This week, the Capitol was covered with the handprints of thousands of children celebrating Children's Week at the Capitol. More than 100,000 handprints and other art projects were hung from the atrium of our Capitol, reminding all of our public servants that they are working for the children and, through them, our future.
Also this week, the Florida Children's Cabinet, created by Governor Crist, met and discussed the topics which direct its charge. Created in 2007, the Cabinet examines various children's needs, including education, health, and stable family structures, and works to develop long-term strategies on how those needs should be addressed. My Regional Deputy for South Florida serves on the Children's Cabinet, and along with the other 14 members, she works to coordinate and examine state agencies that deliver children's services.
In addition to looking at services provided to children, we must also consider issues which directly affect our children, including cybersafety and the threat of gangs and gang violence. I am told that gangs in Florida are recruiting children as young as 10 years old and I believe it is imperative that we do whatever we can to protect our children from this dangerous threat. Prevention and intervention are key to this effort and I look forward to being able to unveil my gang reduction strategy by the end of this month.
It is vitally important for our state and its leaders to consider the future of our children. As a parent and a grandparent, I know children are impressionable and need exemplary role models as well as the care and attention to develop into productive and promising citizens of our state.
Whether it is recognizing April as Child Abuse Prevention Month, working to educate our middle and high school students about cybersafety, or developing prevention and intervention programs to keep our children out of criminal street gangs, safeguarding Florida's children is one of my highest priorities. As the displays in the Capitol this week suggest, our future is truly in their hands.