The Path Not Taken With At Risk Youth: Reviving the Civilian Conservation Corps
As I watch the City of Baltimore try to impose the harshest of penalties on young people involved in the unrest following the death of Freddie Gray, I think of my own work with inner city youth as a coach, league director and advocate during the peak years of the crack epidemic in New York City- 1985-1995. This involvement took three forms; coaching teams and running leagues which drew young people from Park Slope, Prospect Heights, Red Hook and Boerum Hill; working with United Community Centers of East New York on developing programs which reduced violence and empowered neighborhood youth; and working with Bronx tenant organizers and religious leaders in the Crotona neighborhood to develop an organization called "Save a Generation"
Everything we did in those groups- which ranged from creating sports leagues, to developing mentoring programs, to reaching out to drug dealers on the streets and engaging them in conversation- had some positive impact, but most of us ultimately realized that unless we provided an economic alternative to the underground economy, young peoples lives would continue to be at risk, and the law enforcement methods required to get them off the streets would impose severe collateral damage
So in the one group I participated in which had the broadest political base-- Save A Generation- we proposed reviving the Depression Era Civilian Conservation Corps- which created over half a million jobs for young people building roads and creating and restoring national parks- and demanded that a thousand jobs be created serving the young people of the Bronx. .
Needless to say, this never happened. After three years of lobbying, we managed to get 35 Americorps positions for the Crotona neighborhood, a much needed infusion of energy and hope, but the sense of urgency we felt about giving young people in the underground economy something which would put them to work, get them out of harms way, and get them back in school ( we added a GED program to the mix) and give them a sense of purpose doing something constructive never caught on in Washington, or even in Albany.
Too bad. Because at a time when so much of our infrastructure is With A Brooklyn Accent: The Path Not Taken With At Risk Youth: Reviving the Civilian Conservation Corps:
Everything we did in those groups- which ranged from creating sports leagues, to developing mentoring programs, to reaching out to drug dealers on the streets and engaging them in conversation- had some positive impact, but most of us ultimately realized that unless we provided an economic alternative to the underground economy, young peoples lives would continue to be at risk, and the law enforcement methods required to get them off the streets would impose severe collateral damage
So in the one group I participated in which had the broadest political base-- Save A Generation- we proposed reviving the Depression Era Civilian Conservation Corps- which created over half a million jobs for young people building roads and creating and restoring national parks- and demanded that a thousand jobs be created serving the young people of the Bronx. .
Needless to say, this never happened. After three years of lobbying, we managed to get 35 Americorps positions for the Crotona neighborhood, a much needed infusion of energy and hope, but the sense of urgency we felt about giving young people in the underground economy something which would put them to work, get them out of harms way, and get them back in school ( we added a GED program to the mix) and give them a sense of purpose doing something constructive never caught on in Washington, or even in Albany.
Too bad. Because at a time when so much of our infrastructure is With A Brooklyn Accent: The Path Not Taken With At Risk Youth: Reviving the Civilian Conservation Corps: