Pubdate: Fri, 11 Sep 2009 Source: Record, The (Kitchener, CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Record Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/942MrkRX Website: http://news.therecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/225 Author: Kevin Swayze, Staff Writer OTTAWA ANNOUNCES $3.4 MILLION TO KEEP REGION'S YOUTH OUT OF GANGS CAMBRIDGE - Ottawa says it will pay $3.4 million for a program to help young people get out of criminal gangs and stay out of them in the first place. The money funds a new, co-operative project by the Waterloo Region Crime Prevention Council for three-and-a-half years. "The idea is to help young people at risk," said federal science minister and Cambridge MP Gary Goodyear during a press conference at Waterloo Regional Police Headquarters in Cambridge on Thursday "These are programs that are proven to work." The "gang prevention initiative" will work in parallel with the regional police guns and gangs unit. Community youth support agencies like Lutherwood, Roof and the John Howard Society will co-ordinate programs offering life skills and employment training, along with substance abuse counseling to help young people. The gang prevention initiative has a goal of helping 100 young people out of gangs and into productive, law-abiding lives, said Christiane Sadeler, executive director of the crime prevention council. That won't be easy, because young people join gangs seeking the family type of support they never found before, or the money they could never earn before. "Do you want to work a minimum wage job making burgers when you can make significantly more money running drugs?" Nobody expects success with every troubled youth who voluntarily joins the program, said John Bilton, executive director of the John Howard Society of Waterloo-Wellington. “It’s going to be very difficult to move kids out of gangs. We have give them more than they’re getting with gangs.” Since leaving a gang can be is dangerous, perhaps the program will have to move some former members to a place of safety for a while. Bilton is also a proponent of paying for tattoo removal. “I would really be very strongly in favour of it… tattooing is a sign of gang membership.” He’s worked in the criminal justice counseling system for 35 years – including six years inside prison walls – and says jails are a poor way to protect the community. Criminals simply learn to be better criminals the more time they spend behind bars. It’s a better investment to help young people stay away from crime, not jail them later, Bilton said. “We’re not going to make 100 percent success. We’re naïve to think we could. We want to make an impact. We want to make the community safer.” - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr