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Boys Town California, Inc. Family Reunification Program: Community-Based Residential Treatment and Aftercare -- Reducing Length of Stay While Maintaining Positive Outcomes

Award Information

Award #
2009-JL-FX-0043
Location
Congressional District
Status
Closed
Funding First Awarded
2009
Total funding (to date)
$245,000
Original Solicitation

Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2009, $245,000)

The OJJDP FY 09 Earmarks Programs further the Department's mission by providing grants, cooperative agreements, and other assistance authorized by the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, as amended, to organizations identified in the Explanatory Statement Regarding H.R. 1105 (Omnibus Appropriations Act, 2009), 155 Cong. Rec. H1653 (daily ed. Feb. 23, 2009) (statement by Rep. Obey, Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations of the House).

Boys Town California will provide a Family Reunification Program (FRP) for youth under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, on probation, or at significant risk of coming into the juvenile justice system. This project will implement a program design that combines social skill development from a highly acclaimed 'promising program' and an in-home family service; thus incorporating the characteristics and factors that predict post-discharge success: well-planned reunification efforts, involvement of treatment and aftercare staff throughout the process, and thorough reiterative services linking families to community supports.

In 2007 through OJJDP's Invitational Grant Program, Boys Town developed and implemented the FRP at five Boys Town sites: New England, Louisiana, New York, California, and Nevada. This grant will allow further refinement and evaluation of the program. It is anticipated that adolescents who participate will have a reduced length of stay in residential services, be less likely to reoffend and/or require additional residential treatment, and will demonstrate improvement in behavior/emotional functioning, parent and family functioning, and adaptive living skills. Progress toward these goals will be measured by: assessing treatment fidelity, length of stay and recidivism, child behavioral/emotional functioning, and parent and family functioning. NCA/NCF

Date Created: September 15, 2009