A diverse group of PAD workers smiling and posing for a photograph.

History

The PAD Initiative was born out of the work and vision of Atlantans directly impacted by policing and incarceration and committed to a new approach to community safety and wellness.

2013

Under the leadership of queer and trans people of color, Solutions Not Punishment Collaborative (SNaPCO) was formed and lead a grassroots organizing campaign to defeat a banishment ordinance targeting sex workers in Atlanta’s Midtown neighborhood. SNaPCO’s founding organizations, including Racial Justice Action Center, Women on the Rise, LaGender, and Trans(forming), rallied a broad coalition of Atlantans to champion criminal justice reform and propose more effective approaches to public safety.

2015

Community leaders, legal system partners, and elected officials traveled to Seattle to learn about Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD) and Atlanta City Council and Fulton County Board of Commissioners unanimously voted to establish the PAD Design Team.

2016

The PAD Design Team, which included representatives from local criminal justice agencies, local governments, neighborhood and faith leaders, and social services providers, launched an 18-month process to design the local pilot of a diversion and care navigation strategy, based on the LEAD model. 

2017

PAD began accepting diversions in October 2017 in four Atlanta Police Department beats. In 2018, the Atlanta Police Department diverted 69 people, and by 2019 expanded to 28 beats.

2019

PAD was awarded the Civic Impact Award for Government Innovation by the Center for Civic Innovation. PAD successfully completed the two-year pilot, diverting 150 people and providing harm reduction based case management, housing, transportation, food assistance, and linkage to care that supported improvements in participant and community quality of life.

2020

The LEAD Bureau selected PAD to serve as one of seven sites nationally for the LEAD Proof of Concept Cohort, as a model site for Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion.

Atlanta City Council unanimously approved a substantial funding increase to expand PAD citywide.

PAD lead a design process for the expansion into Community Response Services with ATL311. We studied 3.5 years of 911 call data, co-hosted 3 virtual listening sessions with 15 other organizations, surveyed City of Atlanta residents, and convened six stakeholder working groups.

PAD changed our name to the Policing Alternatives & Diversion Initiative. New name, still PAD.

2021

In partnership with the City of Atlanta’s non-emergency 311 city services line, PAD launches Community Response Services for quality of life concerns related to mental health, substance use, or extreme poverty. By summer 2021, Community Response Services expand to be citywide.

Pre-Arrest Diversion Services also expand to include MARTA police officers and APD officers across Atlanta.

Staff

Leadership:

Moki Macias, Executive Director

Denise White, Deputy Director

Farah Witt, Director of Finance

Toni Jackson, Director of Community Response

Letisha Hemanes McCall, Director of Social Services

Tamia Dame, Director of Communications

Community Response Team:

Annette Johnson, Community Response Supervisor

Ash DeSilva, Community Response Supervisor

Referral Coordinators:

  • Devon Claridge

  • Takira Williams

Community Responders:

  • Christian Kelly

  • Michael White

  • Kasali Obanoyen

  • Rachiim McFarlane

  • Ericka Black

  • Lola Andrews

  • Robert Douglas

Community Engagement Team:

Kayla Smith, Community Engagement & Training Manager

Raychell Green, Training Coordinator

A’Shiah Rachel, Community Engagement Specialist

Care Navigation Team:

Angera Hardge, Care Navigation Supervisor

Terry Thompson, Care Navigation Supervisor

Erice Monteiro, Legal Navigation Manager

Will Baskin, Living Room Peer Advocate

Care Navigators:

  • Ashlee Heibel

  • Cameron Johnson

  • Darci Jaret

  • Diamante Hayes

  • D’Neise Robinson

  • Drew Umberger

  • Elisha Montoya

  • Gene Walls

  • Marquasha Zanders

  • Reese Ward

  • Tinola Payne

  • Traci Crawford

  • Victoria Hull

Street Wellness Enhancement & Engagement Team (SWEET)

  • Lori Rush, SWEET Supervisor

  • Emma Weinstein-Levey, SWEET Clinical Advocate

  • Gar Hogan, SWEET Peer Advocate

  • Jamal Smith, SWEET Peer Advocate

  • Kareem Osborne, SWEET Clinical Advocate

  • LaShonda McDowell, SWEET Clinical Advocate

  • Mark “Bean” Peters, SWEET Peer Advocate

Operations Team:

Jasmine Moore, Site Operations Manager

Stacy Piper, Operations Coordinator

Board of Directors

Chris Johnson

Clinton Deveaux, Chair

Iffat Muhammad Walker, Treasurer

James Alexander

Marilynn Winn

Salisha A. Evans

Sara Toering

Staci Fox

Vanessa Hickey-Gales

Members of Solutions not Punishment Collaborative at City Hall, 2015

Members of Solutions not Punishment Collaborative at City Hall, 2015

 “PAD gives me the opportunity to advocate for more humane responses.“

"During 30 years on the Municipal Court, it became clear to me that many defendants were brought before me because of their poverty, their homelessness, their mental health status or their addiction. Their arrests were less about crime than about their circumstances. These are issues that belong in the health and social justice systems of our communities rather than the criminal justice system. PAD gives me the opportunity to advocate for more humane responses to these concerns."

-Hon. Clinton Deveaux (Ret.), Board Chair

Supporters

PAD is supported by the generosity of individual donors, and the following funders:

City of Atlanta

Fulton County

Georgia Department of Behavioral Health & Developmental Disabilities

Georgia Power Foundation

Heising-Simons Foundation

Microsoft Justice Reform Initiative

National Football League

New Venture Fund

Norfolk Southern Corporation

Public Welfare Foundation

The JUST Trust

United Way of Greater Atlanta

Wellspring Philanthropic Fund

William Josef Foundation

Financials

PAD is committed to maintaining transparency in all aspects of our work, including how we manage our financial resources. Below are PAD’s IRS Form 990 filings, which are publicly available documents submitted to the Internal Revenue Service each year.

These forms provide detailed information about PAD’s financial activities. In addition to our 990 forms, PAD’s audit reports are also available, offering a comprehensive overview of our financial stewardship.

Legal Name: Atlanta Fulton County Pre-Arrest Diversion Initiative Inc.

Doing Business As: Policing Alternatives & Diversion Initiative Inc.

EIN: 81-5124367

Chief Executive Officer: Moki Macias

990 Forms:

Audit Reports:

If you have any questions about PAD’s financial activities, please email us at Info@atlantapad.org.