January 20, 2023
Manchin, Capito Announce $623K for Improvements to West Virginia's Juvenile Justice System
Charleston, WV – Today, U.S. Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV) and
Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), members of the Senate Appropriations Committee,
announced $623,276 from the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) Office of Juvenile
Justice Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) for the Justice and Community Services
(JCS) section of the West Virginia Division of Administrative Services. The
funding will support juvenile justice system improvements throughout the state,
as well as educational and community-based projects to help prevent juvenile
delinquency.
“I am pleased to announce this critical investment from the
Department of Justice that will help improve West Virginia’s juvenile justice
system and bolster efforts to prevent juvenile delinquency,” said Senator
Manchin. “All West Virginians deserve to feel safe in their communities,
and we must work together to protect our friends, neighbors and children. The
funding announced today will help promote public safety across the entire state
and, as a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, I will continue
advocating for resources to strengthen public safety initiatives and protect
our young people in the Mountain State.”
“Public
safety is incredibly important,” Senator Capito said. “That’s why it’s
important that we do all we can to make sure people feel safe and support
efforts that help prevent crime in the first place. This funding does just that
by focusing on building that trust by helping young West Virginians stay away
from crime and to help their communities.”
The DOJ OJJDP Title II Formula Grants Program provides funding to
support state and local efforts to establish effective education, training,
research, prevention and rehabilitation programs in the area of juvenile
delinquency, as well as juvenile justice system improvements. The funding
announced today will support nine program areas within West Virginia’s juvenile
justice system, including community-based programs; juvenile justice and
delinquency prevention programs; educational programs for at-risk youth;
programs for positive youth development; programs designed to prevent and
reduce hate crimes committed by juveniles; projects designed to protect
juvenile civil rights; programs designed to provide mental health services for
incarcerated juveniles; programs that address the needs of girls in or at risk
of entering the juvenile justice system; and programs to address the
disproportionate number of youth members of minority groups who enter the
juvenile justice system.
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