By Kim Minugh
Kminugh@sacbee.com
Sacramento will receive nearly $1 million in funds aimed at helping potential offenders stay off the streets and in jobs, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced today.
The competitive grants are being awarded as part of the California Gang Reduction, Intervention and Prevention initiative aimed at stemming street violence. The program started in 2007.
Receiving the grants - about $490,000 each - are the Sacramento Employment Training Agency and the Sacramento Regional Conservation Corps, according to a news release from the governor's office.
In March, Schwarzenegger announced that Sacramento would be receiving almost $383,000 in funds to target gang violence at the local level.
That money is helping fund the "Safe Community Partnership," based on the "cease-fire strategy" used in other U.S. cities, which is expected to launch in September.
That effort involves identifying the worst youth offenders and offering them a choice: Take advantage of community resources to lead a better life, and face a crackdown by local law enforcement.
The strategy will be focused on the Sacramento communities of Del Paso Heights and Oak Park and the Mack Road corridor west of Highway 99.
The grants announced today are intended to expand education, job training and placement programs for at-risk youth. The statewide grants total $7.6 million.
Call The Bee's Kim Minugh, (916) 321-1038.









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