Ohio
Attorney General Mike DeWine...
Pilot
Program for “Aged-Out” Foster Care Youth
May 13, 2012
(COLUMBUS,
Ohio) – Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine announced today a new pilot
program
to help homeless 18 to 24 year-olds who often have trouble receiving
assistance
and are disproportionately victims of crime.
The Older Youth Victim of Crime
Initiative will focus especially on
those who have “aged-out” of the foster care system.
“The
systems and services that may have helped support foster children
before they
turned 18 are far less available to them when they become adults,” said
Attorney General DeWine. “The
lack of
appropriate services can increase the likelihood of victimization,
lengthy
stays on the street, and even chronic homelessness.”
In an
effort to reverse that trend, the Attorney General will fund three
pilot
projects to provide victim services through the State Victims
Assistance Act
(SVAA). Each
project will be eligible
for a two-year grant of up to $275,000.
The
organizations that are awarded the grants will be located in areas
where young,
homeless crime victims are currently underserved.
The funding will help them provide
services
such as court advocacy, safety planning, temporary shelter, and
treatment for
post-traumatic stress disorder.
Attorney
General DeWine recognized the need to help former foster children after
organizing several Child Safety Summits across Ohio.
The roundtable discussions focused on
the
child welfare system.
“It’s time
to give foster children a chance,” said DeWine.
“Let’s treat them the same as we would
our own children and do what’s in
their best interests.”
Three more Child Safety Summits are
scheduled in the upcoming months in Toledo, Youngstown, and Akron.
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