Fight Crime Invest in Kids Tennessee America must cut the pipeline that funnels young people into lives of crime and violence. We take a hard-nosed look at research on what keeps kids from becoming criminals and put that information in the hands of policy-makers and the public.
About News Room Policy Research
In the States
Get more information about After-School issues from our other state offices or our national office.
After-School
Tennessee's After-School Choice: Juvenile Crime or Safe Learning Time

Tennessee's law enforcement leaders know from experience and the research that the hours from 3 to 6 PM on school days are the "prime time for juvenile crime." Approximately six school-age children in every ten are in households where both parents or the only parent are in the workforce. Nearly one quarter of Tennessee's children are regularly left to care for themselves. Studies show that after school is the peak time for teens to commit crime, be a victim of crime, be in or cause a car crash and smoke, drink or use drugs. Quality, constructive and highly supervised programs can cut crime immediately and convert after school hours into safe learning time. One high-quality program found that boys left out of the program averaged six times more crimes than teens in the program. A study of Boys & Girls clubs showed that housing projects without the clubs had 50 percent more vandalism and 37 percent worse drug activity. Teens in one California after-school program were half as likely to be rearrested than teens not in the program.

Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Tennessee calls on Congress to:
  • Substantially increase federal funding for the Child Care and Development Block Grant.
  • Substantially increase funding for the 21st Century Community Learning Centers to support and expand after-school programs that offer kids - especially those most at-risk of school failure - constructive activities during the peak hours of violent juvenile crime, 3:00 pm to 6:00 pm. In particular, meet the needs of middle and high school youth who are currently underserved.

Reports

All Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Tennessee reports on after-school:

Report
Year
Proposed Federal Cuts Threaten After-School Programs for Tennessee Children (brief) 2003