Crime Prevention and Community Justice Act of 1994
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Title I: Model Intensive Grant Programs
Title II: Ounce of Prevention Grant Programs
Subtitle A: Ounce of Prevention Grant Programs
Subtitle B: Family and Community Endeavor Schools Grant
Program
Title III: Police Partnership for Children
Title IV: Midnight Sports
Title V: Drug Courts
Title VI: Community Youth Academies
Title VII: Police Recruitment
Title VIII: National Triad Program
Title IX: Local Partnership Act
Title X: Miscellaneous
Crime Prevention and Community Justice Act of 1994 - Title I: Model Intensive Grant Programs - Authorizes the Attorney General to award grants to not more than 15 chronic high intensive crime areas to develop comprehensive model crime prevention programs that involve and utilize a broad spectrum of community resources, attempt to relieve conditions that encourage crime, and provide meaningful and lasting alternatives to involvement in crime. Directs the Attorney General to give priority in awarding grants to proposals that are innovative in approach to the prevention of crime in a specific area and that vary in approach.
(Sec. 102) Sets forth provisions regarding program, application, and reporting requirements and permissible uses of funds.
(Sec. 107) Authorizes appropriations.
Title II: Ounce of Prevention Grant Programs - Subtitle A: Ounce of Prevention Grant Programs - Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services (Secretary) to: (1) convene an interagency task force to be known as the Ounce of Prevention Council, chaired by the Attorney General, the Secretary of Education, and the Secretary, to advise and counsel the Secretary regarding administration of programs established by this title; and (2) ensure that funding provided under this title shall be used primarily for assistance in distressed communities and for individuals in any area who are particularly in need.
(Sec. 202) Authorizes the Secretary to make grants to States, local governments, educational institutions, eligible coalitions, and other public and private entities for: (1) summer and after-school programs; (2) mentoring, tutoring, and other programs involving participation by adult role models; (3) programs assisting and promoting employability and job placement; and (4) substance abuse treatment and prevention, including outreach programs for at-risk families.
(Sec. 203) Authorizes the Secretary to provide technical assistance and training for, and evaluations of, programs receiving support under this title.
(Sec. 204) Authorizes appropriations.
Subtitle B: Family and Community Endeavor Schools Grant Program - Directs the Secretary of Education, for a fiscal year in which the sums reserved to carry out this section equal or exceed $20 million, to allocate to community-based organizations in each State an amount bearing the same ratio to such sums as the number of children in the State who are from families with incomes below the poverty line bears to the number of children in all States who are from families with incomes below the poverty line. Authorizes such Secretary, for such a fiscal year, to award grants from the appropriate State allocation on a competitive basis to eligible community-based organizations to pay for the Federal share of assisting eligible communities to develop and carry out programs under this subtitle.
Sets forth provisions regarding: (1) reallocation of funds; and (2) fiscal years in which the sums reserved by such Secretary are less than $20 million.
(Sec. 212) Requires a community-based organization that receives a grant under this subtitle to: (1) ensure that such program is carried out in a public school or another appropriate local facility that is easily accessible to children in the community and in compliance with applicable local ordinances; and (2) use such funds to provide to children in the eligible community services and activities that include supervised sports programs and extracurricular and academic programs offered after school and on weekends and holidays during the school year and as daily full- or part-day programs during the summer months and programs such as curriculum-based supervised educational programs, work force preparation, entrepreneurship, cultural programs, arts and crafts, health, dance, tutorial and mentoring programs.
Authorizes the use of such funds for the renovation of facilities and to develop or expand programs designed to improve academic and social development of at-risk children by instituting a collaborative structure that trains and coordinates the efforts of teachers, administrators, social workers, guidance counselors, parents, and school volunteers to provide concurrent social services for at-risk students. Prohibits the use of such funds to provide sectarian worship or instruction.
(Sec. 213) Requires a community-based organization, to be eligible to receive grant funds, to identify an eligible community to be assisted that meets certain criteria, such as significant poverty and significant juvenile delinquency.
(Sec. 214) Sets forth application requirements and requirements concerning eligibility of participants.
(Sec. 216) Directs such Secretary to establish a peer review panel comprised of individuals with demonstrated experience in designing and implementing community-based programs.
(Sec. 217) Authorizes such Secretary to conduct such investigations and inspections as necessary to ensure compliance with provisions of this subtitle.
(Sec. 218) Sets forth requirements regarding: (1) payments to community-based organizations, the Federal share, and the non-Federal share; and (2) program evaluation.
Title III: Police Partnership for Children - Authorizes the Attorney General to make grants to partnerships (i.e., cooperative arrangements or associations involving one or more law enforcement agencies and one or more public or private agencies that provide child or family services) for: (1) teams or units involving participants from both the law enforcement and child or family services components of the partnership that respond to or deal with violent incidents in which a child is involved as a perpetrator, witness, or victim; (2) training for law enforcement officers regarding behavior, psychology, family systems, and community culture and attitudes that is relevant to dealing with children who are involved in violent incidents or at risk or with families of such children; and (3) programs for children and families that are designed jointly by the law enforcement and child or family services components of the partnership, including providing 24-hour response to crisis situations affecting children and programs that provide training in non-violent conflict resolution, after-school activity and neighborhood recreation programs, parent support groups, and mentoring programs.
Authorizes the Attorney General to make grants to units of State or local government, public housing authorities, owners of federally assisted housing, and owners of housing in high crime areas to provide dwelling units to law enforcement officers without charge or at substantially reduced rent for the purpose of providing greater security for residents of high crime areas.
(Sec. 303) Sets forth requirements regarding administration, technical assistance, training, and evaluation.
(Sec. 305) Authorizes appropriations.
Title IV: Midnight Sports - Directs the Attorney General to make grants to assist eligible entities in carrying out midnight sports league programs.
Requires each eligible entity receiving a grant to establish a sports league meeting specified requirements, including that: (1) there be not less than eight teams of ten players each, with at least half the players being residents of federally assisted low-income housing; (2) the program be designed to serve primarily youths from a neighborhood or community whose population has not less than two of specified characteristics, such as a substantial problem regarding use or sale of illegal drugs, high incidences of crimes committed by youth, persons infected with sexually transmitted diseases, or pregnancy, and high rates of youth unemployment or of high school drop-outs; (3) each player be required to attend specified counseling, job training, and other educational classes; and (4) the program serve only youths demonstrating a need for such counseling, training, and education, obtain sponsors for each team in the league, and comply with criteria established by the Attorney General.
Sets forth provisions regarding: (1) eligibility (entities eligible under specified provisions of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act and nonprofit organizations providing crime prevention, employment counseling, job training, other educational services or federally-assisted low-income housing); (2) use of grant amounts; (3) grant amount limitations; (4) non-Federal funds; and (5) application, selection, and reporting requirements.
Directs the Attorney General to: (1) make a grant to one qualified entity to study the effectiveness of midnight sports league programs of entities receiving grants; and (2) require such entity to report to the Congress, the Attorney General, and the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
Authorizes appropriations.
Title V: Drug Courts - Authorizes the Attorney General to make grants to State and local governments and other public and private entities for programs that involve continuing judicial supervision over specified categories of persons with substance abuse problems and that involve the integrated administration of other sanctions and services, including: (1) testing for the use of controlled or other addictive substances; (2) substance abuse treatment; (3) diversion, probation, or other supervised release involving the possibility of prosecution, confinement, or incarceration based on noncompliance with program requirements or failure to show satisfactory progress; and (4) programmatic or health related aftercare services such as relapse prevention, education, vocational training, job placement, housing placement, and child care or other family support services.
(Sec. 502) Sets forth requirements regarding administration, technical assistance, training, and evaluation.
(Sec. 504) Authorizes appropriations.
Title VI: Community Youth Academies - Authorizes the Attorney General to make grants to qualified community organizations, States, or units of local government to assist in meeting the costs of developing and operating qualified instructional programs for juveniles who have been incarcerated under a juvenile justice system or who are determined to be at risk of violating criminal law. Specifies that such programs are to be designed to provide the academic, moral, and social development of juveniles to enable them to become independent, responsible, and productive citizens.
Sets forth requirements regarding: (1) qualified community organizations; (2) the instructional program; (3) applications; (4) action by the Attorney General; and (5) grantee reporting.
(Sec. 602) Authorizes appropriations.
Title VII: Police Recruitment - Authorizes the Attorney General to make grants to assist qualified community organizations in meeting the costs of qualified programs designed to recruit and retain applicants of police departments.
Specifies that a program is a qualified program if: (1) it is designed to recruit and train applicants to a police department from underrepresented neighborhoods and localities; and (2) it provides recruiting services which include tutorial programs to enable individuals to meet police force academic requirements and to pass entrance examinations, counseling to applicants to police departments who may encounter problems throughout the application process, and retention services to assist in retaining individuals to stay in the application process of a police department.
Sets forth requirements regarding: (1) qualified community organizations; (2) applications; (3) action by the Attorney General; (4) grant disbursement; (5) the grant period; and (6) grantee reporting.
Directs the Attorney General to prescribe guidelines on content and results for programs under this title.
(Sec. 702) Authorization of appropriations.
Title VIII: National Triad Program - Requires the Director of the National Institute of Justice to conduct a national assessment of the: (1) crimes committed against older Americans and the effect on victims; (2) numbers, extent, and impact of violent and nonviolent crimes against older Americans and the extent of unreported crimes; (3) collaborative needs of law enforcement, health, and social service organizations, focusing on prevention of crimes against older Americans, to identify, investigate, and provide assistance to crime victims; and (4) strategies to respond effectively.
(Sec. 804) Requires the Director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance to make grants to coalitions of local law enforcement agencies and older Americans to assist in the development of programs and to execute field tests of particularly promising strategies for crime prevention and related services based on the Triad model (which calls for the participation of the sheriff, at least one police chief, and a representative of at least one older Americans' organization within a county and which may include participation by general service coalitions of law enforcement, victim service, and senior citizen advocate second service organizations), which can then be evaluated and serve as the basis for further demonstration and education programs.
Sets forth requirements regarding: (1) applications, distribution of grant awards, and post-grant period reporting; (2) training assistance, evaluation, and dissemination awards (to mount a program of public service announcements to increase awareness and understanding of issues surrounding crimes against older Americans); and (3) reporting requirements.
(Sec. 807) Authorizes appropriations.
Title IX: Local Partnership Act - Local Partnership Act of 1994 - Directs the Secretary of the Treasury to make specified payments to units of local government to carry out programs related to education, or health, to prevent crime. Requires that not less than ten percent of the total combined amounts of such payments obligated by a unit for contracts and subcontracts be expended with small business concerns controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals and women and colleges and universities which are historically Black and which have a student body in which more than 20 percent of the students are Hispanic Americans or Native Americans, with exceptions.
Authorizes appropriations to a Local Government Fiscal Assistance Fund of the Department of the Treasury.
Sets forth provisions regarding: (1) qualification for payment; (2) allocations to State, local, and territorial governments; (3) income gap multipliers; (4) State variation and adjustments of local government allocations; (5) information used in allocation formulas; and (6) public participation.
Prohibits any person in the United States from being excluded from participating in, denied benefits of, or subject to discrimination under, a program or activity of a unit of general local government receiving a payment pursuant to this title because of race, color, national origin, or sex. Makes specified prohibitions and exemptions (regarding discrimination based on age under the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, discrimination against an otherwise qualified handicapped individual under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and discrimination because of religion under the Civil Rights Acts of 1964 and 1968) applicable to such a program or activity. Directs the Secretary of the Treasury to try to make agreements with heads of Federal and State agencies to investigate noncompliance with such provisions.
Sets forth provisions regarding: (1) discrimination proceedings; (2) suspension and termination of payments in discrimination proceedings; (3) compliance agreements; (4) enforcement by the Attorney General of prohibitions on discrimination; (5) civil actions by adversely affected persons; (6) judicial review; (7) audits, investigations, and reviews; and (8) reporting requirements.
Title X: Miscellaneous - Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to permit the award of drug control and system improvement grants to State and local governments for the purpose of participating in multijurisdictional gang task forces.
Referred to the Subcommittee on Health and the Environment.
- Civil Rights and Human Services Subcommittee
- Education and Workforce Committee
- Elementary, Secondary, and Vocational Education Subcommittee
- Energy and Commerce Committee
- Financial Services Committee
- Health and Environment Subcommittee
- Healthy Families and Communities Subcommittee
- Housing and Insurance Subcommittee
- Intergovernmental Affairs Subcommittee
- Judiciary Committee
- Oversight and Government Reform Committee
- Postsecondary Education, Training and Life-Long Learning Subcommittee