Award Information
Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2013, $224,658)
The Juvenile Accountability Block Grant Program (JABG) Program is authorized under the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 2002 (42 U.S.C. 3796ee et. seq.). The goal of the JABG program is to reduce juvenile offending through accountability-based programs focused on both the juvenile offender and the juvenile justice system. The objective is to ensure that States and Territories are addressing the specified purpose areas and receiving information on best practices from OJJDP. JABG funds are allocated to States and Territories based on each State's relative population of youth under the age of 18. The underlying premise of juvenile accountability programming is that young people who violate the law should be held accountable for their actions through the swift, consistent application of graduated sanctions that are proportionate to the offenses, both as a matter of basic justice and as a way to combat juvenile delinquency and improve the quality of life in the nation's communities.
Oregon's Youth Development Council plans to pass-through 75 percent of the JABG funds to eligible units of local government to continue supporting the following purpose areas: (1) establishment and maintenance of accountability-based programs designed to reduce recidivism among juveniles; and (2) establishment and maintenance programs to enable juvenile courts and juvenile probation officers to be more effective and efficient in holding juvenile offenders accountable. However, Oregon is open to considering all reasonable grant requests that fall within the 17 JABG purpose areas. The State will retain 20 percent of the funds to develop and maintain interagency information sharing processes and protocols between Law Enforcement Data System (LEDS), Juvenile Justice Information System (JJIS), Juvenile Crime Prevention Data Manager, Department of Human Services, Oregon Health Authority, and Department of Education's databases. NCA/NCF