In 1971, the City of San Antonio established the "Youth Services Project," now known as the Youth Services Division,
under the Department of Human Resources and Services (currently the Department of Community Initiatives). The program
was funded through the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare and was operated by the City as a delinquency
prevention agency by diverting first time Class C misdemeanor and juvenile status offenders from the local juvenile
justice system.
Three community based youth centers were established in public housing projects in the "Model Cities Area," a ten
square mile sector in west San Antonio. This project was cited as an exemplary model program by the federal government
in 1972, and as a result, the program expanded to all geographic quadrants of the city. In 1977, the City of
San Antonio assumed complete funding of the project and officially renamed the agency as the Youth Services Division.
Today, the division operates six diversion sites located geographically throughout the city. Services are provided to
troubled youth to help prevent further behavior that could lead to possible adjudication and commitment. The division
also operates the Juvenile Restitution Program which places juvenile Class C misdemeanor offenders in community/public
service. Also offered is the Runaway Intervention Program which provides crisis intervention for families who
report their children as missing.