Abused Kids May Mingle with Delinquents
WESTWORD
Behind his glasses, Jack has a sweet face. It's the face of a kid who's
been hurt by the very people who were supposed to protect him. A kid
who's carefully creeping toward learning to trust adults and to believe
that they won't manipulate him or abandon him like his parents did.
Slowly, Jack is coming to realize that what happened isn't his fault.
Jack, who is sixteen, was removed from his home just after his
twelfth birthday. The call was made by his mentally ill mom and
domineering stepdad. Take our oldest son, they told child-welfare
workers. He's the reason we're poor and down on our luck; he's the one
who is mentally ill. Although Jack's stepdad never beat him, he demanded
that Jack hurt himself, punishing the boy by making him hold a
squatting position long after his thighs burned with pain. There was
also emotional abuse, and Jack and his four younger siblings have
recently hinted that they may have been sexually abused, too.
But Jack, whose name was changed for this story, isn't mentally ill.
His only diagnosis, after more than four years of therapy, is
post-traumatic stress disorder. Still, he's not like most
sixteen-year-old boys. His attorney describes him as "pesky," the way a
ten-year-old little brother might be pesky. His development has been
stunted by trauma. For his sixteenth birthday, Jack asked for Matchbox
cars.
What he wants most is a family, but that hasn't happened. Although
his social workers don't have the heart to tell him, there's little
chance that someone would adopt Jack at his age.
Instead, a new law passed in April allows Colorado counties to put
physically and emotionally abused boys like Jack at a remote, privately
run facility that houses a quarter of the state's committed juvenile
delinquents: boys ages 14 to 21 who are guilty of crimes such as car
theft, aggravated assault and vehicular homicide.
Ridge View Youth Services Center in Watkins was supposed to be
Colorado's answer to its problem of too many delinquent teenagers and
not enough room. But lately it's had more empty beds than full ones.
Expanding the types of youth that can go to Ridge View will certainly
fill some of them, but those in favor of the plan — including state
lawmakers, county officials and employees of Rite of Passage, the
for-profit organization that operates Ridge View — insist that it's not
about making money, saving money or warehousing children. Instead, they
praise Ridge View's unique approach, which combines academics and
athletics in a fence-less environment that proponents say more closely
resembles a prep school than a prison.
If opening Ridge View to non-criminal youth helps just one boy, they repeatedly say, it'd be worth it.
But child-welfare advocates are skeptical. They insist that the two
types of youth don't belong together. At a place like Ridge View, which
is designed for "high-risk" kids, someone like Jack is sure to become a
pawn or a punching bag or a delinquent youth himself.
"My concern is, we're starting out youth deep in the juvenile-justice
system before they've even committed a crime," says Kim Dvorchak,
executive director of the Colorado Juvenile Defender Coalition. "It
feels like commitment without trial."
"We are very concerned...about what message we would send to a young
person who has been traumatized by abuse and neglect and then placed in a
juvenile correctional facility where the focus is on changing the
behavior of the offender," Carla Bennett, a volunteer lobbyist on
juvenile-justice issues for the League of Women Voters of Colorado, told
lawmakers debating the bill. "Will there be a subtle message, or maybe
not so subtle, that the [dependent or neglected] youth was somehow
responsible for his problems?"
2 comments:
This proposal is cruel. It's also not fiscally sound. There are organizations, e.g., Shiloh Home, which will care for these children and give them the treatment and a family like setting that will position them much more soundly to be contributing members of our society. How sad that legislators put profit above children's needs.
Although I cannot take in foster children because of my criminal past, I know that there are hundreds, if not thousands of families of different faiths and positive backgrounds who could. What keeps them back is the risk factor. What if? These children need adults who are willing to take the risk to give them a new beginning surrounded with an environment of love and acceptance.
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