Oakville Beaver, 28 Nov 2001, a5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

The Oakville Beaver, Wednesday November 28, 2001 - A5 Project aims at turning lives around for boys under 12 yearsof-age By Angela Blackburn O A K V IL L E B E A V E R S T A F F H a l t o n S e a r c h . c V m A new Halton Regional Police Program that aims to turn youths -- under 12 -- around when they get into trouble with the law is for boys only. That's because the Under 12 Project only works with boys, said Superintendent Dan Okuloski, who outlined the program at Thursday's Halton Police Services Board meeting. It's among the first of its kind for children under 12 and it received $185,000 in federal funding last week. The project mirrors another in Toronto called the Earl's Court Project. It will see police partner with the local Children's Assessment & Treatment Centre (CATC) to provide group work for boys based on the SNAP (Stop Now and Plan) philosophy. Through group work boys will learn to communicate with out resorting to unacceptable actions, such as the whack in the nose, that got them into trouble in the first place, explained Okuloski. Girls get into trouble the same as boys, said Okuloski, how ever, group work doesn't succeed with them. "It's an odd thing. It surprised me, but it just doesn't work. They have tried," admitted Okuloski, speculating that perhaps age has something to do with it. "If girls exhibit aggressive behavior, they don't change as a result of group work. The group interaction is not successful for girls. One-on-one works better with them," said Okuloski. The first Halton groups should get going in February, in Oakville. Burlington and north Halton. "We hope to touch 90 families a year that we would call high risk," said Okuloski. The program is voluntary, but will be suggested, strongly, in suitable circumstances by schools or police. Groups will consist of eight to 10 youths, and parent groups will meet, separately, at the same time. "I think some great things will come out of this," said Okuloski. "We can't keep incarcerating people," said board member Donald Robinson. While youths under 12 can't ordinarily be put in jail, Okuloski said if they eventually go that route it doesn't help. "When young people go to jail, they just learn more criminal behavior," he said. Parental involvement is key, he said. It should all go a long way when the Young Offenders Act is replaced by the Youth Criminal Justice Act next year. Bill C-7 is currently at the Senate and its philosophy is to keep youths out of the traditional court system for most offens es. "If there's a question of community safety, they'll go through the formal process," assured Okulosld. And if diversion programs don't work or are refused, there's always the option of going back and laying charges. "I don't think the transition (to the Youth Criminal Justice Act) will be that substantial. We're there now," said Okuloski. The Under 12 Project is one of the newest options the Halton police have at their disposal. Yet another program coming on stream is one called Conferencing. That will see a group of parents, police, offenders and vic tims, sit down together at a host church to discuss the crime. It begins in December. Also, in Oakville, statistics show that less than 5% of more than 400 local youths, who passed through the Youth Diversion Program in its first few years re-offended. That program steers youths away from re-offending through positive influences in everything from family life and education, to employment, housing and recreation. It sees youths enter into a three-month contract featuring offender-appropriate conditions from codes of behaviour (like keeping the peace, attending school, and meeting a curfew) to performing community service, making restitution, or attending counseling. F in e O r ig in a l C a n a d i a n A rt Traditional & Contemporary Much More Than Just Decor Over 150 Originals , FAWCETT-LANGDON GALLERY 4 3 1 B r o c k A v e ., B u r lin g to n Wednesday-Saturday 10-5, Sunday 1-4 Website: www.fawcett-langdon.com 905-333-0063 M PETITE CLASSICS Sizes 2-18 20-50 Fall Collection % o ff Sale (some exceptions apply) M A P L E G R O V E V IL L A G E O A K V IL L E 905-845-0655 f t ll u lr Id U N D ERTHE BUY THIS BUNDLE AND GET THE HP SCANJET 2200C SCANNER FREE AFTER REBATES .4 5 1 3 6 4 V A LU E 9 9 .9 6 O THEY WANT TO O A K V IL L E n ^ I , ' F IN A N C IN G O N M O S T 2 0 0 1'S & 2002's O n ly 7 2 0 0 1 's L e ft D O D G E C H R Y S IB t J E P m · · · · · · A M D Z l m w m 2002 Sebring Coupe aF IN A N C IN G S 60 month i n v e n t A M D A th lo n 1.3 G H z 128 M B SDRAM 4 0 G B h a rd d rive CDRW 5 6 K m odem M S W in XP HP 7935 L th/on *49900p e rm o .$ 8 5 0 0o rT r a d e- E q u i v a l e n tD o w n $ 5 0 0 0 o r T r a d e E q u i v a l e n t D o w n $559°° P e rm o 3 0 0 0o rT r a d e- E q u i v a l e n tD o w n $599°° P e rm ° -$ 2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo Power w indow s, power door locks, tilt, cruisp, C.D. player, air, keyless entry, security system & more. Stk. #162067 O u r P r ic e M a il- In a n d In s ta n t R e b a te s P r ic e A fte r R e b a te s $ 472707/ 4 5 0 2 4 0 /4 2 8 9 7 6 1479 CANii sr* DECIDE! REMEMBER a a rjn W E SELL · $0 Downpayment $2500 Downpayment $5000 Downpayment 2002 Dodge Caravan SE x-~ $496/mth $438/mth $389/mth Auto, 4-door, air conditioning 7 passenger, cassette. Stk. #526556 $0 Downpayment $2500 Downpayment $5000 Downpayment 2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser Power w indow s and door locks, tilt steering, cruise control, air c o n d itio n in g ^ and more. Stk. #257552 $339/mth $288/mth $239/mth PHOTOSM ART 6 1 8 DIGITAL CAMERA · 2.11 megapixels n e a <. · 3x optical zoom optical; 2x digital) digi (2x · 2" LC D SCANJET 2200C SCANNER O u r P r ic e M a il- In R e b a te P r ic e A fte r R e b a te 1 1 9 .9 6 · Easy 2-button technology · 42-bit resolution ·U SB connectivity 443989 451364 96 99 -20.00 SONY. S O N Y SONY. o, 2 4 x C D -R W1 G X $0 Downpayment j $325/mth $2500 Downpayment i $265/mth $5000 Downpayment I $209/mth 2002 Dodge Neon The prem ium Chrysler small car features people w ant in an affordable sedan; room , power and com fort. CD-R/RW m inim.. A * CDRW DRIVE · 24 x 10 x 40 °/QPurchase Financing for 60 months O.A.C. 2002 Chrysler Intrepid SE 6 cyl., auto., air, power w indow s, power locks, power m irrors & more. 471032 CDR · 80 minutes 362121 Coupon Code: 9739100000000000 W hen you bank w ith bizSm art, you'll NEVER pay any fees for yo u r d aily business banking again. That means no fees fo r w ithd raw als, deposits, b ill paym ents, plus your cheques are free. W e a lso offer cre d it decisions in seconds and a no fee business Line o f Credit. If you w a n t big savings fo r yo u r business, talk to a know ledgeable bizSm art Business A sso ciate o r ca ll 1 - B B S - 2 l T 3 * % a " b iz S m a r t s a v e s y o u m o n e y w it h b lZ SM A R T taS m aR O rtrwms o c a iK fin sx tesu te c to dS T A P L E S B u w w ssD e p o tsto re s. bttSmM«>nO Tcu*istMiGMorewled&v08C. $0 Downpayment j $369/mth $2500 Downpayment ; $308/mth $5000 Downpayment I $257/mth Leased prices based on 48 mo. lease, 20,400 km per year plus Freight, Fees and Taxes Lie. O.A.C. Neons based on 60 mo. fin. @ 0%. n o f e e d a ily b u s in e s s b a n k in g . Valid until Dec 3rd or while quantities last. Not all items available with delivery or on-line orders. MKVftlE DODGE O R V S U I JBB» 646 4th Line, Speers Rd Oakville m m O A K V I L L E QEW at Dorval Drive · 210 North Service Road W. · 2460 Winston Churchill (at Dundas) BRAMPTON 1250 Steeles East (East of 410)(b) · 80 Great Lakes Drive(b) · 2937 Highway 7 East MISSISSAUGA 1530 Aimco Blvd.(b) · 5900 Mavis Rd.(b) HOURS Mon-Fri 8AM-9PM Sat 9AM-6PM Sun 11AM-5PM STAPLES B u s i n e s s D E P O T O a d g eT r u c k s c h r y s le r | 005)845-4211 SoeesRd 1b u s i n e s s d e p o t . c o m W W W w w w .o a k v ille d o d g e .c o m ft

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy