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Page accuracy

[edit]

This page is now COMPLETELY inaccurate.

Justice Resource Institute is a medium-sized non-profit organization agency that's been around for 40 years in New England with 30+ social services programs with a mental health focus and social justice mission.

The Trauma Center is a small but productive (many publications, etc.) program that's been around for 30 years and is an internationally recognized traumatic stress specialty training,research and treatment center.

The Trauma Center joined JRI in 2005.

The leadership currently listed on this ridiculous reversion to a previously completely incorrect edit is the leadership of the Trauma Center--not JRI. The programming listed is an highly abbreviated overview of JRI's many offerings, not the Trauma Center.

The few publications listed are a subset of those produced by JRI (the TC is responsible for well over 100 research publications).

Whoever keep hijacking these pages should just delete the entire thing and start over--couldn't be more inaccurate.

Joseph Spinazzola, Executive Director, The Trauma Center, Vice President, Behavioral Health & Trauma Services, Justice Resource Institute email redacted - WLU

Content must be verified through the addition of reliable sources. Feel free to suggest new sources and edits, though given your conflict of interest, I would suggest you do not add them yourself. WLU (t) (c) Wikipedia's rules:simple/complex 20:52, 3 January 2012 (UTC)[reply]
[edit]

Hi Andy.

I noticed that large swathes of the article have been copied from this JRI web page and I have reverted to a prior version. Your version can always be restored by going to this page and clicking "save."

I have no problem with employees or agents of JRI editing this page, though you must familiarise yourself with WP:COI.

The simplest way around the copyright issue would be to replace "© Copyright 2012" at the bottom of the JRI "about" web page with a note saying the page's text is licensed under Creative Commons CC-BY-SA - the minimum degree of copy freedom required for Wikipedia content (see WP:COPY) - and the images are © Copyright 2012. This would mean others may copy, distribute, and display the text and make derivative works based on it, provided they do so under CC-BY-SA and credit JRI. Hopefully, this is something your webmaster can arrange in five minutes.

OR you could remove "© Copyright 2012" from the bottom of the web page, and email our volunteers at: permissions-en@wikimedia.org using this format (to be sure the permission is unequivocal)

I hereby affirm that CHOOSE ONE: [I, (name here) am] OR [(copyright holder's name) is] the creator and/or sole owner of the exclusive copyright of [SPECIFY THE WORK HERE - describe the work to be released in detail, attach the work to the email, or give the URL of the work if online]

I agree to publish that work under the free license "Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0" (unported) and GNU Free Documentation License (unversioned, with no invariant sections, front-cover texts, or back-cover texts).

I acknowledge that by doing so I grant anyone the right to use the work in a commercial product or otherwise, and to modify it according to their needs, provided that they abide by the terms of the license and any other applicable laws.

I am aware that this agreement is not limited to Wikipedia or related sites.

I am aware that I always retain copyright of my work, and retain the right to be attributed in accordance with the license chosen. Modifications others make to the work will not be claimed to have been made by me.

I acknowledge that I cannot withdraw this agreement, and that the content may or may not be kept permanently on a Wikimedia project.

[SENDER'S NAME AND DETAILS (to allow future verification of authenticity)]
[SENDER'S AUTHORITY (Are you the copyright-holder, director, appointed representative of, etc.)]
[DATE]

and ask them to post a note on this talk page letting us know they've received your email.

OR you could rewrite the contents in different words (paraphrase), using a different essay structure.

Whichever option you choose, follow each paragraph derived from that web page with a citation to that page. To do that, paste this

<ref name=JRIabout>[http://www.jri.org/About-JRI-History.php About JRI.] Retrieved 4 February 2012.</ref>

after the first paragraph and this

<ref name=JRIabout/>

after each subsequent paragraph, and paste this

==References==<br>{{reflist}}

to the bottom of the article.

Sorry this is so bureaucratic. We have to take copyright seriously. Any queries at all, please ask here or on my talk page. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 09:43, 5 February 2012 (UTC)[reply]