A Move to Make Things Right – Oct 25, 2024

 

THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW, RIGHT? 
For too long, the “lock ’em up” mentality ruled, and children who crossed the law were locked up in facilities that offered little teaching and lots of trauma.

In addition to widespread physical and sexual abuse in institutions, kids are also subject to body cavity searches, long periods of being physically restrained, strip searches, and solitary confinement. More than half of suicides in juvenile detention take place during solitary confinement, and those types of searches can trigger young people who have experienced sexual abuse.

تيhis is systemic taxpayer-funded child abuse and neglect.

These are awful ways to treat any child, and grossly counter-productive if you want institutionalized children and teens to make positive life choices when they’re released.

Fortunately, there is bipartisan support to move Pennsylvania in the direction of protecting kids in the juvenile justice system from harm and trauma. A PA House Committee this week passed legislation sponsored by Rep. Melissa Shusterman (D-Chester) that will stamp out the rampant abuse at youth detention centers.

HB 1600 details how staff can use strip and cavity searches, restraints, and solitary confinement. To quote the bill, these activities, “may not be used for punishment, retaliation or administrative convenience, as a result of staffing shortages or for any reason other than securing the immediate physical safety of a youth.” It’s disturbing that these guidelines are not already in law and – more importantly – that they even need to be.

أناn addition, HB 1600 rachets up the work of the PA Department of Human Services (DHS) to keep kids safe. DHS must conduct announced and unannounced visits to these youth jails and has the explicit okay to interview staff and children, review records, and shut down or stop funding abusive facilities.

Better yet, the bill explicitly emphasizes the importance of not locking kids up and keeping them home where they can learn from and apologize for their mistakes. Community-based, restorative justice programs provide tools for better decision making, anger management, and rebuilding trust. This cost-saving approach invests in healing communities, thus making our neighborhoods safer and our children successful.

As members of the Youth Safety Coalition, we’re proud of the work we’ve done to build bipartisan support and momentum for HB 1600. Anyone can be a member of the Coalition and join in on this important work! Contact Stefanie Arbutina at stefaniea@childrenfirstpa.org لتعلم المزيد.

Help more parents get child care!

انقر هنا to sign the Start Strong PA petition calling for $284 million in state funding to launch a child care teacher recruitment and retention initiative to fix the staff crisis. More teachers means more spots for kids!

“Eliminating the Department of Education means losing funding, collapsing the [special needs education] program, and terminating thousands of teachers.”

– Donna Cooper, Children First Executive Director, on the impact on the Phila School District if the Project 2025 call to eliminate the U.S. Department of Education happens

              
Where do your candidates stand on child care, paid family leave, and other important issues? Check the Child Care Voter candidate surveys.
“The hard, harsh truth is that we have created
a toxic culture for low-income children and
families, and we must now teach them how to
survive and thrive in it. The good news is that
there’s an incredible amount of interest in
this topic…”
– Alex Briscoe of California Children’s Trust
and guest expert on today’s Children First
mental health webinar (which you can watch here.)