Governor Polis and Division of Criminal Justice Announce $3 Million in Crime Prevention and Crisis Intervention Grants Awarded to 15 Colorado Organizations

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LAKEWOOD — Governor Polis and the Division of Criminal Justice announced the 15 Colorado organizations across ten counties who are the recipients of the State Multidisciplinary Crime Prevention and Crisis Intervention funding (CPCI), a total of $3 million.

From Boulder to La Plata County, these grants will support agencies over a 21-month funding period and contribute to implementing community-based programs focused on crime prevention and crisis intervention strategies.

“We are committed to making Colorado communities safer for everyone, and that includes investing in the organizations on the ground who are doing effective work to prevent crime. Congratulations to all the recipients and keep up the great work,” said Governor Jared Polis.

The CPCI Grant Program aims at improving public safety and creating one of the safest states in the country by investing in crime prevention and crisis intervention programs. Recipients of the grant are based in rural counties and urban areas.

“Grants play a crucial role in enhancing the safety of our communities by providing essential resources for crime prevention and intervention programs," said Matthew M. Lunn, Colorado Division of Criminal Justice director. “They empower local communities to address public safety challenges through innovative solutions and collaborative efforts. By investing in these initiatives, we strengthen the foundation of a safer, more resilient Colorado for everyone."

Here are a few examples of how grant recipients are working to prevent crime.

Axis Health System received a CPCI grant in collaboration with the La Plata County Sheriff’s Office to expand its co-responder program. The program dispatches a deputy and a clinician to address mental health and behavioral health crises, and connects individuals to wrap-around services to meet their needs for food, clothing, shelter, and other resources.

Similarly, the Public Health Department in Rio Grande County received funding to implement two programs, Botvin’s Life Skills Training and Strengthening Families, in the San Luis Valley. These evidence-based programs are proven to prevent or reduce youth delinquency by targeting known risk and protective factors. This rural, multidisciplinary project involves public health, behavioral health, public schools, Colorado State University (CSU) Extension, CSU prevention researchers, youth and family service providers, and local families, among other stakeholders.

The Latino Coalition for Community Leadership (LCCL), a CPCI grant recipient, is known for building collaborative partnerships among some of Metro Denver’s Black and Latino-led grassroots groups that serve communities hardest hit by violence. Through their Violence Interruption and Healing Collaborative project, targeting Denver, Adams, and Arapahoe Counties in areas with high rates of violent crime, LCCL will provide training and technical assistance, as well as subgrants, to violence interruption organizations to build their capacity to implement Community Violence Intervention Strategies, an approach that uses evidence-informed strategies to reduce violence through tailored community-centered initiatives. LCCL will also facilitate working relationships between the organizations and local government agencies, with a focus on public health organizations and local law enforcement.

The full list of 2024 grant recipients are listed below.

The Colorado Division of Criminal Justice’s 2024 CPCI awards are based on the State’s FY 2025 appropriation for HB24-1421, Modifying Public Safety Program Funding. The Multidisciplinary Crime Prevention and Crisis Intervention (CPCI) Advisory Committee, whose membership is representative of the communities where crime is disproportionately high, reviews applications and makes recommendations based on communities with greatest need, the applicant’s level of cultural and population specific competency, and level of collaboration.

The CPCI Advisory Committee approved the awards announced below:


Arapahoe County

Agency: Second Chance Center, Inc.

Project Title: Safe Homes, Safe Communities

Grant Amount: $81,468


Agency: Collaborative Healing Initiative Within Communities

Project Title: Re-Enter, Re-Build, Re-Start (R3)

Grant Amount: $200,000


Boulder County

Agency: Bridge House

Project Title: Work and Housing First in Mitigating Recidivism

Grant Amount: $148,694


Denver County

Agency: Apprentice of Peace Youth Organization

Project Title: AOPYO Youth Center for Behavioral Health

Grant Amount: $81,468


Agency: Denver Healing Generations

Project Title: Denver Healing Generations Calmecac Program

Grant Amount: $81,468


Metro Denver (Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Broomfield, Denver, Jefferson, Gilpin)

Agency: Fully Liberated Youth

Project Title: Violence Interruption Through School-Based Prevention Services for High-Risk Young People

Grant Amount: $200,000


Agency: Latino Coalition for Community Leadership

Project Title: Violence Interruption and Healing Collaborative

Grant Amount: $700,000


Agency: Tribe Recovery Homes

Project Title: Crime Prevention and Crisis Intervention through Peer Support Services

Grant Amount: $240,498


El Paso County

Agency: Educating Children of Color, Inc.

Project Title: A year-round program to reduce juvenile delinquency, achieve educational equity, empower youth, and dismantle the cradle-to-prison pipeline

Grant Amount: $120,000


Agency: Inside Out Youth Services

Project Title: ALLY Up for LGBTQIA2+ Violence Prevention

Grant Amount: $150,000


Agency: Relevant Word Ministries

Project Title: Pursuing Academic & Cultural Excellence (PACE) Mentoring Program for Crime Prevention and Community Resilience

Grant Amount: $110,000


La Plata County

Agency: Axis Health Partners

Project Title: Axis + La Plata County Sheriff’s Office Co-responder Program

Grant Amount: $300,000


Pueblo County

Agency: Southern Colorado Harm Reduction Association

Project Title: SoCo Harm Reduction: Pathways to Multidisciplinary Services

Grant Amount: $200,000


Agency: Servicios de La Raza, Inc.

Project Title: Just and Equitable Approaches to Crime Prevention and Intervention Services for Latinos and other Indigenous Communities

Grant Amount: $300,000


Rio Grande County

Agency: Rio Grande County Public Health Department

Project Title: Rio Grande County San Luis Valley: Partnership Strengthening Juvenile

Delinquency Prevention

Grant Amount: $88,500


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