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Senate Overwhelmingly Passes
Hatch-Leahy Bill
To Expand Boys & Girls Clubs
…Measure Would Boost Funding To $100
M. By 2010;
Now Moves To The House
[WASHINGTON (Friday, June 4) – The U.S.
Senate has unanimously passed bipartisan legislation authored by
Senators Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) that provides
financial support for communities to build safe havens for youth away
from the influence of drugs and gangs. “The Boys & Girls Clubs of
America” bill (S.2363) extends the authorization for annual grants
from the Department of Justice (DOJ) to the Boys & Girls Club of
America under a program Leahy has long championed. The Senate passed
the bill Thursday evening, hours after the measure was cleared by the
Judiciary Committee. As a senior member of the Appropriations
Committee and the ranking Democratic member on the Judiciary
Committee, Leahy has been a long-time advocate for the Boys & Girls
Clubs of America, successfully convincing Congress to increase federal
support for the nonprofit youth service organization from $20 million
in 1998 to $80 million this year and helping new clubs to open in
Vermont. Hatch chairs the Judiciary panel. The bill now moves to the
House for consideration. Leahy’s statement on the passage of the bill
follows.]
Remarks By Senator Patrick Leahy,
On Senate Passage Of The Boys & Girls Clubs Of America Bill, S.
2363
June 3, 2004
MR. LEAHY: Mr.
President, I am pleased that the Senate is taking up and passing the
legislation that Senator Hatch and I introduced together to
reauthorize and expand the Department of Justice grant program for the
Boys & Girls Clubs of America. We reported it out of the Judiciary
Committee this morning and I thank the Senate for moving our
bipartisan legislation so quickly. I also thank our 30 bipartisan
cosponsors, including the Democratic Leader, Senator Daschle, the
Assistant Democratic Leader, Senator Reid, and Judiciary Committee
members DeWine, Kohl, Biden, Feinstein, Craig, Sessions, Durbin,
Edwards, Schumer and Chambliss, for supporting our legislation to
support the Boys & Girls Clubs of America.
Too often the public
sees Republicans and Democrats disagreeing. From time to time, even
Senator Hatch and I disagree on important issues. But when it comes
to the Boys & Girls Clubs of America there is no doubt that we see
eye-to-eye: This bill shows the unified support of Republicans and
Democrats for the good works of Boys & Girls Clubs across the nation.
Children are the
future of our country, and we have a responsibility to make sure they
are safe and secure. I know firsthand how well Boys & Girls Clubs
work and what topnotch organizations they are. When I was a
prosecutor in Vermont, I was convinced of the great need for Boys &
Girls Clubs because we rarely encountered children from these kinds of
programs. In fact, after I became a U.S. Senator, a police chief was
such a big fan that he asked me to help fund a Boys & Girls Club in
his district rather than helping him get a couple more police
officers.
In Vermont, Boys &
Girls Clubs have succeeded in preventing crime and supporting our
children. The first Club was established in Burlington 62 years ago.
Now we have 22 club sites operating throughout the State: seven clubs
in Brattleboro, one in Springfield, two clubs in Burlington, one in
Winooski, two clubs in Montpelier, five clubs in Randolph, one club in
Rutland, two clubs in Vergennes and one in Bristol. There are 10
additional project sites that will be on board and serving kids by the
end of 2005: one in Bennington, two in Burlington, one in Duxbury, one
in St. Johnsbury, one in Hardwick, three in Randolph and one in
Ludlow. These clubs will serve well over 10,000 kids statewide.
As a senior member
of the Senate Appropriations Committee, I have pushed for more Federal
funding for Boys & Girls Clubs. Since 1998, Congress has increased
Federal support for Boys & Girls Clubs from $20 million to $80 million
in this year. Due in large part to this increase in funding, there
now exist 3,300 Boys & Girls Clubs in all 50 States serving more than
3.6 million young people. Because of these successes, I was both
surprised and disappointed to see that the President requested a
reduction of $20 million for FY 2005. That request will leave
thousands of children and their Clubs behind and we cannot allow such
a thing to happen.
In the 107th
Congress, Senator Hatch and I worked together to pass the 21st Century
Department of Justice Appropriations Authorization Act, which included
a provision to reauthorize Justice Department grants to establish new
Boys & Girls Clubs nationwide. By authorizing $80 million in DOJ
grants for each of the fiscal years through 2005, we sought to
establish 1,200 additional Boys & Girls Clubs nationwide. This was to
bring the number of Boys & Girls Clubs to 4,000, serving no less than
5 million young people. The bill we introduce today will build upon
this: We authorize Justice Department grants at $80 million for FY
2006, $85 million for FY 2007, $90 million for FY 2008, $95 million
for FY 2009 and $100 million for FY 2010 to Boys & Girls Clubs to help
establish 1,500 additional Boys & Girls Clubs across the nation with
the goal of having 5,000 Boys & Girls Clubs in operation by December
31, 2010.
If we had a Boys & Girls Club in every community, prosecutors in our
country would have a lot less work to do because of the values that
are being instilled in children from the Boys & Girls Clubs of
America. Each time I visit a club in Vermont, I am approached by
parents, educators, teachers, grandparents and law enforcement
officers who tell me “Keep doing this! These clubs give our children
the chance to grow up free of drugs, gangs and crime.”
You cannot argue
that these are just Democratic or Republican ideas, or Conservative or
Liberal ideas – they are simply good sense ideas. We need safe havens
where our youth – the future of our country – can learn and grow up
free from the influences of drugs, gangs and crime. That is why Boys
& Girls Clubs are so important to our children.
I thank the Senate
for taking up and passing our bipartisan bill to expand Federal
support for the Boys & Girls Clubs of America. Our country’s strength
and ultimate success lies with our children. Our greatest
responsibility is to help them inhabit this century the best way
possible and we can help do that by supporting the Boys & Girls Clubs
of America.
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