Title 20 › Chapter 28— HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter IX— ADDITIONAL PROGRAMS › Part W— Path to Success › § 1161w
Authorizes the Secretary to give grants to community colleges so they can team up with juvenile detention centers and secure juvenile justice facilities. The grants help eligible young people age 16 to 25 who have been convicted and are detained or recently released. The goal is to give them counseling, training, mentoring, job connections, and classes that lead to a certificate or an associate’s degree. Programs must include one-on-one counseling with referrals for health, housing, and job training, chances to join community workshops that help stop gang and youth violence, and a curriculum tailored to each person’s interests and skills. Grants run for one four-year period and can be renewed. Colleges must apply with a resource assessment, program plan, and budget. The Secretary will give priority to colleges that serve the most “priority individuals” (eligible people convicted of gang-related offenses who served detention) and to the strongest proposals. Grant funds may pay tuition and transportation, support classes (including work toward a diploma or its equivalent), set up mentoring led by a college coordinator, build job pathways like internships and apprenticeships, and run community seminars. Education programs must offer flexible options, different completion tracks, and an individual plan that at minimum leads to the required certificate or degree. Colleges must report results and evaluate how well the programs work. Definitions in brief: community college (as defined elsewhere), eligible individual (age 16–25, convicted and detained or released), gang-related offense (certain serious drug felonies with maximum penalty of at least 5 years or violent felonies with maximum penalty of at least 6 months, or conspiracies, committed to benefit a criminal street gang), priority individual (an eligible person convicted of a gang-related offense who served detention), and guidance counselor (a one-on-one youth support worker). Funding is authorized for fiscal year 2009 and the five succeeding fiscal years.
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Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1161w
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60