HR-9059-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ)
What it does
This bill would direct the Assistant Attorney General to award grants to the National Police Athletic/Activities League (National PAL) for fiscal years 2028 through 2032. It would authorize $16 million per year ($80 million total) to establish up to 250 new PAL chapters in public housing projects and distressed areas, and to expand existing chapters. Funded chapters would be required to run at least two after-school programs covering activities such as mentorship, academic assistance, athletics, drug prevention, and job skills training.
Who benefits
Youth ages 5–18 in distressed urban, suburban, and rural areas — particularly the approximately 75% of current PAL participants who live in inner cities. Residents of public housing projects who gain access to new chapters. Native American communities in distressed areas, which are specifically targeted for new chapter placement. Law enforcement agencies that benefit from improved community relationships. Volunteers from businesses and academic institutions who gain structured mentorship opportunities. The National PAL organization itself, which receives direct federal grant funding.
Who is hurt
Other youth-serving nonprofit organizations that compete for federal juvenile justice and community grant funding and may face reduced allocations. Taxpayers who bear the $80 million authorization cost. Communities where new PAL chapters are established but later lose federal support, as chapters must plan for financial self-sufficiency after the grant period ends — a transition that may prove difficult. Alternative after-school program providers whose activities could be displaced if PAL chapters duplicate existing services (though the bill requires coordination to avoid duplication).
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that PAL has an 85-year track record serving 2 million youth annually across more than 200 chapters, and that the after-school hours between 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. represent a documented peak period for juvenile crime and victimization. They contend that directing resources to distressed areas — where 40% or more of residents are high-risk youth — targets federal dollars at the communities with the greatest need, and that PAL's model of law enforcement-led mentorship builds the community trust that reduces both crime and victimization over the long term.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill channels $80 million to a single named private organization without a competitive grant process, bypassing the accountability mechanisms that normally govern federal spending on youth services. They contend that evidence linking PAL participation to measurable reductions in juvenile crime rates is limited and methodologically contested, and that the bill's requirement for chapters to become self-sustaining after federal support ends raises serious questions about whether new chapters in the most distressed communities — which have the least private-sector fundraising capacity — can survive long-term.