Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 108 Part 3.djvu/87

 PUBLIC LAW 103-322—SEPT. 13, 1994 108 STAT. 1839 (B) Programs to prevent crimes against the elderly based on the concepts of the Triad model. (C) Programs that prevent young children from becoming gang involved, including the award of grants or contracts to community-based service providers that have a proven track record of providing services to children ages 5to18. (D) Saturation jobs programs, offered either separately or in conjunction with the services provided for under the Youth Fair Chance Program, that provide employment opportunities leading to permanent unsubsidized employ- ment for disadvantaged young adults 16 through 25 years of age. (E) Midnight sports league programs that shall require each player in the league to attend employment counseling, job training, and other educational classes provided under the program, which shall be held in conjunction with league sports games at or near the site of the games. (F) Supervised sports and recreation programs, including Olympic Youth Development Centers established in cooperation with the United States Olympic Committee, that are offered— (i) after school and on weekends and holidays, during the school year; and (ii) as daily (or weeklong) full-day programs (to the extent available resources permit) or as part-day programs, during the summer months. (G) Prevention and enforcement programs to reduce— (i) the formation or continuation of juvenile gangs; and (ii) the use and sale of illegal drugs by juveniles. (H) Youth anticrime councils to give intermediate and secondary school students a structured forum through which to work with community organizations, law enforcement officials, government and media representatives, and school administrators and faculty to address issues regarding youth and violence. (I) Award of grants or contracts to the Boys and Girls Clubs of America, a national nonprofit youth organization, to establish Boys and Girls Clubs in public housing. (J) Supervised visitation centers for children who have been removed from their parents and placed outside the home as a result of abuse or neglect or other risk of harm to them and for children whose parents are separated or divorced and the children are at risk because— (i) there is documented sexual, physical, or emotional abuse as determined by a court of competent jurisdiction; (ii) there is suspected or elevated risk of sexual, physical, or emotional abuse, or there have been threats of parental abduction of the child; (iii) due to domestic violence, there is an ongoing risk of harm to a parent or child; (iv) a parent is impaired because of substance abuse or mental illness; (v) there are allegations that a child is at risk for any of the reasons stated in clauses (i), (ii), (iii).

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