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Addressing the Root Causes of Gang Activity in California

Tony-Mendoza.jpg

In the Democratic weekly radio address Assembly member Tony Mendoza talks about the crucially important role parents play when it comes to keeping at risk youth from joining gangs and legislation aimed at addressing the root causes of gang activity in California.

To listen in English, click here.

To listen in Spanish, click here.

Hello, this is Assemblymember Tony Mendoza.

Gang membership is on the rise in California. Statewide, there are approximately 420,000 gang members, and 150,000 are in Los Angeles County alone.

And nationwide, there are more active gang members than there are state and local police.

When I was elected to the State Assembly, I held a gang summit in my district, inviting law enforcement personnel and gang intervention experts.

And everyone in the room agreed that parental involvement is essential to dissuading at-risk youth from going down a gang path that will lead them to an early grave.

This also fits with my experience as a fourth-grade teacher in East Los Angeles.

Children with parents who took an active interest in their education were much more likely to go to college and much less likely to be involved with criminal elements.

This is why I’ve authored Assembly Bill 1291, a bipartisan bill that would require the parents of first-time juvenile offenders who commit gang-related crimes to take parenting classes.

These classes would teach parents how to persuade their children to cut gang ties and emphasize the importance of parental involvement in the healthy upbringing of an at-risk child.

This is an important part of a package of Democratic bills that attempt to address the root causes of gang activity in California.

Other bills broaden educational opportunities for inner city youth, enhance the availability of quality jobs in gang-infested areas, and promote greater community and parental involvement.

Gang activity is a complex problem that requires state involvement on multiple fronts.

But expecting a higher standard from the parents of at-risk youth will go a long way toward turning the tide against gangs.

Thanks for listening. This has been Assemblymember Tony Mendoza.

Spanish transcript:

Que tal, les habla el Asambleísta Tony Mendoza.

En California la membresía de las pandillas va en aumento.

En todo el estado, hay aproximadamente 420 mil pandilleros de los cuales 150 mil se encuentran en el condado de Los Angeles.

A nivel nacional, hay más pandilleros que policías.

Cuando fui elegido a la Asamblea, lleve a cabo una audiencia pública en mi distrito a la cual invite a personal de la policía y expertos en intervención de pandillas.

Concordamos que la participación de los padres es esencial para disuadir a los jóvenes en peligro de caer en las pandillas y que los conducirá a una muerte temprana.

Esto va en mi experiencia como maestro de cuarto grado en el Este de Los Angeles.

Los niños con padres que se preocuparon activamente de su educación tuvieron mucho más probabilidades de asistir a la universidad y menos probabilidades de implicarse con elementos criminales.

Es por eso que presente la propuesta de ley AB1291, una propuesta bipartidaria que requiere que los padres de jóvenes que cometen un crimen relacionado con las pandillas a tomar clases de educación paternal.

Estas clases enseñan a los padres a como persuadir a sus hijos a cortar las relaciones con las pandillas y acentuar la importancia de la supervisión de los padres en el crecimiento de un joven en riesgo.

Esto es una parte importante de un paquete de propuestas de ley demócratas que procura atacar las causas primordiales de las actividades pandilleras en California.

Otras propuestas aumentan las oportunidades educativas para los jóvenes en los vecindarios urbanos de la ciudad, la disponibilidad de empleos bien remunerados en las áreas infestadas de pandillas, y promueven la participación comunitaria y paternal.

La actividad pandillera es un problema complicado que requiere de la participación del estado en múltiples frentes.

Pero requiriendo un mejor compromiso de los padres de esos jóvenes en riesgo resultará en un gran triunfo en contra de las pandillas.

Gracias por su atención. Les habló el asambleísta Tony Mendoza.

Posted on July 23, 2007

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