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Southside Rides Foundation teaches life skills through cars

by: Cambridge Cunningham

Posted: Mar 1, 2023 / 07:28 AM EST

Updated: Mar 1, 2023 / 07:28 AM EST

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (WGHP) — David Moore is using his lifelong love for cars to change lives.

The founder of Southside Rides Foundation uses his body shop on Hope Street in Winston-Salem to mentor at-risk youth. He teaches autobody work, mechanic repairs, and custom paint jobs so young people can learn a trade.

“I noticed there’s a lot of kids that have an interest in doing this type of work, especially with the cars,” Moore said.

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Participants have to complete an eight-week course in the classroom before they earn the right to work on vehicles. Amier Brown says he learned so many technical skills and life lessons, he decided to stay longer than the 16 weeks the hands-on part of the program requires. Check out the difference Community Foundations are making here in the Piedmont Triad

“They teach me a lot of things about like buying cars, fixing cars, selling cars, just learning how to become like a businessman,” Brown said.

The Winston-Salem Foundation’s Black Philanthropy Initiative awarded Southside Rides Foundation a $15,000 grant to provide materials and equipment. It also allows participants to earn a stipend for their work.

“I like to give them some sort of incentive,” Moore said. “It’s some money to help them address like child support, restitution fees, probation fees – fees that people don’t realize these guys might have.”

Moore’s grandson, Davion Moore, grew up learning from his grandfather. He says working alongside program participants taught him time management and communication skills. He hopes others will choose to gain skills and find a support system through the program.

“I honestly recommend coming here because it will teach you a lot and it will show you the right path.”

The next Southside Rides Foundation course will begin in the middle of March. You can contact David Moore for more information or to enroll.  Suggest a Correction

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David M Moore History Interview – MUSE Winston-Salem – Alanna Meltzer-Holderfield

MUSE Winston-Salem oral history interview with David Moore, owner, and founder of the Southside Rides Foundation. Interviewed by Alanna Meltzer-Holderfield on Dec. 1, 2022. The interview covers David’s life as a native of Winston-Salem, his childhood and family dynamics, his time in prison, and his path to reshaping his life, and helping others to do the same.

BUCKLEY REPORT

Winston-Salem man helping start conversations about saving lives

by: Dolan ReynoldsBob Buckley

Posted: Dec 19, 2022 / 06:26 PM EST

Updated: Dec 19, 2022 / 06:26 PM EST

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (WGHP) — “Alright, Ms. Arnold. How you doing today?” Dave Moore said.

“Hello, Mr. Moore…how are you?” Jeanettra Arnold said.

This isn’t two people from Winston-Salem exchanging pleasantries. It’s Moore trying to start a most-serious conversation about saving lives.

Moore has been working for years to help young African-American men find their way out of the drug and gang spiral that so often leads to violence. He believes that starts with the old adage that it takes a village.

“That’s the way it was back in the day,” Moore said. “Back in the day, you had different guys, different men that would come pick up some kids, take them to football practice, come pick up some kids drop them off at the boxing ring, going to the YMCA.”

Moore says those options for keeping young people occupied are quickly disappearing, and that is when the gangs pounce and recruit kids as young as 11 and 12.

“It’s not as bad as New York, but I see the potential for it to get to the point that it was in New York,” says former Nassau County, New York, sheriff’s deputy William Herrera. “You let it get out of control, it will get out of control very quickly.”

Herrera is working with Moore on the issue, and he also comes to it with some credibility of having been there.

“There’s a lot of us out there that are in the same position as me where you grew up in that environment, and you made it out,” Herrera said. “Well, take that and pay it forward. Teach it to these kids. Teach them that your environment doesn’t define you.”

Arnold is praying for her son Brandon who both made the honor roll in school and spent some time in prison. And that wasn’t even the worst of it: Brandon was shot seven times by someone in a dispute over a girl and nearly died. Despite his issues, Arnold is always there for her son.

“Always be that support system for your child because, at the end of the day, there’s nobody out there that’s going to love your child like you do,” Arnold said. “I keep a cell phone on for him. I will blow that phone up ’til he answers.”

Moore says the credibility of knowing what these young people are going through is essential. That’s why he brings Deven Gist to talk to them. 

Gist spent nearly 18 years in prison after killing someone – again, a dispute over a woman – but now is out of prison, has a young daughter and wants to prevent other kids from following in his tainted footsteps. Gist wasn’t in the worst position growing up. His father was in the home.

“He let me know…’if you want to be that way…there are consequences to it. I’m here for you.’ He did everything he was supposed to do as a father. I love him to death. He’s still in my life to this day…but it’s the choices that I made because I was caught up thinking…I had to be cool, and it got me 17 years in prison,” Gist said. “Prison is not the place to be…I promise you it’s not. It’s not going to make you cooler, not going to make you better, not going to make you tougher.”

See more of what Moore and his colleagues are trying to do in this edition of the Buckley Report.

David M Moore

Hey Facebook friends, I was touched today when I got a call saying I was selected to be honored at the MEN THAT WIN ceremony on September 23rd at 7 pm. Information on the flyer. Thanks for choosing me, peace and love to everyone 💕
Hey Facebook friends, I was touched today when I got a call saying I was selected to be honored at the MEN THAT WIN ceremony on September 23rd at 7pm. Information on the flyer. Thanks for choosing me, peace and love to everyone 💕

Experiencing a bit of what released offenders go through

August 31 2022 13:27
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By John Railey

“You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view … until you climb in his skin and walk around in it.”

— Atticus Finch in “To Kill a Mockingbird”

I’ve just been released from prison. Chaos and frustration consume my days as I wait in long lines to get a state identification card, see my probation officer and try to find work, the whole time relying on an inefficient public transportation system to get around. And if I don’t make it back to my halfway house by curfew, I face a return to prison.

I was used to being told what to do in prison. Now I have to figure it all out on my own, often on the internet, which I’ve grown rusty on.

That’s the world I got a glimpse of on Aug. 16 when I took part in a reentry simulation at the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office. With more than 50 others – including law-enforcement officers and social service workers – I spent a morning racing around a large room, bouncing back and forth from one table set up as a probation office, to another set up as a drug treatment center, to still another set up as a halfway house. Before that day, I had some idea of what released offenders go through from interviewing them for my job at Winston-Salem State University’s Center for the Study of Economic Mobility (CSEM), where reentry is a research bedrock. But the simulation gave me a real handle on what released offenders encounter.

Getting out of prison is hard and frustrating. Every complex turn is challenging and can lead to failure – a return to prison that is costly in financial and human terms. “Many of these men and women are so barren of role models and mentors,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Rob Lang of Winston-Salem told me recently. “They lack internet skills. Some can hardly read, or have reading deficits. Some don’t have any food and are hungry. They need a little help.”

Lang’s job as a prosecutor involves sending those convicted of crimes to prison. But he has long realized released offenders need a path back, and has worked toward that as the Project Safe Neighborhoods and Reentry coordinator for his office. That effort continues with the reentry simulations. Lang’s office partners with Rebecca Sauter’s Project Reentry, which she leads, and along with other community partners on the simulations to help those who work with released offenders – or want to do that work – better understand the maze released offenders confront.

These events are sorely needed.

Reentry work is a bedrock for CSEM, which realizes the heavy financial and human costs of recidivism. Douglas Bates, a CSEM Research Fellow and assistant professor in WSSU’s Department of Social Work, is developing a survey that will help employers and released offenders better adjust to the workplace. Among CSEM’s partner organizations are the Do School, whose participants can include released offenders learning the construction trade, and Project M.O.O.R.E., which helps at-risk youth and is run by David Moore, who did time in prison decades ago before turning his life around.

CSEM’s Associate Director, Alvin Atkinson, worked with Lang on reentry efforts when Atkinson was with WSSU’s Center for Community Safety in the early 2000s.

The simulation events are part of a nationwide initiative and is the latest of several to be held in our state and area. Participants, taking on the roles of released offenders, deal with challenges of medical care, mental health, substance abuse, child support and employment. “We create different scenarios,” Lang said. “This is modeled on real-life experiences and barriers that these guys have. We show the chaos.”

Transportation is another big challenge. “Over and over, transportation is one of the biggest barriers,” Lang said. For example, he said, a released offender lacking a driver’s license might depend on a coworker to get to his job. But the coworker loses his job, and the released offender relies on cabs to get to work. “So he’s spending $18 to get to an $8-an-hour job,” Lang said.

CSEM’s research has documented similar challenges among those in the general population, including the fact that riders who use city buses to get to work spend an average of 12 hours a week on buses, helping to lead The Winston-Salem Foundation and Forsyth Technical Community College to tackle the issue. Reform of the public transportation system can especially help released offenders. In other areas of the state, Lang said, a factory, realizing problems with public transportation, started shuttle services for released offenders, and a city tweaked its bus lines to help them get to work. In Forsyth County, Lang encourages released offenders to use the driver’s license restoration project offered by the district attorney’s office.

The released offenders often turn out to be good workers, Lang said. “They’re motivated by not wanting to go back.”

Project Reentry is making a difference. The statewide recidivism rate is 32%, according to Project Reentry, but for released offenders who take part in their programs, that rate is 10.7%.

The reentry simulation events can help. “People who have been through the system talk about who helped them and how,” Lang said, and participants learn how to better help released offenders, including through enhanced coordination among everyone from probation officers to food bank operators.

“We can do our jobs better,” Lang said. “Many released offenders do want to change, if we can just help a little bit.”

John Railey (raileyjb@gmail.com) is the writer-in-residence for Center for the Study of Economic Mobility, www.wssu.edu/csem.

East Winston man continues giving back with a new program

David M MooreDavid Moore is well known in Winston-Salem for his Southside Rides, which puts newly released offenders, like he once was, to work in its car body shop. Now, he’s expanding his scope, trying to reach at-risk youth before they make the costly mistakes he and so many others made. In this holiday season, here is the story of a man who gives back year-round. We could use a lot more visionaries like him.

“It’s all about trying to build a better community, and letting these young folks know that’s a cool thing,” More, a towering man of 60, said.

He has renewed focus on an initiative of his foundation, Project M.O.O.R. E., the second word standing for Mentoring Our Own and Rejuvenating the Environment. Next month, with the start of the new year, Moore plans to transform an old frame house just off Martin Luther King Drive into a spot where youth can gather, learn and dream, charting plans for careers with on-site training in barbering, cosmetology, and music. Moore, who has a track record for getting things done, understands the people he is trying to reach. A natural leader who is charismatically plainspoken and streetwise, he has been there.


Winston-Salem State University’s Center for the Study of Economic Mobility (CSEM) has named Moore one of its Community Scholars and given Project M.O.O.R.E. an Economic Mobility Opportunity Award. Alvin Atkinson, CSEM’s Associate Director, said, “Everybody in East Winston knows David and his compassionate record for reaching people at whatever stage they are and helping them reach their full potential.”

Moore and his initiative are in sync with key themes of CSEM’s work: tapping into the abundance of talent and hope in Eat Winston and helping residents break down barriers that have too long thwarted upward economic mobility. Toward that end, CSEM’s work has included supporting efforts to help parolees re-enter the workplace, most recently with research by CSEM Fellow Douglas Bates. Moore’s Southside Rides, which includes a thriving body shop here and in Charlotte, has long emphasized such re-entry efforts.

His new initiative, Project M.O.O.R.E., aims to reach youth before they commit serious crimes. He identifies with them, including the peer pressure and home tensions they face, some with parents missing in action. Moore spent his first years in Bermuda with his mother, never meeting his father until he moved to Winston to live with his family when he was 12.

After graduating from North Forsyth High School, he went to work at Hanes Dye and Finishing. He learned auto bodywork at Forsyth Technical Community College and opened his own shop.

On the side, he began selling marijuana, moving it in increasingly larger quantities, having it driven in from Mexico by car. “Then we got so cocky we were having it mailed in,” he said. In 1999, he had a package mailed to the home of a favorite niece, Cassandra Jones. She had sickle cell anemia and Moore helped support her. He was going to pick up the package at her house.

She was not involved in the drug business and didn’t know what was in the package, Moore said. He got busted and she was detained. Detectives threatened to go hard on her, Moore said. To save her, he confessed to trafficking drugs. Cassandra, who was never charged, told Moore, “God’s got you now.” She died while he was in the Winston-Salem jail waiting for his case to be adjudicated.

Moore, shaken to his core, re-embraced the Christianity of his youth as he went to state prison for two years. He mentored other inmates. Soon after he got out, he set up Southside Rides Foundation, a nonprofit. “I went through challenges, doors slammed in my face, and all I wanted to do was help,” he said “Ex-offenders aren’t built where you can get a $50,000 loan and start your own business.” His wife, Linda, stood by him, just as she did when he was in prison. He secured grants from the city of Winston-Salem, gradually making Southside a success. Thirty-seven of the men who have been in the program have opened their own body or car shops, Moore said.

To encourage more such entrepreneurship, Moore recently gave four graduates of his program stipends of $1,000 each.

As he revamps Project M.O.O.R.E, he brings to bear all the lessons he’s learned through Southside Rides. The project will serve 15 youth, 14 -to 19 years old. Each session of the program will last six months. Laptops will be on site, and the participants will be required to do schoolwork, in addition to their job training. The barbering and cosmetology will be interesting to students, Moore said, and the music side will be especially so. Participants can make their own videos for YouTube and other venues. “What kid wouldn’t want to learn the music part of it?” Moore asked.

As an added incentive, qualified students will be able to use donated dirt bikes for a limited time, and, if they graduate from high school, get to keep them.

He will insist on parental involvement. “That helps me to help the kids,” he said.

Two of Moore’s friends, Sonia Young and Dennis Davis, will be the on-site managers.

The three of them will try to teach the program participants to believe in themselves. “I learned to do it. They can too,” Moore said. “And my niece Cassandra, she’s always looking down on me from above.”

A BRIGHTER FUTURE!

HELP ME, HELP You

WHERE I COME FROM

David Moore is running for his first term for NC State House District 71. This district includes 

David Moore was born in Winston-Salem Nc after a year old his mother and himself moved to Bermuda island to live there for 11 years, on the 12 years his mother and himself return to Winston-Salem to begin their new lives. Time passed and life continued, David soon met his wife in 1979. Now the couple has been married for 38 years and counting. Within this time David and his wife had three amazing children and a previous child before they met. Their children are Candice Lloyd, Dexter Moore, Jasmine Moore, and Dominic Moore. All children contribute to extending their family to have sixteen grandchildren. 

As an ex-convict, David has spent the last eighteen years making the necessary change he wants to see in his community. Fighting for convicts and the opportunity to be seen as a changed individual and not labeled as a criminal. David and his team have accomplished so much, that in 2004 he was able to open up his own auto body shop here in Winston-Salem NC. David soon filled his business as a Non-profit in 2005 to help with the M.O.O.R.E project. David was presented with the opportunity to collaborate with the Winston-Salem court system to offer his auto body shop as a community service work spot in 2006. Two years later David was collaborating with the Winston-Salem police department (WSPD) in their Gang Prevention initiative. Forsyth Tech soon to see David and his Non-profit on their radar and offered him to teach on their campus as an Auto body instructor. He also taught at Lexington prison via being hired by Davidson Community college. 

David is now running for North Carolina House District 71. After serving a 2 year prison sentence, David was released in 2004 when he began his new journey. Since then David Moore is well known in Winston-Salem for his Southside Rides, which puts newly released offenders, like he once was, to work in its car body shop. Now, he’s expanding his scope, trying to reach at-risk youth before they make the costly mistakes he and so many others made. He has renewed focus on an initiative of his foundation, Project M.O.O.R. E., the second word standing for Mentoring Our Own and Rejuvenating the Environment. Moore, who has a track record for getting things done, understands the people he is trying to reach. A natural leader who is charismatically plainspoken and streetwise, he has been there.

“It’s all about trying to build a better community, and letting these young folks know that’s a cool thing,” -David Moore

MISSION STATEMENT

Equality Meets Opportunity 

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COMMUNITY

Winston-Salem man uses auto body shop to mentor at-risk youth

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — A man in Winston-Salem is using his trade skills to give back to the community by helping people turn mistakes into opportunities.

For the last 15 years, David Moore has been mentoring the incarcerated and at-risk youth in his auto body shop. 

“Meeting Mr. Moore was like a field trip. I could use my hands, and he just pretty much let me go. You know, it wasn’t ‘Don’t do this, don’t do that.’ It was, ‘Go out there and see what you can do,’ so it was more like a test,” said Romi White, owner of Romi White Auto Repair.

Moore founded Southside Rides Foundation to help people, who, because of their past, have few other options. 

“Mr. Moore gave me a chance. He didn’t judge me for my background. I don’t think anybody should judge anybody, but just give them a chance,” said White.

On Friday, he celebrated four of his mentees’ success with a $1,000 grant. 

All four are proud business owners with body shops across the city.

“I did not ever think it, no. I did not. So, it feels good every day I wake up knowing I got to go to my own shop now,” said Sidney Reynolds, owner of 2Cheap-Customz. 

“Without that resource, I feel like my future would not be where it is now. I would have not been able to give back and help others and employ over 20 people in the time that I’ve been doing this. Without that opportunity none of that would exist,” said White. 

Moore says growth starts with being brave enough to try on your own.

“I have kids. I have grandkids. If they leave the house, I want to make sure they safe so what do I do about that? I provide opportunities for everybody to want to do it right,” said Moore. 

Moore says local dealerships have hired over 200 people who went through his program and around 30 have opened their own businesses.  

East Winston man continues giving back with new program

David Moore is well known in Winston-Salem for his Southside Rides, which puts newly released offenders, like he once was, to work in its car body shop. Now, he’s expanding his scope, trying to reach at-risk youth before they make the costly mistakes he and so many others made. In this holiday season, here is the story of a man who gives back year-round. We could use a lot more visionaries like him.

“It’s all about trying to build a better community, and letting these young folks know that’s a cool thing,” More, a towering man of 60, said.


He has renewed focus on an initiative of his foundation, Project M.O.O.R. E., the second word standing for Mentoring Our Own and Rejuvenating the Environment. Next month, with the start of the new year, Moore plans to transform an old frame house just off Martin Luther King Drive into a spot where youth can gather, learn and dream, charting plans for careers with on-site training in barbering, cosmetology and music. Moore, who has a track record for getting things done, understands the people he is trying to reach. A natural leader who is charismatically plainspoken and streetwise, he has been there.

Winston-Salem State University’s Center for the Study of Economic Mobility (CSEM) has named Moore one of its Community Scholars and given Project M.O.O.R.E. an Economic Mobility Opportunity Award. Alvin Atkinson, CSEM’s Associate Director, said, “Everybody in East Winston knows David and his compassionate record for reaching people at whatever stage they are and helping them reach their full potential.”

Moore and his initiative are in sync with key themes of CSEM’s work: tapping into the abundance of talent and hope in Eat Winston and helping residents break down barriers that have too long thwarted upward economic mobility. Toward that end, CSEM’s work has included supporting efforts to help parolees re-enter the workplace, most recently with research by CSEM Fellow Douglas Bates. Moore’s Southside Rides, which includes a thriving body shop here and in Charlotte, has long emphasized such re-entry efforts.

His new initiative, Project M.O.O.R.E., aims to reach youth before they commit serious crimes. He identifies with them, including the peer pressure and home tensions they face, some with parents missing in action. Moore spent his first years in Bermuda with his mother, never meeting his father until he moved to Winston to live with family when he was 12.

After graduating from North Forsyth High School, he went to work at Hanes Dye and Finishing. He learned auto bodywork at Forsyth Technical Community College and opened his own shop.

On the side, he began selling marijuana, moving it in increasingly larger quantities, having it driven in from Mexico by car. “Then we got so cocky we were having it mailed in,” he said. In 1999, he had a package mailed to the home of a favorite niece, Cassandra Jones. She had sickle cell anemia and Moore helped support her. He was going to pick up the package at her house.

She was not involved in the drug business and didn’t know what was in the package, Moore said. He got busted and she was detained. Detectives threatened to go hard on her, Moore said. To save her, he confessed to trafficking in drugs. Cassandra, who was never charged, told Moore, “God’s got you now.” She died while he was in the Winston-Salem jail waiting for his case to be adjudicated.

Moore, shaken to his core, re-embraced the Christianity of his youth as he went to state prison for two years. He mentored other inmates. Soon after he got out, he set up Southside Rides Foundation, a nonprofit. “I went through challenges, doors slammed in my face, and all I wanted to do was help,” he said “Ex-offenders aren’t built where you can get a $50,000 loan and start your own business.” His wife, Linda, stood by him, just as she did when he was in prison. He secured grants from the city of Winston-Salem, gradually making Southside a success. Thirty-seven of the men who have been in the program have opened their own body or car shops, Moore said.

To encourage more such entrepreneurship, Moore recently gave four graduates of his program stipends of $1,000 each.

As he revamps Project M.O.O.R.E, he brings to bear all the lessons he’s learned through Southside Rides. The project will serve 15 youth, 14 -to 19 years old. Each session of the program will last six months. Laptops will be on site, and the participants will be required to do schoolwork, in addition to their job training. The barbering and cosmetology will be interesting to students, Moore said, and the music side will be especially so. Participants can make their own videos for YouTube and other venues. “What kid wouldn’t want to learn the music part of it?” Moore asked.

As an added incentive, qualified students will be able to use donated dirt bikes for limited times, and, if they graduate from high school, get to keep them.

He will insist on parental involvement. “That helps me to help the kids,” he said.

Two of Moore’s friends, Sonia Young and Dennis Davis, will be the on-site managers.

The three of them will try to teach the program participants to believe in themselves. “I learned to do it. They can too,” Moore said. “And my niece Cassandra, she’s always looking down on me from above.”