[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 91 (Thursday, June 9, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H3574]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
YOUTH PROMISE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Webster of Florida). The Chair
recognizes the gentleman from Florida (Mr. Yoho) for 5 minutes.
Mr. YOHO. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to call attention to an
incredibly important piece of legislation that will provide essential
funding for programs which will go miles toward helping every young
person in America who has maybe had a misstep reach their potential and
achieve their American Dream.
As I travel my district, I am so impressed as I meet some of the most
incredible young people in north central Florida. These young Americans
have the capability of literally changing the world and the capability
of bettering their communities and setting a positive example for the
youth that will follow in their footsteps.
Unfortunately, too many will fall victim to the circumstances in
which they were born. Too many will become familiar with the inside of
a juvenile detention facility, as the image of the classroom fades from
memory, and the all-too-often reality of life behind bars begins to
materialize. I want to stress that if this happens to even just one
child, that is one child too many.
We live in the greatest nation on Earth. We tell our children they
can be whatever they want to be when they grow up, yet we know the
reality for some is that as these very words are spoken, there is no
truth to them. These are the youth who fall subject to the cradle-to-
prison pipeline, and it is unacceptable.
These are the children in our communities, children who go to school
with our own kids and, yes, in some cases even our own children. We
have the ability to change their reality. H.R. 2197, the Youth PROMISE
Act, will do just that. The Youth PROMISE Act establishes a PROMISE
Advisory Panel of State representatives as well as local PROMISE
Coordinating Councils, which will develop and implement evidence-based
locally controlled--not Washington-controlled--youth violence
prevention and intervention practices and mentorship opportunities.
These practices will occur on a community level, working with
families, working with schools, nonprofits, juvenile justice advocates,
and law enforcement officers to intervene early in a child's life to
prevent them from starting down a path that can easily define the
remainder of their lives.
Last Congress, the Youth PROMISE Act garnered the bipartisan support
of over 130 Members of this body in Congress, yet it sat in committee
for nearly 2 years. This Congress, the Youth PROMISE Act has sat in the
House Committee on Education and the Workforce for over 400 days
without action.
Our youth cannot continue to wait. There are many issues that
Congress deals with which Republicans, Democrats, and Independents
cannot agree upon, but this is not one of them. If they have not
already, I urge my colleagues to cosponsor this vital piece of
legislation. I urge leadership in the House and the Senate to bring up
this bill for a vote, a vote for our challenged youth so that they may
continue the great posterity of this Nation.
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