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. (a) Use of funds granted under the California Community
Crime Resistance Program are restricted to the following activities:
(1) Further the goal of a statewide crime prevention network by
supporting the initiation or expansion of local crime prevention
efforts.
(2) Provide information and encourage the use of new and
innovative refinements to the traditional crime prevention model in
localities that currently maintain a well-established crime
prevention program.
(3) Support the development of a coordinated service network,
including information exchange and case referral between such
programs as local victim-witness assistance programs, sexual assault
programs, gang violence reduction programs, drug suppression
programs, elderly care custodians, state and local elderly service
programs, or any other established and recognizable local programs
devoted to the lessening of crime and the promotion of the community'
s well-being.
(b) With respect to the initiation or expansion of local crime
prevention efforts, projects supported under the California Community
Crime Resistance Program shall do either of the following:
(1) Carry out as many of the following activities as deemed, in
the judgment of the Office of Emergency Services, to be consistent
with available resources:
(A) Crime prevention programs using tailored outreach techniques
in order to provide effective and consistent services for the elderly
in the following areas:
(i) Crime prevention information to elderly citizens regarding
personal safety, fraud, theft, grand theft, burglary, and elderly
abuse.
(ii) Services designed to respond to the specific and diverse
crime prevention needs of elderly residential communities.
(iii) Specific services coordinated to assist in the installation
of security devices or provision of escort services and victim
assistance.
(B) Programs to provide training, information, and prevention
literature to peace officers, elderly care custodians, health
practitioners, and social service providers regarding physical abuse
and neglect within residential health care facilities for the
elderly.
(C) Programs to promote neighborhood involvement such as, but not
limited to, block clubs and other community or resident-sponsored
anticrime programs.
(D) Personal safety programs.
(E) Domestic violence prevention programs.
(F) Crime prevention programs specifically geared to youth in
schools and school district personnel.
(G) Programs which make available to residents and businesses
information on locking devices, building security, and related crime
resistance approaches.
(H) In cooperation with the Commission on Peace Officer Standards
and Training, support for the training of peace officers in crime
prevention and its effects on the relationship between citizens and
law enforcement.
(I) Efforts to address the crime prevention needs of communities
with high proportions of teenagers and young adults, low-income
families, and non-English-speaking residents, including juvenile
delinquency diversion, social service referrals, and making available
crime resistance literature in appropriate languages other than
English.
(2) Implement a community policing program in targeted
neighborhoods that are drug infested. The goal of this program shall
be to empower the people against illegal drug activity. A program
funded pursuant to this chapter shall be able to target one or more
neighborhoods within the grant period. In order to be eligible for
funding, the program shall have the commitment of the community,
local law enforcement, school districts, and community service
groups; and shall be supported by either the city council or the
board of supervisors, whichever is applicable.
(c) With respect to the support of new and innovative techniques,
communities taking part in the California Crime Resistance Program
shall carry out those activities, as determined by the Office of
Emergency Services, that conform to local needs and are consistent
with available expertise and resources. These techniques may include,
but are not limited to, community policing programs or activities
involving the following:
(1) Programs to reinforce the security of "latchkey" children,
including neighborhood monitoring, special contact telephone numbers,
emergency procedure training for the children, daily telephone
checks for the children's well-being, and assistance in developing
safe alternatives to unsupervised conditions for children.
(2) Programs dedicated to educating parents in procedures designed
to do all of the following:
(A) Minimize or prevent the abduction of children.
(B) Assist children in understanding the risk of child abduction.
(C) Maximize the recovery of abducted children.
(3) Programs devoted to developing automated systems for
monitoring and tracking crimes within organized neighborhoods.
(4) Programs devoted to developing timely "feedback mechanisms"
whose goals would be to alert residents to new crime problems and to
reinforce household participation in neighborhood security
organizations.
(5) Programs devoted to creating and packaging special crime
prevention approaches tailored to the special needs and
characteristics of California's cultural and ethnic minorities.
(6) Research into the effectiveness of local crime prevention
efforts including the relationships between crime prevention
activities, participants' economic and demographic characteristics,
project costs, local or regional crime rate, and law enforcement
planning and staff deployment.
(7) Programs devoted to crime and delinquency prevention through
the establishment of partnership initiatives utilizing elderly and
juvenile volunteers.
(d) All approved programs shall utilize volunteers to assist in
implementing and conducting community crime resistance programs.
Programs providing elderly crime prevention programs shall recruit
senior citizens to assist in providing services.
(e) Programs funded pursuant to this chapter shall demonstrate a
commitment to support citizen involvement with local funds after the
program has been developed and implemented with state moneys.