CBPS Collective
Kris Arroyo is a Nuyorican born and raised in Brooklyn, NY. At a young age, Kris was committed to preventing gun violence in her community after she lost a childhood friend to gun violence and became a leader in her high school's reACTION program. At age 17, Kris was already making an impact across NY state, speaking in the State Capitol against the NRA, and was recognized for her passionate advocacy for gun violence victims, receiving honors from then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz.
While previously serving as the Director of Community Outreach for New Yorkers Against Gun Violence, Kris helped develop a community-based ReAction curriculum that has been a guide to students throughout New York City emphasizing personal and group development, misconceptions about guns and gun violence, policy and programmatic solutions to reducing gun violence, and advocacy skills. Through this program, she was able to educate and mentor hundreds of high school and middle school students each year. Her passion and dedication to serving youth led to her being the lead advisor for Youth Over Guns and bringing them into the New Yorkers Against Gun Violence coalition. Kris joined Justice League NYC in 2017 after meeting Carmen Perez at the first major conference with The Gathering for Justice, “ Growing Up Locked Down.” She immediately became an integral part of organizing and an invaluable staff member of The Gathering for Justice (TGFJ) team as she previously served as the Program Administrator Office Manager. During her membership of TGFJ-Justice League NYC Task Force, she also helped deploy major campaigns such as #JusticeforEricGarrner, #FreeMeekMill, and Women’s March.
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CBPS Collective
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We are a collective of experts in building neighborhood leadership to advance safety -- the groups on the ground that do the work day in and day out to mediate conflict, get people in crisis into supportive services and put youth on a path away from violence and to stability. We represent and support the dozens of small, nonprofit, community-led grassroots organizations that, for decades, have been helping to forge peace, with little support or official recognition from policymakers, elected officials or funding agencies. Investing in the community-based public safety leaders is the key difference-maker in stopping violence, ending mass incarceration and setting the nation on a transformational course toward a shared safety model rooted in systems of care, healing and community self-determination.