No more mass shootings. No more homeless camps. The New American Dream is safety, security, and belonging for all

Kellison Community Concepts (KCC) was created to end preventable suffering—mass violence, homelessness, and despair. We believe mass shootings and mass homelessness are not America’s destiny. Our approach is both practical and visionary: immediate tools that help today, and structural change that lasts for generations.

What We Do

We educate. We advocate. We transform systems.

Workshops & Training – KCC offers interactive workshops that give people real tools to manage stress, prevent violence, and strengthen connection.

Tools & Resources – Practical, downloadable guides for crisis response, suicide prevention, and workplace culture change.
Policy & Culture Shift – From fragmented systems to “One Door” access, we push bold reforms and cultural change that end the cycle of mass violence, homelessness, and despair.

Workshops we offer

WOKE + MAGA = WOGA

Meeting in the middle, going grey, and reclaiming shared values to end mass violence, rebuild trust, and choose belonging over division.

The Tech Tsunami

Cumulative Stress in a Wired World

The nonstop pace of tech is fueling stress, burnout, and division our brains weren’t built to handle. This workshop shows how digital overload impacts our lives—and teaches simple tools like PauseB4™ and Hope Scrolling to reset and reconnect.

Love Someone in Crisis?

Scripts, boundaries, and resources to help a loved one in crisis with compassion, while protecting your own energy and safety.

See the Signs™

Equipping communities, schools, and workplaces to recognize early warning signs, intervene compassionately, and prevent violence before it escalates.

The New American Dream

A 6-hour deep dive connecting cultural shifts and systemic reforms to bold solutions for ending mass shootings, homelessness, and despair—reimagining America around safety, security, and belonging.

High-Stress, High-Risk Support

Confidential support and practical tools for first responders, ER staff, law enforcement, therapists, and others carrying the hidden costs of trauma and hyper-responsibility.

HAVE MORE QUESTIONS?

Why It Matters

When the system breaks, people break. KCC exists to reimagine what happens next.

After decades working in hospitals, jails, and crisis response, I saw the same heartbreaking pattern: the system failed the very people it was supposed to help. People in pain were punished instead of supported. Families were torn apart. Violence escalated. I created KCC to reimagine that system—where early support replaces punishment, community care comes before crisis, and compassion is the first response.

We are living through overlapping crises—mass shootings, homelessness, addictions, and tech-driven stress—but change is possible. Seatbelts, 911, the moon landing, and Social Security all seemed impossible until they became inevitable. Small acts of compassion matter, but they must be paired with a massive overhaul of our crisis and mental health systems and a bold national strategy. Together, we can rebuild a New American Dream where safety, security, and belonging are the foundation for everyone.

a quote here

Tools & Downloads

Preventing Workplace Attacks & Active Shooter Incidents

Why This Matters

Workplace violence is one of the fastest-growing threats to employee safety and organizational stability. Nearly all acts of workplace violence are preceded by observable warning signs and escalating distress (FBI, 2021). Ignoring these signs increases risk for tragedy.

Preventing Attacks in Schools

Why This Matters

Mass shootings are not random—they follow a path of observable warning signs. Nearly all attackers experience personal crisis, escalating distress, or observable behavior changes before violence occurs (U.S. Secret Service, 2019). Prevention begins with awareness and compassionate intervention.

America Under Pressure:
Stress, Isolation, and the Need for Support

The Reality Today

America is experiencing unprecedented levels of stress, anxiety, and exhaustion. Parents, workers, and communities face relentless demands—digital overload, fewer supports, and less time to recover when crisis strikes. We are living in a culture of constant alerts: pop-ups, emails, texts, apps, and passwords pulling our attention in all directions. At the same time, family structures are smaller and weaker, leaving fewer shoulders to lean on when life becomes overwhelming.

Coming Together to End Mass Violence: Connection is Protection

America stands at a crossroads. Violence—whether mass shootings, political assassinations, attacks on first responders, or hate-driven attacks—is increasing at alarming rates. While the media and online spaces amplify division between Republicans and Democrats, MAGA and WOKE, the truth is that we share far more in common than we often recognize. If we are to end mass violence, we must rediscover our shared values, recognize the root causes driving despair, and come together around a common purpose.