Thursday, August 22, 2024

Governor Hochul Announces Nearly $40 Million for Next Phase of Youth Employment Program to Help New York Continue Bringing Down Gun Violence

Youth trainees working together 

Next Phase Will Provide Job Opportunities and Training for Another 2,500 Young People

Program Has Already Connected Thousands of Young People with Jobs in Recent Years and Helped Drive Down Gun Violence

Shootings Declined 29% Through July in Communities Across New York, Reaching Historic Lows

Governor Kathy Hochul today announced nearly $40 million has been awarded for the next phase of the Youth Employment Program, which will help New York continue reducing gun violence by providing job opportunities and training to at-risk youth in communities across the state. The program plays an important role in New York State’s Gun Involved Violence Elimination (GIVE) Initiative, which operates in 21 counties with most of the state’s population outside New York City.

“Public safety is my top priority, and I’ll never stop fighting to keep the people of this state safe and working to protect our most vulnerable youth,” Governor Hochul said. “The Youth Employment Program strengthens my administration’s comprehensive approach to ending the scourge of gun violence in communities across New York State, while providing at-risk youth with valuable work experience and skills that will help ensure that they have strong futures.”

The $38.8 million awarded today includes investments in year-round jobs and training opportunities for young people in regions that receive support from the GIVE initiative. This funding is expected to provide paid work and training opportunities for approximately 2,500 low-income, at-risk youth across these areas of the state from September 2024 to June 2025.

Youth Employment Program Spending by Region

Capital Region 

$2,513,157 

Central New York 

$3,053,407 

Finger Lakes 

$3,945,970 

Long Island 

$7,941,588 

Mid-Hudson 

$10,526,973 

Mohawk Valley 

$1,339,113 

North Country 

$511,728 

Southern Tier 

$2,090,487 

Western New York 

$6,877,577 

TOTAL 

$38.8 million 

New York State’s Youth Employment Program and GIVE Initiative have already proven to be effective at creating opportunities for young people and bringing down gun violence across the state.

Under Governor Hochul’s leadership, the Youth Employment Program has already connected thousands of young people with jobs and training. The most recent phase of the program ran from January 1 – June 30, 2024, when approximately 2,650 young people participated in the program, working at schools, libraries, restaurants, camps/child care programs, community organizations and other job sites.

As a result of this program and other investments through GIVE, Governor Hochul also announced earlier this week that shooting incidents with injury declined 29 percent through July 2024 compared to the same seven-month period last year, as reported by the 28 police departments across 21 counties participating in the GIVE Initiative. In many GIVE districts, shootings are now at their lowest level on record since the State began tracking this information two decades ago.

Today’s announcement to advance the next phase of the Youth Employment Program will continue that effective work. Research shows that vulnerable at-risk and unemployed youth can face struggles later in life, including poverty, mental health and criminal justice involvement. In addition, youth exposed to trauma and violence may suffer long-term harmful effects later in life, including barriers to successful employment and financial stability.

The second phase of the Youth Employment Program will operate from September through June. To be eligible for the program, youth must be between the ages of 14 and 20 and have a household income below 200 percent of the federal poverty level, which varies by household size and, for example, is $51,640 for a family of three.

Youth Employment Program providers are encouraged to collaborate with local law enforcement and other local organizations serving at-risk youth and must collaborate with local SNUG Street Outreach programs if such programs are available in their district. The SNUG Street Outreach program, administered by the state Division of Criminal Justice Services, uses a public health approach to address gun violence by identifying the source, interrupting the transmission, and treating individuals, families and communities affected by the violence.

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