|
PAL's mission remains unchanged — to keep young people out of trouble by channeling their energies into recreational and athletic
programs. For more than 90 years, PAL programs have expanded to meet the new challenges faced by our youth today.
PAL started in 1936, when a New York police officer was called to a disturbance involving youth. A juvenile gang in
New York City, harassing storekeepers and generally making life miserable in the neighborhood, caused the problem that
pioneered this approach to juvenile delinquency.
Lieutenant Thomas Flynn, of the New York Police Department’s Crime Prevention Bureau had a special passion for
helping kids and came up with the idea to provide free activities to keep youth off the street. Lt. Flynn searched
out the gang’s ringleader and listened for reasons behind the kids’ antisocial behavior. From talking to the youth,
he discovered that they had no recreational facilities to keep them off the streets. He talked with some of his fellow
officers and some of the neighborhood shop keepers. They liked his idea and each chipped in one dollar for uniforms and
equipment. Lt. Flynn found a playground where the group could play under the supervision of friendly police officers.
The team was an instant success. Before the year was out, there were close to a dozen such teams in the city.
Easily America’s largest juvenile crime prevention program with over 3 million youth members throughout the United States,
its territories and Canada, the National PAL encompasses more than 700 cities, counties, and townships, servicing more than
400 member chapters. Each PAL chapter is tailored to the area in which it operates, geared to the specific needs of the
community it serves. Benton County Sheriff’s Office PAL is the second chapter in Arkansas to offer this to the community,
with North Little Rock Police Department being first.
PAL provides an opportunity to get kids off the street and to provide children who can’t afford to participate in team sports
an opportunity to do so. PAL generally solicits funds, equipment, and volunteer help from members of the community, so that the
cost to taxpayers is small while the returns are great. Participants in the League's activities are supposedly much less likely
to engage in crime, far more likely to praise the character of the police force, and discourage their friends from either committing
crimes or covering up criminal activity.
There are many youth-oriented programs, but only one PAL. We are one of the few programs that’s prime responsibility is the prevention
of juvenile crime. PAL is more than a mere athletic program, it becomes a very potent crime deterrent.
|