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    Green Dot Brings Change

    Green Dot

    Photo By Steven Conklin | Members of the 142nd Fighter Wing in Portland, Ore. participate in Green Dot training...... read more read more

    PORTLAND, OR, UNITED STATES

    06.04.2016

    Story by Tech. Sgt. Steven Conklin 

    142nd Wing

    The culture within the U.S. Air Force has been changing, and helping to drive that cultural change is Senior Master Sgt. Bobbi Kennedy, Green Dot coordinator for the 142nd Fighter Wing.

    “Green Dot is a civilian program that was adopted by the Air Force because it is shown to have a reduction in interpersonal violence,” Kennedy said. “Based on CDC [Center for Disease Control] studies, at the high school level there has been a 50 percent reduction in interpersonal violence and at the collegiate level it was up to 23 percent.”

    As part of her demonstration, Kennedy highlighted red dots that represented potential violence, allowing participants to see the negative situations. She then showed green dots representing service members intervening to stop the violence.

    Kennedy said that service members can use their Green Dot training to intervene in one of three different ways; directly addressing the situation, distracting the offender, or delegating another person to intervene.

    “The Air Force wants training like this because we have a problem,” Kennedy said. “People are still getting assaulted, people are still getting into domestic violence situations, and there are still problems with stalking.”

    Green dot training replaces the sexual assault prevention and response training, but focuses on a wider range of violence and emphasizes on intervention.

    “Go ahead and step in when you need to, and maybe that looks like directly stepping in and asking somebody to stop, or maybe that is having a friend come help you, or maybe it’s just calling the police, but don’t walk away from that situation,” Kennedy said. “Go ahead and make that choice to make a difference because it helps somebody out, and the more we do that, we will start to see those reductions.”

    While culture changes may not happen overnight, Col. Paul T. Fitzgerald, 142nd Fighter Wing commander praised the training for its effectiveness.

    “It’s proven. This is something that has been tried and true,” he said. “It works.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.04.2016
    Date Posted: 06.07.2016 23:07
    Story ID: 200041
    Location: PORTLAND, OR, US

    Web Views: 32
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN