As Halloween approaches, the City of Yonkers has once again put public safety first by announcing an official curfew for minors. The curfew, which takes effect Thursday, October 31, 2025, is designed to protect children and families during a night that often brings not only fun and candy — but also mischief, vandalism, and unsafe situations.
According to city officials, children 11 and younger must be home by 10:00 PM, youth 12 to 13 by 10:30 PM, and those 14 to 16 by 11:00 PM. Exceptions apply for minors accompanied by a parent or guardian, traveling to or from work or school with proof, or standing near their homes with permission from a neighbor.
Violators will be escorted to the nearest Yonkers Police precinct, and parents or guardians will be contacted. While no fines are specified, the goal is clear — safety, not punishment.
A Tradition of Safety, Not Suppression
Yonkers is not alone in enforcing curfews during Halloween. Cities across the nation have implemented similar measures to reduce property damage, loitering, and youth-related incidents that have historically spiked on October 31st. These policies aren’t about criminalizing children — they’re about creating order on a night when chaos can easily take over.
For years, residents have voiced concerns about reckless behavior, vandalism, and violence occurring in certain neighborhoods after dark. The curfew gives law enforcement and parents a shared tool to ensure that our youth — especially those under 17 — are safe, supervised, and protected from harm.
The Real Issue: Parenting and Involvement
Let’s be honest — many of the problems we’re seeing with our youth today stem from a deeper issue: the breakdown of parental involvement. Too many children are being raised by television, social media, or the streets, while discipline and accountability have taken a back seat.
The city can set a curfew, but it’s parents who must set the standard. When adults stop showing up — in the home, in schools, or in community spaces — young people are left to define their own rules. That vacuum of guidance leads to the very situations the curfew is trying to prevent.
A child’s safety starts long before Halloween night. It begins with a parent who knows where their child is, who they’re with, and what they’re doing. Curfews don’t raise children — parents do.
Protecting Black Youth from Risk — Not Restricting Their Freedom
In too many cities, Halloween night can quickly turn dangerous, especially in communities already dealing with underfunded youth programs and high-density housing. When police, parents, and residents work together to set curfews, they create a safer environment — not a punitive one.
The focus must remain on prevention. A young person home safe by 11:00 PM is one less headline, one less arrest, and one less tragedy. Protecting Black youth means guiding them away from danger — not waiting to react after the fact.
A Message to Yonkers Parents
This Halloween, the message from Yonkers officials should be echoed by every parent: Keep your children safe, keep them supervised, and keep them home early. The curfew isn’t an attack on freedom — it’s a shield against harm.
Many of the problems we label as “youth issues” are really parenting issues. Our children will follow the examples we set — and when adults step up, communities stabilize.
As a retired law enforcement officer who has watched so many young children come through the justice system for making silly mistakes, I support proactive measures that protect our youth and strengthen family accountability. Safety isn’t about control — it’s about care. And on Halloween night, that care begins at home.














