Safe Walk program helps Mornelle kids get to school - Action News
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Toronto

Safe Walk program helps Mornelle kids get to school

A woman has started a program to walk children from a once violence-plagued community in East Scarborough to school every day.

Parents were afraid to walk their children to school after a series of shootings

Safe Walk

8 years ago
Duration 3:03
Parents started Safe Walk after shootings left kids scared to walk to school.

It's 8 a.m andkids are streaming out of the Mornelle Court buildings in eastern Scarborough.

The best route to their school is a shady stairwell running through the wooded area to the back of the complex.

But ayoung man was shot dead there in 2008 andthatstairwellbecameoff-limits during a particularlyviolent eight-month period.

Angela Brackett started the Safe Walk program 7 years ago after a series of violence events in the community. (CBC)
"Parents weren't taking their kids to school anymore," said Angela Bracket, who lives in the area.

"They were afraid to walk because we had a couple of shootings ...so it really affected the community."

The final straw was the murder of 17-year-old Shazad Khawajain July 2008. Hewas gunned down during a tripto the store to buymilk for his mother.
The Safe Walk program, run entirely by volunteers, takes about 80 children to school from the Mornelle court community. (CBC)

That's when Brackett decided to do something to make the neighbourhood safe for their families.She started the Safe Walk program.

Thegroup ofvolunteersinyellow reflective vests have beenwalking neighbourhood kids to school for the past seven years.

They maketheirway around the community, gathering children as they go. In all, about 80 children use the program to get to and from school.

17-year-old Shazad Khawaja was fatally shot outside his Mornelle Court apartment building in July 2008. (CBC)

School staff say attendance is up

"We started the program with 20 children and it just evolved and it just grew," Brackett said.

"We have letters from the principal stating that since we started this program the kids are coming out more ... more attendance and they're arriving on time and it's because of what we're doing in the community."

The children yell "Good morning, Miss Angela", as they join the human school bus.
A young man was killed in this stairwell in 2008, which sparked volunteers to start the Safe Walk program. (CBC)

"I think it's awesome because whenever my mom can't bring me to school, they bring me," says Grade 4 studentMalachiCupid.

"They feel like they're my family."

And Brackett's volunteerism isn't lost on Alyssa Fullner, who's also in Grade 4.

"I think it's nice of her because she doesn't really do it for money. She does it for the kids because shecares about us."

Safe Walk program partners with police, city

Brackettstarted the programin partnership with Toronto Police 43 Division, Toronto Community Housing, and the local city councillor, Paul Ainslie.

She has received support from the city's Community Crisis Response Program (CCRP), which helpscommunities impacted by violence.

Volunteer BlossomWynter has been with her since day one.

"The residents were scared. I was scared, also. So Angela, my friend, came up with this idea and theparents were so happy about it".

Almost daily, Toronto PoliceConst.RandallArsenaultjoins the group.

Angela Brackett has been walking kids to school since 2009, and also runs a homework program as well as camps during march break and the summer. (CBC)
Wynter believes it's the police partnership that has changed this community.

"The cops used to come around ...it used to be a problem. We have 43 Division cops.They walk with us, make it even better. So, right now the cops and the community, we are one family."

Officer Randall Arsenault has walked with the Mornelle Court community nearly every day for the past 3 years. (Toronto Police Service)

'It was like a war'

The volunteer team also offers free camps anda homework program in space donated by TCH.

"It was like a war, but now it's like a love web. Isn't it kids?" asks Wynter.

The children respond with a "yes" so loud it resonates through the stairwell.
Volunteers pick up children from the many Mornelle Court apartment buildings and bring them safely to school. (CBC)

Thegroup, flanked with volunteers, rushes to school, arriving safely before the bell.

With files from Toronto Police Services