|
News
Cleveland Gangs Part 2:
Local Programs Help Kids Avoid the Lure of Gangs
Aired December 28, 2000
While the number of gangs in the Cleveland area is
down, according to recent state statistics, the lure of "the life" over
young people is still a big concern. With most parents -- whether husband
and wife or single -- holding down jobs, more kids than ever are left unsupervised
after school hours. In some communities there are programs and facilities
where kids can learn, keep occupied and stay out of trouble. Other locales
are not so fortunate. 90.3's Bill Rice reports.
Bill RiceThis Boys' and Girls' Club on Cleveland's
west side is a haven for many neighborhood kids. On this cold Monday evening
the week before Christmas basketball and billiards rule. But throughout
the year the club provides kids with more than just game activities. Reverend
Gregory Coles is president of Boys' and Girls' Clubs of Cleveland.
Gregory ColesAthletics and game room activities
are the hooks we use to draw the kids in. So in a games room we ping pong,
foos ball, air hockey, that kind of a thing. We have various athletic
activities for the kids throughout each year. When they come in and get
involved in those, then we get them involved in other things that will
ultimately help make them the kind of people that every community needs.
People who are productive, who give back.
BRThose things include homework help and
tutoring, computer skills, arts and music activities, and specialized
clubs designed to nurture individual interests and talents. In many ways,
says Coles, the club picks up the slack where local schools leave off.
GCThere are really, beyond the few athletic
outlets that are available and maybe a few instances where there's some
after school tutoring for kids that have remedial academic issues, there
really aren't that many things for them to do after school.
BRColes says that makes places like Boys'
and Girls' Clubs a critical community asset, especially for so-called
"at-risk" kids -- those who have no one else to structure their time in
productive ways when school is out. Jacqueline Bradshaw is the club's
Director of Character and Leadership Development.
Jacqueline BradshawWe have kids that probably
if they weren't with us probably would be standing on a corner selling
drugs. But if you can show them something different, just provide them
with something different, just a taste -- then you've got 'em. Because
that's all they're looking for. They want to belong to something.
BRProfessionals across the board who work
with kids agree that one of the biggest contributors to juvenile delinquency
is neglect.
Peter Sikora is a Cuyahoga County juvenile Judge. Sikora
says when kids are neglected at home they look elsewhere for a sense of
belonging. And often its the gangs that step in.
Peter SikoraWe think of kids entering gangs
as being totally anti-social and being lawbreakers and not wanting to
follow any rules, when it's just quite the opposite. If they really get
involved in gang activity, they are very structured. They're told what
to wear, what to do, when to do it, how to do it. So they get from the
gang often what they're not getting from the family structure.
BRMike Walker heads Partnership for a Safer
Cleveland, which works extensively with gang-prone youth.
Mike WalkerMost kids are neglected or maltreated
not physically, but mentally. Not spending time, not giving direction,
not having a role model. Here's something i heard a gang member say many
years ago that's still true today; I'd rather be wanted by the police
than no one at all. That's deep.
BRWalker is one of many who believe society
has dropped the ball when it comes to kids. He says it's not just an inner
city problem, but is spreading to the suburbs as well.
MWThere are more disenfranchised youth that
live in suburban Cleveland then there were 5, 10, 15 years ago. Part of
it is most of the efforts of improvement in greater Cleveland have not
been for the benefit of young people. When we build subdivisions we build
senior centers, we don't build youth centers. We don't have a youth development
plan in our county.
BRThe Cleveland Boys' and Girls' Clubs has
six locations throughout the Cleveland area, and is running at full capacity,
serving about 5,000 kids. Reverend Gregory Coles says the organization
would like to expand into other unserved neighborhoods and surrounding
suburbs, places like Glenville, Collinwood and East Cleveland. He says
those communities would welcome them, but can't afford it.
GCPeople say "Yes yes yes, bring the Boys'
and Girls' Club on, but no no no, we don't have any money to help you
do it." Funding is always the issue, and it seems like we can find plenty
of money to build jails, but when it comes to giving our young people
the best of what we have to offer, nobody's willing to make that sacrifice.
I suppose I don't really understand why that is, but that is the way it
is.
BRBill Rice, 90.3 WCPN®, 90.3 FM.
Suggested Websites
Partnership for a Safer Cleveland:
Ohio Attorney General Summary of Gang Membership Study:
|
|