Sarah Ovaska, Staff Writer
Organizations across the state that work to keep young people from committing crimes fear that they'll lose more than $22 million in funding unless the General Assembly acts swiftly when it reconvenes this spring.
Uncertainty about the Juvenile Crime Prevention Council money -- which makes up 15 percent of the state Department of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention's total budget -- has many of the nonprofit agencies that depend on the money worrying that they'll have to stop, or at least interrupt, services while waiting on state lawmakers.
The legislature doesn't return to Raleigh until May 13, and the JCPC funding is set to expire June 30. That leaves a small window for the more than 500 organizations that rely on a patchwork of funding sources to line up the rest of their money -- with no guarantee that the state will pay.
"You can pay now or pay later," said Quillie Coath, who runs a program in Durham that reaches out to at-risk youths and gets a large amount of its budget from JCPC funds.
Several legislators and their staff members have all but promised that the money will be reinstated. They say the funds were moved to a one-year, nonrecurring part of the state budget as a signal to department officials and the various programs that there needs to be more oversight.
Such accountability is the price of doing business with government, said state Sen. Linda Garrou of Forsyth County.
"You always hear from any agency that fears losing money for its programs," Garrou said.
The legislature also put the funding for seven other programs in various state agencies in the same position -- including $9.1 million that the N.C. Department of Correction uses for its Criminal Justice Partnership Program, which runs programs in 95 of the state's 100 counties. All had to submit reports in February justifying their funding.
The youth programs, which serve an estimated 30,000 young people, were placed in the nonrecurring budget to "make sure that they're deserving and in need of state funding instead of just rubber-stamped," said Schorr Johnson, communications director for Senate President pro tem Marc Basnight, a Manteo Democrat.
But Sen. Ellie Kinnaird, a Carrboro-based Democrat, said her fellow legislators have since recognized a mistake was made with juvenile justice funding. She hopes to have it return to a two-year funding cycle, so providers will know if they'll have jobs from one year to the next.
"That means tremendous uncertainty for these groups," Kinnaird said of the current system.
Still, she said, there needs to be more oversight of how funds are handled, with county-based councils being more accountable about how state dollars help youths and their families.
Auditing programsCounty JCPC councils generally evaluate programs on their own, and the state juvenile justice department reviews grant proposals annually, said Kathy Dudley, an assistant secretary for juvenile justice programs in the eastern part of the state.
The juvenile justice department has conducted audits of only seven of the more than 500 programs it gives money since 2004, said William Lassiter, a spokesman for the department. Of those, six had minor problems and either fixed them or stopped working with the state.
A Mecklenburg County program, Present Day Cares, had its money suspended last year and the department asked SBI to begin a criminal investigation, Lassiter said. Agents opened their probe in November and are still investigating, said Noelle Talley, spokeswoman for the state Attorney General's Office. The state auditor also is assessing how JCPC funds are used statewide, Lassiter said.
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