News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: Editorial: De-Criminalizing Children |
Title: | US NY: Editorial: De-Criminalizing Children |
Published On: | 2009-12-17 |
Source: | New York Times (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2009-12-17 18:08:29 |
DE-CRIMINALIZING CHILDREN
As many as 150,000 children are sent to adult jails in this country
every year -- often in connection with nonviolent offenses or arrests
that do not lead to conviction. That places them at risk of being
raped or battered and increases the chance they will end up as career
criminals.
To fix this problem, Congress needs to properly reauthorize the
Juvenile Justice Delinquency and Prevention Act of 1974, under which
states agreed to humanize juvenile justice policies in exchange for
more federal aid. This act was largely bypassed in the 1990s when
unfounded fears of an adolescent crime wave reached hysterical levels.
When it reauthorizes the law -- it is already three years late --
Congress should make it illegal for states to place children in adult
prisons, perhaps with the exception of truly heinous criminals.
The House has yet to introduce a new bill; in the Senate, an updated
version has yet to be voted out of the Judiciary Committee. The
Senate bill is less than ideal, but it does encourage the states to
de-emphasize the practice of detaining children in adult jails before
trial and requires them to better protect young people who end up
there. Several states have begun to reform their systems: housing
young people in juvenile facilities -- where they are better
protected and can get mental health treatment -- even if they have
been convicted in adult courts. The current version of the law
threatens states with loss of federal aid if they make that decision.
The Senate bill would do away with that language.
The bill also would require states to phase out policies under which
children are detained in either juvenile or adult facilities for
offenses like violating curfew or smoking. These children should be
dealt with through community-based counseling or family intervention
programs, which are better for the child and for taxpayers.
In addition, the bill increases financing for mentoring, drug
treatment, mental health care and other programs that have been shown
to keep children out of custody in the first place. And it would
require states to closely monitor -- and address -- racial inequities
in their system. Studies show that black and Hispanic children get
harsher treatment at all levels of the juvenile justice system than
white children.
The Senate bill is not perfect. But it represents a welcome step away
from the cruel and self-defeating policies that subject children to
irreparable harm at the hands of the state and puts them on a path
that too often leads to a lifetime spent behind bars.
As many as 150,000 children are sent to adult jails in this country
every year -- often in connection with nonviolent offenses or arrests
that do not lead to conviction. That places them at risk of being
raped or battered and increases the chance they will end up as career
criminals.
To fix this problem, Congress needs to properly reauthorize the
Juvenile Justice Delinquency and Prevention Act of 1974, under which
states agreed to humanize juvenile justice policies in exchange for
more federal aid. This act was largely bypassed in the 1990s when
unfounded fears of an adolescent crime wave reached hysterical levels.
When it reauthorizes the law -- it is already three years late --
Congress should make it illegal for states to place children in adult
prisons, perhaps with the exception of truly heinous criminals.
The House has yet to introduce a new bill; in the Senate, an updated
version has yet to be voted out of the Judiciary Committee. The
Senate bill is less than ideal, but it does encourage the states to
de-emphasize the practice of detaining children in adult jails before
trial and requires them to better protect young people who end up
there. Several states have begun to reform their systems: housing
young people in juvenile facilities -- where they are better
protected and can get mental health treatment -- even if they have
been convicted in adult courts. The current version of the law
threatens states with loss of federal aid if they make that decision.
The Senate bill would do away with that language.
The bill also would require states to phase out policies under which
children are detained in either juvenile or adult facilities for
offenses like violating curfew or smoking. These children should be
dealt with through community-based counseling or family intervention
programs, which are better for the child and for taxpayers.
In addition, the bill increases financing for mentoring, drug
treatment, mental health care and other programs that have been shown
to keep children out of custody in the first place. And it would
require states to closely monitor -- and address -- racial inequities
in their system. Studies show that black and Hispanic children get
harsher treatment at all levels of the juvenile justice system than
white children.
The Senate bill is not perfect. But it represents a welcome step away
from the cruel and self-defeating policies that subject children to
irreparable harm at the hands of the state and puts them on a path
that too often leads to a lifetime spent behind bars.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...