NYDIC Archive
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Younger Americans Act - Talking Points for Adults
Talking Points
These talking points are here to help when you go to visit your Members of Congress. They highlight some of the important concepts in the Younger Americans Act (YAA), and refute some arguments against it. Tell personal stories about the need for and success of youth development programs. Connect these stories to the points about the YAA by showing how YAA funding would support organizations like yours.
The Younger Americans Act sends a message to young people that the government cares about them. Most youth-focused federal programs are deficit-based; that is, they are trying to solve a problem (drugs, crime, teen pregnancy, etc.). YAA mobilizes communities to set positive goals for and with youth. To become productive citizens, young people need to be more than just problem free. While the Younger Americans Act focuses on all young people, it includes a special focus on youth who have the greatest need. Thirty percent of YAA funding at the local level is designated for five categories of situations young people find themselves in:· Rural communities
· High rate of poverty
·
High
risk due of abuse and neglect
·
Out-of-home
facilities, like juvenile detention facilities
© 2001 National Collaboration for Youth
