Youth, families, and all of New York's taxpayers will be the winners if state officials view their agreement on reforming four notorious juvenile facilities as one piece in a total overhaul of the juvenile justice system.
The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA) prohibits states that receive federal funds from placing status offenders—youth who exhibit troubling, but non-criminal, behaviors such as chronic truancy, incorrigibility, or running away—in locked juvenile detention or correctional facilities. A September 8 report by the National Coalition of Juvenile Justice draws attention to some of the challenges that jurisdictions face in complying with this particular requirement.
A recently published letter to Governor David Paterson from the U.S. Department of Justice presents a heartbreaking picture of events in four New York State juvenile correctional facilities. That’s why it is important to remember that there are also jurisdictions in this country that offer a better way of caring for youth in state custody.