Fact Sheet: State and Local Collaboration Demonstration Projects
History
The Family and Youth Services Bureau (FYSB) funds Research and Demonstration (R&D) projects to enhance knowledge about key issues in serving young people and to build capacity in the youth service field. Going beyond providing services and support to young people, FYSB R&D projects test strategies for redesigning youth-related systems and services.
From 1998 to 2003, FYSB awarded more than $7.8 million in State Youth Development Collaboration Demonstration Projects to 13 States to develop and support innovative youth development strategies.
The original grants enabled the States to identify and develop new, or strengthen existing, youth development strategies. Each State designed a unique plan for implementing the demonstration project on the basis of its identified needs and prior youth development activities. These efforts focused on all youth, including youth in at-risk situations such as runaway and homeless youth, youth leaving the foster care system, abused and neglected children, and other youth served by the child welfare and juvenile justice systems.
States’ activities included: assessing existing statewide policies and procedures to determine how best to integrate youth development principles into current approaches; providing training on the Positive Youth Development approach; involving young people in program and policy development; organizing regional, State, or community-wide conferences and forums; creating new outlets for sharing information on youth development; developing and supporting statewide coalitions of agencies serving runaway and homeless youth; and identifying data to measure positive outcomes.
Between 2004 and 2007, the Bureau has awarded an additional $6.8 million to continue its investment in collaborative approaches through the Positive Youth Development State and Local Youth Development Collaboration Projects. Wanting local communities to benefit from the successes of the State-level projects, FYSB launched the State and Local Youth Development Collaboration Projects to encourage cooperation between State governments and local community jurisdictions or Tribes. The grants were awarded to 9 of the original 13 states: Arizona, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New York, and Oregon. The State and Local Collaboration Demonstration Projects specifically aim to move the earlier successes in promoting Positive Youth Development from the State to the local level.
Purpose
The mission of the Family and Youth Services Bureau (FYSB) is to provide national leadership on youth and family issues. The Bureau promotes positive outcomes for children, youth, and families by supporting a wide range of comprehensive services and collaborations at the local, Tribal, State, and national levels. FYSB programs offer positive alternatives for youth, ensure their safety, and maximize their potential to take advantage of available opportunities.
FYSB’s State and Local Youth Development Collaboration Projects pilot innovative ways to increase opportunities for Positive Youth Development at the local level, going beyond policy and broadly-focused initiatives to develop intensive, community-based efforts that involve local stakeholders and provide developmental opportunities for young people. Specifically, the projects’ goals are to:
- encourage collaboration, among the State and local (or Tribal) agencies and communities, that will increase opportunities for Positive Youth Development;
- promote and facilitate communication and cooperation between the State and local youth-serving agencies in addressing the needs and issues of adolescents and young adults;
- encourage ongoing community participation in the planning and execution of strategies aimed at the positive development of their young people; and
- energize local constituencies around a Positive Youth Development agenda.
In addition, the projects aim to increase opportunities for young people by providing them with:
- more ways to use their time positively, for instance by playing sports, volunteering, learning new skills, or working;
- more ways to express themselves positively, find their strengths and talents, and get a healthy start in life; and
- more opportunities to get involved in their communities and to give back through community service.
FYSB’S Grant Award Process
When new funds become available, FYSB will solicit applications through www.grants.gov. Applications are reviewed by peer panels, and successful applicants may receive up to 5-year grants. While FYSB funds demonstration activities through the grants process, research activities are carried out under the auspices of contracts. Both methods are competitively reviewed.
For More Information
The experiences of the State Collaboration Projects since they began in 1998 provide lessons on various aspects of collaborative work – such as goal setting, resource development, marketing, and evaluation – that may inform the efforts of organizations and communities launching similar efforts. Detailed information about the original State collaborations and the ongoing State and local projects is available at http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/fysb.
For further information about FYSB’s State and Local Collaboration Demonstration Projects, contact the National Clearinghouse on Families & Youth, P.O. Box 13505, Silver Spring, MD 20911-3505; (301) 608-8098; fax: (301) 608-8721; e-mail: ncfy@acf.hhs.gov; Web site: ncfy.acf.hhs.gov.
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