Family Service of Rhode Island, the Roger Williams University Justice System Training and Research Institute and the Institute for Intergovernmental Research will create a Center for Trauma-Informed Policing to improve outcomes for traumatized children encountered on crime scenes. A state-of-the-art, virtual law enforcement training program will be developed and the FSRI Go Team police/mental health partnership program will be formally evaluated. A Project Advisory Committee including child trauma experts, law enforcement, clinicians, and family with lived experience will advise on all project activities. Following a New England-based pilot to test the initial training and technical assistance program and two Learning Communities involving police departments across the country to improve upon and refine the program and related intervention products, the final trauma-informed law enforcement Learning Management System (LMS) will be launched and broadly disseminated. Project goals and objectives: 1. Develop a best practice Trauma-Informed Policing training curriculum for law enforcement to respond to the needs of children impacted by traumatic stress (informed by a nationwide law enforcement survey, LMS design and build out, pilot testing, and two Learning Communities. 2. Evaluating FSRI's Go Team program to assess its efficacy in reducing child trauma symptomology as a promising addition to the inventory of evidence-based practices (including a point-in-time-self study, stakeholder survey, key informant interviews, Go Team service recipient focus groups, service utilization data, and measures for post intervention child trauma symptomology synthesized into a comprehensive evaluative report for journal publication. 3. Evaluation of overall project impact resulting in a Project Evaluation Report. 4. Dissemination of the Trauma-Informed Policing training program, LMS, intervention products, and evaluative findings (as promoted through project partner, SAMHSA, and NCTSN networks and presented at regional and national law enforcement and child mental health conferences, regional meetings, and other relevant venues. The Center for Trauma-Informed Policing or "TIP Center" will serve as an ongoing resource for law enforcement interested in becoming trauma-informed, implementing best practice response approaches, and developing or enhancing partnerships with community-based mental health organizations to mitigate the short- and long-term effects of childhood trauma exposure and reduce the risk of revictimization. Ten diverse police departments at various stages of trauma-informed readiness are expected to participate in the Year two pilot and 20 are expected to participate in the Year three and four Learning Communities. A total of 3,000 law enforcement professionals, community-based mental health professionals, and other key stakeholders are expected to benefit from TIP Center training, technical assistance, consultation, and intervention products across the five year project period.