Community Spring Insights

Rolling the Crisis Dice: Calling for Help During a Behavioral Health Crisis
Leigh Scott, Fellow Leigh Scott, Fellow

Rolling the Crisis Dice: Calling for Help During a Behavioral Health Crisis

I recently had the unfortunate experience of trying to get mental health support for someone very close to me. They were in an acute crisis. The co-morbidities included trauma history, brain trauma, and a history of addiction all exacerbated by recent loss. Trying to navigate the mental health system while they were in crisis was made all the more difficult by the fact that…

Read More
No Adults in the Room: My Journey Navigating the Mental Health and Carceral System
Leigh Scott, Fellow Leigh Scott, Fellow

No Adults in the Room: My Journey Navigating the Mental Health and Carceral System

There is a unique problem in America - using cages as the answer to behavioral health concerns. Locally, there are over 1,000 beds available at the Alachua County Jail and only 35 at the rehab center. There are unlimited spaces in the criminal court, but in the mental health diversion court, where you may be connected to resources, they are limited to…

Read More
Love and Trauma: How we move through the world
Kenjee Roker, Fellow Kenjee Roker, Fellow

Love and Trauma: How we move through the world

Links Not Locks is a campaign focusing on the intersection between mental health crises and incarceration. I've seen time and time again that when folx are in crisis, they are met with force and stigma instead of the help and community support they need.

Last year, my life was filled with what seemed like a never-ending crisis triggered by a series of car accidents. After…

Read More
Reinvest in Housing: The GCRA and the Affordable Housing Crisis
John Wise, Fellow John Wise, Fellow

Reinvest in Housing: The GCRA and the Affordable Housing Crisis

Housing in our community is increasingly out of reach for many of our neighbors. There are about 19,000 people in our community who, after paying for the cost of housing available to them, are left with only about $25 per day for other expenses – that’s $175 per week for food, utilities, health and child care, transportation, everything…

Read More
Why the Pursuit of Happiness Is Always Political
Sydney Lee, Fellow Sydney Lee, Fellow

Why the Pursuit of Happiness Is Always Political

I want you to imagine a scenario to keep in mind for the rest of this piece. Imagine you are satisfied with your life as a whole, whether this is a scenario about your hopes for the future or your life in the past or present…

Read More
Housing policy has failed, and continues to fail, Black and Latino People
Lacorya Lynn, Fellow Lacorya Lynn, Fellow

Housing policy has failed, and continues to fail, Black and Latino People

As stated by David Von Drehle, “History is not just about the past. It also reveals the present.” This is clear when you consider how housing and race interact in our community and country. The United States was founded off the oppression, indoctrination, and enslavement of Indigenous and Black people. Throughout our nation’s history, Indigenous people, Black people, and other people of color have suffered at the hands of greed and apathy. Indigenous people were…

Read More
What Stats On Affordable Housing Won’t Tell You:  Another Look at the Same Truth
Julius Irving, Fellow Julius Irving, Fellow

What Stats On Affordable Housing Won’t Tell You: Another Look at the Same Truth

If I told you the truth would you believe me? If by some chance you were to believe me, what would you be willing to do with that truth? Well, I’ve heard the truth and I believe it. Millions of people around the world, including myself, are living this truth everyday. One of the many things I'm doing is sharing my inside out perspective of this truth with the hope of opening eyes, ears, and minds to a truer telling of…

Read More
Shining A Light On Affordable Housing
Lacorya Lynn, Fellow Lacorya Lynn, Fellow

Shining A Light On Affordable Housing

Air, water, food, sleep, clothing, and shelter are all basic physiological needs. However, for many people, unaffordable rent means that they must prioritize shelter at the expense of their other needs. Food, health, safety--these are all things that we as Community Spring fellows have had to sacrifice to have a place to stay. Because of our backgrounds and our knowledge of other affected people, we decided that…

Read More
The Pain of “Othering”
Latashia Mayze-Brimm, Fellow Latashia Mayze-Brimm, Fellow

The Pain of “Othering”

“Othering” is being placed in a category by systems and society that deem you unworthy to be a part of the community. As a Black person, the foundation of “othering” is white supremacy that permeates throughout the social and justice system. Mass incarceration arose as part of the New Jim Crow to repress Black people. It is now so large and corrupt that…

Read More
Coming Home: A Narrative Poem of Community Voices
Nadine Johnson, Fellow Nadine Johnson, Fellow

Coming Home: A Narrative Poem of Community Voices

The following poem is a collection of community stories gathered in order to end the stigma around incarceration and re-entry. Our hope is that by highlighting the personal experiences of these individuals we may open hearts, minds and eyes to see people who have been incarcerated for what they are…people!

Read More