Mayor Names New Anti-Gang Czar

Tuesday, Sep 8, 2009  |  Updated 12:30 PM PDT
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Mayor Names New Anti-Gang Czar

KNBC-TV

Glassell Park Recreation Center is one of dozens of Los Angeles City parks that will keep the lights on at night in an effort to give kids a safe place to go this summer.

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The architect of the successful Summer Night Lights  program was named Tuesday as Los Angeles' new anti-gang czar, tasked with  overseeing the city's gang prevention and intervention  programs.

Guillermo Cespedes will take over the mayor's Office of Gang Reduction  and Youth Development,  replacing the Rev. Jeff Carr, who will become Mayor  Antonio Villaraigosa's chief of staff effective Sept. 19.

Cespedes is credited with developing the Summer Night Lights program,  which in its first year helped the city record its safest summer in more than  30 years. The program kept 16 parks across the city open until midnight,  providing at-risk youths with organized activities aimed at keeping them out of  gangs.

Those organized activities included basketball and soccer tournaments;  workshops in acting, dance, hip-hop, fashion, T-shirt printing, music and make- up design; and film screenings. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has praised  the program as an ``innovative approach to crime fighting.''

According to the mayor's office, Cespedes' career in community service  spans three decades. During the 1970s, he worked with various agencies helping  low-income families and disenfranchised youth in Connecticut. He moved to  California in 1981, and over the years has worked with agencies such as Clinica  de la Raza, Oakland Children's Hospital, the East Bay Agency for Children and  CalWorks.

In 2003, Cespedes served as the deputy director of the Summer of Success  Baldwin Village, keeping Jim Gilliam Park busy with sports tournaments and  family activities until 2 a.m. during the summer months. It became the model  for the Summer Night Lights program.

From 2005 through 2007, Cespedes taught in the African Studies  Department at Cal State Dominguez Hills.

Cespedes has a Bachelor of Arts degree from Sacred Heart University and  a Masters in Social Work from Columbia University. He also received post- graduate training from the Nathan Akerman Family Institute, Bronx State  Hospital Family Studies Unit and Bristol Hospital Family Unit.

A native of Cuba, Cespedes has lived in South Los Angeles since 1999.

Posted Sep 8, 2009
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