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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
FLY Expands Innovative Legal Eagle Program
to North Santa
Clara County
Pilot Serves
20 Students and Delivers Legal Education While Maintaining Program Relationship
Continuity
OCTOBER 25 xx, 2007–
Fresh Lifelines for Youth (FLY), an award-winning program that works
to reduce juvenile crime and incarceration through legal education,
mentoring, and leadership training, announced today that it has expanded
its services for teens on probation through an innovative pilot program
in north Santa Clara County. The new Legal Eagle program is the first
of its kind to combine legal education with one full year of one-on-one
case management services, community service, and group activities. The
program will initially serve 20 youth, enabling them to maintain a continuous
relationship with program staff.
“Preserving relational continuity
with program staff for one year is a new approach for these kinds of
programs,” said Aila Malik, acting executive director for FLY. “The
Legal Eagle program builds a case manager into the program from the
beginning of the 12-week legal education class. Unlike other programs
that change program staff between classes and ongoing case management,
the Legal Eagle program will enable teens to form critical relationships
that last the entire length of the program, while providing valuable
life and leadership skills. We hope to build on this model and expand
the approach to other locations.”
The Legal Eagle program classes
are being held at Mountain View High School once a week for 12 weeks.
Teens between the ages of 11 and 18 learn positive life skills, such
as empathy, problem-solving, and anger management, through role-plays,
skits, and interactive lessons. Lessons are based on legal topics that
teach students about the law and consequences of crime. FLY has hired
two new staff to deliver the curriculum and case manage the youth. Hillary
Steinmetz will serve as the north county case manager, while Latisha
Chisholm will serve as the law special programs coordinator.
“In its other programs, FLY
has achieved a high level of success, and kids’ lives demonstrate
the difference,” said Santa Clara County Supervisor Liz Kniss. FLY's
North Santa Clara pilot offers a new approach that promises to help
teens steer away from criminal activity. I'm very hopeful that
FLY's Mountain View High school project will prove successful and create
a model for intervention programs across the county.”
FLY’s expansion into northern
Santa Clara County is made possible by a $100,000 grant from a major
donor, as well as in-kind space donation from Mountain View High School.
FLY operates law programs for
juvenile offenders on probation, high-risk youth in local alternative
high schools, and as prevention courses in middle schools. The organization
also offers a Leadership Training Program for youth who attend the law
course and need additional help to develop their positive leadership
skills and graduate from high school. This yearlong program includes
a three-day wilderness retreat that focuses on leadership, community
activism, and monthly meetings where youth design and provide community
service. Youth receive a case manager who helps them set and achieve
education, vocation, and health goals. Approximately 85 percent of youth
do not re-offend during this yearlong program, and over 90 percent of
the high school seniors graduate or earn their GEDs.
FLY programs cost-effectively
prevent crime. Incarcerating one youth for one year in California’s
prison system currently costs $71,000 and has a 25-percent success rate.
FLY’s yearlong Leadership Program costs approximately $7,000 per youth
and has kept 85 percent of participating youth from going back on probation
for a new crime during the program. FLY has received a national grant
award for best practices, a national grant award for innovation, the
City of San Jose Human Rights Award, and each of the past five years
has been ranked as one of the top violence prevention programs in the
City of San Jose by outside evaluators.
About FLY
Founded in 1998, FLY provides at-risk and disadvantaged youth with vital information regarding the decisions they make in their lives. The organization offers mentoring, leadership skills development, and legal education to reduce juvenile crime and incarceration. FLY has helped thousands of youth learn important life skills and avoid becoming inmates of the criminal justice system. For more information, please visit www.flyprogram.org.
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