Joined by some 100 New York City high school students, Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion went downtown Sunday to admonish city agencies for not providing enough after-school options for youth.
He said more than 150,000 high school students don’t have access to after-school programs, according to a study conducted by his office.
“We have a major crisis on our hands,” Carrion told his audience at City Hall.
The former teacher linked the lack of after-school programs with a rise in youth crime, saying that, from 2002 to 2006, youth (ages 13 to 18) arrests jumped almost 20 percent.
“Keeping kids off the streets and in programs translates into better school performance,” Carrion said. “We must change the prime time for juvenile crime (out of school time) into golden hours of academic achievement.”
Carrion said the city spends a disproportionate amount of its after-school budget on elementary and middle school students, which leaves high school students out in the cold. He added that, according to the study, some communities are loaded with after school programs, while others are completely neglected – a common gripe of Bronx parents.
“Programs need to be offered in as many communities as possible,” he said.

