venture is that they are doing and the way a lot of a distinction they’re making,” stated Giulian.
For the scholars, the advantages of this program transcend serving to folks in want, they’re making associates they could have in any other case by no means talked to in school.
“It is satisfying to have such an excellent relationship with our associates and it is very nice to have an expertise like this,” stated Gianna Reilly, a senior at the highschool who volunteers to assist the category.
As any good trainer will know, an train in giving again and constructing life expertise all the time provides up.
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Pennsylvania ranks third for police misconduct settlement cases
Perry’s story may help understand some of the findings of a Whitley Law Firm study, originating in North Carolina, that analyzed police misconduct settlement figures nationwide, documenting patterns and covering numerous jurisdictions.
According to the study, Pennsylvania has paid more than $59 million total for four police misconduct settlements, from 2010 to 2014, ranking the commonwealth third-highest (an average of $14.8 million per settlement) in the nation for large payout amounts.
New York leads the nation in settlement costs, averaging $73 million per case and ultimately exceeding $1.1 billion in total settlements.
A closer look at Philadelphia
In Philadelphia, the study showed the city paid $54 million for police misconduct cases settled between 2010 and 2014.
The family of Walter Wallace Jr. received a $2.5 million settlement in 2021, a year after Wallace was fatally shot by police while experiencing a mental health crisis near his home in Cobbs Creek.
However, Wallace family attorney Shaka Johnson called the payment “cheap” in some respects, noting that the family has the right to use the funds to honor Walter’s memory. His death, which occurred months after the killing of George Floyd in Minnesota, further fueled demands for police reform. Floyd’s death in May 2020 sparked nationwide protests and calls for accountability.
Similarly, Wallace’s killing deeply affected Philadelphia residents, prompting demands for changes in law enforcement policies, training and accountability measures.
The Whitley study underscores the steep costs of misconduct settlements and the systemic issues they expose. The report highlighted the need for preventative issues, such as improved policies and police training, to reduce wrongful deaths.
“Every dollar spent on a misconduct settlement is a dollar that could have been invested in community resources, safety initiatives, and police training,” the report states. “It’s critical that we work to ensure these settlements become rare, not routine.”
The cases of Wallace and Floyd stand as stark reminders of the urgent need for systemic reforms to rebuild trust between law enforcement and the communities they serve.
Michael Collins, senior director of state and local policy for social justice nonprofit Color of Change, blames the high number of misconduct payment settlements on strong police unions in this country.
“The Fraternal Order of Police, which acts to protect indefensible cop behavior, they will negotiate as part of the contract ways in which account is very watered down,” Collins told WHYY News in an interview. “They will, you know, protect officers who are tied to, like, white supremacists. They will protect officers who have previously engaged in misconduct, they will erect obstacles that do not occur for investigations into regular members of the public.”
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