CAA Flagship wrote:Ibanez wrote:
That's a good question. I would suspect it's a good starting point.
Certainly better than nothing. By a long shot. But it seems there could be a route for a more immediate impact by including older kids.
The area of town they are talking about, those kids for the most part are a lost cause. They're already on the streets slingin dope. CID can back me up on it. The 8-10 yr olds are probably their best shot AND are probably more likely to accompany their parents to the laundromat.
![#twocents :twocents:](./images/smilies/twocents.gif)
Sure, outliers exist, but on the whole i'd say the teenagers are lost. The city does things for the younger kids. If you see black kids in Charleston selling you a palmetto rose you should know that, for the most part, those kids have a permit and are part of a program that helps keep kids from turning to crime( I think it's called Rose Kids).
Under city ordinances, sellers of palmetto roses — woven sweetgrass creations that are often sold to couples on downtown sidewalks — must go through a week-long entrepreneurship class and earn a peddler's permit, which they must display at all times while selling roses.
http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/TheB ... t-a-permit