In February, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-Rhode Island, called on the Senate to pass important juvenile justice reform by reauthorizing the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA). The JJDPA is the only piece of federal legislation that governs juvenile justice across the country, and provides critical funding and guidance for states.
The JJDPA hasn’t been reauthorized in more than 10 years, despite the fact that this past decade has seen groundbreaking research on the most effective evidence-based methods to keep children out of the juvenile justice system, in school and on a path toward rehabilitation. The bill has overwhelming bipartisan support because it is based on what we as advocates, juvenile court judges, law enforcement, researchers, service providers and educators have learned about how to keep families together, and children and communities safe.
For more information, visit the JJIE Resource Hub
The JJDPA faces opposition from only one senator — Tom Cotton of Arkansas. Cotton’s concern lies in the bill’s elimination of the Valid Court Order (VCO) exception, a widely criticized provision that allows for children who commit status offenses to be incarcerated in juvenile facilities. It is difficult to understand why Sen. Cotton would be in favor of a policy that those of us who work with children and families every day, and whose role it is to protect the public, ensure justice for victims and rehabilitate children, so vehemently oppose.
Status offenders are youth who commit offenses that would not be crimes if they were adults — in other words, they commit acts that only kids can be punished for. The most common are truancy and running away.
They are nonviolent behaviors that pose no threat to public safety. Because these children pose no threat to public safety, the presumption is that they should not be committed. It makes little sense to incarcerate these children, who have committed no real crime, and place them in facilities alongside youth accused of more serious offenses.
More often than not, status offenders are our most vulnerable youth. They are girls running away from physical and sexual abuse in foster care, or forced to miss school because a trafficker is causing them to “work,” or children whose families do not have the financial resources to hire child care and who are asked to stay home from school to look after younger siblings. Girls are over-represented among youth detained for status offenses — they are 16 percent of the overall detained population, but almost 40 percent of youth detained for status offenses, most often for running away.
Research tells us that incarcerating status offenders is not only costly but ineffective. Detaining a truant child increases the likelihood that a child will be further disconnected from school and the community, and more likely to become involved in more serious, risky behavior.
Recognizing these facts, in Georgia Judge Steven Teske led the effort to reduce the use of detention for status offenders and to implement community-based supports that focused on the circumstances in the child’s life that were the root cause of the behavior. Consequently, he reduced his county's daily detention population by 86 percent, school-based arrests by 91 percent and juvenile commitments by 72 percent.
In New Mexico, Judge John Romero Jr., who presides over a gender-specific girls court, reflected that detaining girls for status offenses “traumatizes, demeans and affirms a young person’s belief that they are destined for the trash heap.”
[Related: States Consider Legislation to Raise the Age for Juvenile Court Into Young Adulthood]
In Texas, Judge Darlene Byrne presides in juvenile court where children are in foster care while involved in the juvenile justice system. She is constantly reminding herself “juvenile justice youth are victims of abuse and neglect and the thought of locking them up for safety-seeking behavior does much more harm than good, and should be stopped now.”
It was this type of judicial insight that prompted the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges to issue a resolution in 2010 calling for the elimination of the VCO exception. As Judge Teske and others make clear, the VCO exception has little to do with judicial discretion — it is simply an outdated policy that is “more harmful than helpful.”
Despite these facts, Sen. Cotton’s home state of Arkansas continues to detain status offenders — some as young as 8 and 9 years old. As a matter of fact, 50 percent of the youth incarcerated in Arkansas are there for status offenses. And shockingly, almost 90 percent of all youth in detention in Arkansas have been arrested for nonviolent offenses — most for a single, misdemeanor offense. The cost of incarcerating these children in secure facilities in Arkansas is roughly $70,000 per year per child. Clearly this is not a cost-effective solution to running away or skipping school.
But beyond effectiveness and cost, the reason to eliminate the VCO exception is a moral one.
The truth is that detention is not safe for children. And subjecting status offenders, who are often traumatized and abused children, to confinement is a particularly cruel fate. This is especially true in Arkansas.
Arkansas’ state juvenile justice practices are so out of step with the rest of the country that both the Bush administration and the Obama administration have launched official investigations into their state juvenile justice practices. In fact, a series of federal and state investigations over the years have revealed that youth in the state’s juvenile facilities were “routinely degraded; verbally, physically and sexually abused; hogtied; forced to sleep outside in freezing weather.” Facilities were reported to have “locked children naked in cells overnight after turning the air conditioning on high” and that staff in one facility “were drugging youths to control unruly behavior — in many cases without doctors’ orders, in violation of facility policy and against the children’s wills.”
To detain young children for innocuous, nonviolent behaviors and risk the harms that come with secure confinement is completely unjustified. Incarcerating vulnerable and often traumatized children reinforces the message that they receive from their abusers — that they are responsible for their own victimization, that no one will believe them if they seek help or try to escape and that they simply do not matter.
We must remember that the ultimate goal of the juvenile justice system is not to punish, but to rehabilitate. Today, armed with the latest data of what is proven to improve outcomes for our children, we can, and ought, to do better. It is what we owe to our children in Arkansas and to those all across the country.
Yasmin Vafa is co-founder and executive director of Rights4Girls, a human rights organization focused on gender-based violence against young women and girls in the U.S. She is a faculty adjunct educator and consultant for the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, a member of the Department of Justice’s National Task Force on the Use of Restraints with Pregnant Women and Girls under Correctional Custody and co-author of a seminal report mapping girls' unique pathways into the juvenile justice system, “The Sexual Abuse to Prison Pipeline: The Girls’ Story.”
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Working in the Juvenile System for the past 21 years, it is evident that FINS or Status Offenders are desensitized to being incarcerated after a period of time and it no longer serves as a deterrent to bad choices or behavior. Incarceration is of no consequence to a repeat Status Offender who crosses the legal line and becomes a delinquent. I have watched as many S/O cross that line and go directly to Division of Youth Services for long-term incarceration (treatment). Many of them return to DYS multiple times for violation of aftercare or for committing a new offense. Some have progressed to the adult side of incarceration, committing felonies of even violent types. Many of these children come from dysfunctional families or are being raised by aged grandparents who can no longer control them. Our facility has experienced having several children from the same families incarcerated, sometimes all at once. Parents are no longer being held responsible for these children and they are being pushed off onto society to be raised at tax-payer expense. Some of these parents use the juvenile system to their advantage for weekend baby sitters and having their child locked up when SSI checks come out so they don’t have to spend that money on the child. The courts, staff, and the whole system has no checks-and-balances as to the institutionalization of our youth. It can only end badly for everyone.
Superb article. It’s frustrating Sen. Cotton can’t accept fact, reason, or uphold the moral responsibility to support the reform.