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Cash-strapped states cut juvenile justice programs

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JIM DAVENPORT | 12/26/08 10:10 PM | AP

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Charles Mosley instructs students in brick masonry at Birchwood High School, a school for juvenile criminals that has lost some funding for its programs, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2008, in Columbia, S.C. South Carolina is one of several states cutting programs for juvenile criminals, which critics contend is shortsighted and will eventually lead to more crime and higher costs. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)

COLUMBIA, S.C. — State budget cuts are forcing some of the nation's youngest criminals out of counseling programs and group homes and into juvenile prisons in what critics contend is a shortsighted move that will eventually lead to more crime and higher costs.

Tennessee, South Carolina, Kentucky and Virginia are among states that have slashed juvenile justice spending _ in some cases more than 20 percent _ because of slumping tax collections. Youth advocates say they expect the recession will bring more cuts next year in other states, hitting programs that try to rehabilitate children rather than simply locking them up.

"If you raise a child in prison, you're going to raise a convict," said South Carolina Juvenile Justice Director Bill Byars, credited with turning around a system once better known for warehousing children than counseling them and teaching them life skills.

Now, he's been asked to draw up plans to trim an additional 15 percent from a juvenile justice budget already cut $23 million, or 20 percent, since June as part of the state's effort to pare $1 billion from its $7 billion budget.

All five of the system's group homes _ which generally house less-violent offenders and give them more individual attention _ have been shuttered. Also gone are some intensive youth reform and after-school programs in detention facilities.

The story is similar in other states. Kentucky is nixing a boot camp-style program developed by the National Guard. Virginia is losing behavioral services staff and a facility that prepares children to go home after serving time, along with smaller camps and community programs. Juveniles in those programs will return to traditional correctional facilities.

"It's not like we're going to say, 'OK, let's close a juvenile detention center,' or something like that," said Gordon Hickey, spokesman for Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine. "We have to reduce spending across the state, and the governor looked at suggestions and recommendations from all departments. He certainly realizes that all of these reductions have consequences. The idea is to limit the damage as much as possible."

Among the programs being cut in South Carolina is one that Lex Wilbanks, an 18-year-old arrested four years ago on drug and gun charges, credits with giving him back his future.

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Before moving to the program run by Florida-based nonprofit Associated Marine Institute, which provides intensive counseling and wilderness camps in several states, Wilbanks spent four months in a regular juvenile detention center.

"When you did something wrong or you fight or you disrespect staff, they just throw you into lockdown," Wilbanks said. "They just throw you in and make them fight to survive. You're just making them a hardened criminal."

In South Carolina, only 22 percent of offenders who go through the institute's program later break the law, less than half the recidivism rate for juveniles in large state facilities, Byars said.

Through the program, Wilbanks worked his way to the top rank in Army Junior ROTC and earned a GED and college credits. Acting up brought meetings during which counselors "talk you through problems and how you can actually change," he said. "It gives you hope."

Florida is also axing three Associated Marine Institute programs to save $1.7 million, part of an effort to cut 4 percent, or $18 million, from the juvenile justice budget. Advocates are bracing for additional cuts as legislators go back to the Capitol in January to deal with a $2 billion state budget hole.

Florida's juvenile justice system "is going to die the death of a million 4 percent cuts," said Jacqui Colyer, who leads a state juvenile justice advisory group.

The picture isn't as bleak everywhere. In New York, where the population of jailed juveniles has declined as the state moves toward a more community-based approach, Gov. David Paterson has proposed closing six youth facilities and consolidating and downsizing others that aren't being fully used to save $12 million in 2009-10 and $14 million in 2010-11.

A court order limits the cuts California can make and Minnesota, Massachusetts and Nebraska haven't made serious cuts to their systems. Other states, including Connecticut, Oregon, New Hampshire and Utah, are making more modest cuts or delaying planned spending.

Advocates say they worry most about losing programs, such as group homes, that take children out of large facilities to give them individual attention.

Juvenile facilities see an array of major and minor criminals. Gun, drug, sex and assault offenders may share sleeping quarters and classes with teen pranksters sentenced for disrupting schools or destroying property. Terms can last weeks or, in extreme cases, until youths become adults and are transferred to adult prisons.

Generally, less violent offenders make it to the smaller group homes, and experts say social pecking orders are easier to defuse in those settings compared to prisons where gangs try to form and fight for control.

Sheila Bedi, executive director of the Washington-based Justice Policy Institute, said housing children can cost as much as $600 per child daily. But the expenses can be much higher when children emerge hardened from big youth prisons, commit more crimes and end up in adult facilities.

"The truant comes out learning how to steal a car," Bedi said. "You cannot expect a child to come out of that situation with the ability to make better life decisions."

___

Associated Press Writer Dena Potter in Richmond, Va., contributed to this report.

COLUMBIA, S.C. — State budget cuts are forcing some of the nation's youngest criminals out of counseling programs and group homes and into juvenile prisons in what critics contend is a shortsigh...
COLUMBIA, S.C. — State budget cuts are forcing some of the nation's youngest criminals out of counseling programs and group homes and into juvenile prisons in what critics contend is a shortsigh...
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- eremite I'm a Fan of eremite 5 fans permalink

What did you expect them to do? Cut back their bloated bureaucracy.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 PM on 12/26/2008
- rog4823 I'm a Fan of rog4823 permalink

I work in the juvenile system (for now...) and its not going to be pretty. Cuts have placed a county that I cover to the point where they have ANNOUNCED they aren't going to send any kids to any placements until the new fiscal year. Isn't that a great announcement for kids to read? This is on top of staff cuts and everything else. There are a lot of good people that actually help others that are going to lose their jobs and a lot of kids who could be helped that end up getting ignored.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 12/26/2008
- mpgarr I'm a Fan of mpgarr 3 fans permalink

We are almost invariably, when it comes to "criminal justice," "penny wise and pound foolish!!!"

The results of cutting the budgets of the juvenile systems across the country will be something we will very quickly come to regret!!!

There is an old saying in corrections: "Prisons are universities of crime!"

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 04:24 PM on 12/26/2008
- WADIIAH I'm a Fan of WADIIAH permalink

deplorable

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 12/26/2008
- motoGpifupleez I'm a Fan of motoGpifupleez 129 fans permalink

This is one policy I thought RihtWingers would cling to forever, keeping people in prison that is. Aren't they the super-duper law and order bunch? How will they explain to their base (bitter, angry, old White people) that the prisons will be releasing all those undesirable types (i.e. Blacks) back into their tranquil communities? The privatized Prison Industrial Complex is supposed to remove "those elements" from society, not to mention provide the talent pool for the upcoming FOX reality show "Gladiators: This time the BLOOD is REEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAALLL"!

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 04:15 PM on 12/26/2008
- ChaoticGood I'm a Fan of ChaoticGood 9 fans permalink

Everyone knows that "spare the rod, ruin the child", hometown right wing nonsense religious crappiola is the "common sense" solution. Just ask the nearest Republican, they can explain it to you.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 12/26/2008

""It's not like we're going to say, 'OK, let's close a juvenile detention center,' or something like that," said Gordon Hickey, spokesman for Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine."

Yes, heaven forbid they not slow down on this country's policy of making every person who ever does something deemed illegal pay for it with portions of their lives, no matter how archaic and unproductive that is. We certainly can't have serial candy-bar thieves running amok!

The baby boomers are amazing--all these years and they STILL haven't gotten the connection between the fact that while they keep cutting spending on criminal reform and crime deterrence (namely education, activity programs, etc.), the crime rate keeps going up and more and more people are housed in prisons.

That generation has ruined this country.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 12/26/2008
- stargazer13 I'm a Fan of stargazer13 156 fans permalink
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our children deserve the best from us as a society cut other things reduce wages make other sacrifices
don,t sacrifice our children that should be the last cuts we make

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 12/26/2008
- wm1066 I'm a Fan of wm1066 43 fans permalink
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More people drowning in Norquists tub!
This is exactly what bush wanted when he bankrupted America, no more money for any social program that did good for the middle class and the poor.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:08 PM on 12/26/2008
- LeeCalif I'm a Fan of LeeCalif 88 fans permalink

That's right.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 12/26/2008
- tomk2434 I'm a Fan of tomk2434 3 fans permalink

How about we end the costly and pointless civil war on useful drugs that discourage mindless consumerism instead of dropping kids who can't sit still into a meat grinder and sacrificing them to the prison industrial complex?

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:03 PM on 12/26/2008
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