File #: K-1718-11    Version: 1 Name: Contract with Crossroads Youth and Family Center for FYE18
Type: Contract Status: Passed
File created: 8/18/2017 In control: City Council
On agenda: 9/12/2017 Final action: 9/12/2017
Title: CONTRACT K-1718-11: A CONTRACT BY AND BETWEEN THE CITY OF NORMAN, OKLAHOMA, AND THE CROSSROADS YOUTH AND FAMILY CENTER, INC., IN THE AMOUNT OF $40,000 FOR THE OPERATION OF THE EMERGENCY YOUTH SHELTER FOR THE PERIOD JULY 1, 2017 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2018.
Attachments: 1. text File Crossroads, 2. Crossroads Contract, 3. Purchase Order
Title
CONTRACT K-1718-11: A CONTRACT BY AND BETWEEN THE CITY OF NORMAN, OKLAHOMA, AND THE CROSSROADS YOUTH AND FAMILY CENTER, INC., IN THE AMOUNT OF $40,000 FOR THE OPERATION OF THE EMERGENCY YOUTH SHELTER FOR THE PERIOD JULY 1, 2017 THROUGH JUNE 30, 2018.

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BACKGROUND: The City of Norman juvenile program in conjunction with the Crossroads Youth and Family Center, Inc., ("Crossroads") was awarded a federal and state grant from the Office of Juvenile Affairs ("OJA") to implement a Community Intervention Center ("CIC") in early 1997. Originally, this was a pilot project and the City of Norman was one of five cities to open a CIC. This program began in October of 1997. Until 2016 the CIC was housed in a building owned by the City and located at 1900 West Robinson in Westwood Park.

The CIC was a multi-city collaborated project. The federal money for the program was originally "seed" money to start the program. By design of the grant, the federal funding ceased three years after the inception of the program. Funding for the program was from the state through OJA. Since that time, the CIC program had been very successful and had been considered one of the premier projects of OJA. The CIC program was the first program to have a partnership between a local government, the state government, youth service agencies and law enforcement.

The purpose of the CIC was to provide a community based location for law enforcement officers to take juveniles, who had been apprehended for committing an offense that is not detention-eligible, for the purpose of holding, supervising and releasing the juveniles to a parent or guardian as appropriate. The goal of the program was two-fold: To maximize police officer productivity by returning them back to patrol duties as timely as possible and to have a consistent entry for juveniles into the juvenile justice system where they can be offered social services and be evaluated for needs.

Under the administrative rules adopted b...

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