INDIANAPOLIS — One Indianapolis organization says one of the solutions to slowing down crime – is giving people the things they need like housing and food.
That’s why organizations like PACE and restaurants like Q’s Quisine are working to help give people the resources they need like healthy options for food and counseling.
Quinetta Jones opened her own restaurant Qui's Quisine in February because she saw a need in her community for healthy food as well as other reasons.
“I knew that when I was searching for fresh fruits and vegetables it was either a grocery if there was one around or there just wasn’t one,” Jones said.
Jones says her restaurant is in the middle of a food desert.
The Indianapolis Community Food Access Coalition calls Indianapolis one of the worst cities in America for food deserts. They say more than 208,000 Hoosiers live in a food desert.
PACE says it provides resources like relapse prevention groups and counseling.
“We service individuals that have been engaged in any way with the justice system,” Gina Fears, Assistant Director of Recovery and Community Services at PACE said.
Its location in the Martindale-Brightwood area has been serving the area for the last 15 years.
“Our issues are more human than they are a location in the city,” Fears concluded.
If you want to learn more about PACE click here.
-
Tyrese Haliburton confirmed out for next season following Achilles injury
The Indiana Pacers have officially confirmed that star guard Tyrese Haliburton will miss the entire 2025-2026 season after he tore his Achilles.Indianapolis city-county council revisits curfew ordinance after mass shooting
The Indianapolis City-County Council is re-evaluating its curfew ordinance following a mass shooting in downtown Indianapolis that left two teenagers dead, and 5 other people injured.Mass shooting in downtown Indy leads to gun charges against four teens
Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears announced Monday that four people, including three juveniles, have been charged in connection with Saturday's mass shooting in downtown Indianapolis.Body of 14-year-old boy recovered from lake on Indy's northeast side
Authorities are searching for a 14-year-old boy who went missing in a lake near Kessler Boulevard and Fall Creek Parkway on Sunday. He reportedly went under while swimming from a pontoon boat.