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REPORT
Ontario youth call for end to violence
Dozens of young people from across Ontario are calling for an end to
youth violence with a study released Monday that finds abuse to be
widespread and on the rise. The report, organized by Ontario's Office of
Child and Family Service Advocacy and the group Voices for Children, was
based on the stories of 80 young people who spoke about their
experiences with school bullying, domestic assault, street violence and
attacks within institutions. Its 21-year-old author, Stephanie Ma, said
society treats youth as second-class citizens and denies them
opportunities to contribute to their communities. “More often than not,
authorities and adults feel the need to talk at us, rather than with
us,” said Ma, who was placed into the care of Toronto's Children's Aid
Society at age 12. “It feels hopeless because no matter where we are,
whether it is in school or when we are looking for housing, we are
negatively typecast.” Ma said young people have few places to turn when
they are physically and emotionally attacked in schools, foster homes,
group homes and detention centres.
The report made seven recommendations, including a
call for tighter screening on those who work with youth, the involvement
of young people in all levels of decision-making and lowering the voting
age to 16. Judy Finlay, chief advocate of the Office of Child and Family
Service Advocacy, said society must do more than just examine the root
causes of violence, but acknowledge it is widespread, talk openly about
it and engage kids in the remedies. She said violence against youth
deserves to have the same wide acknowledgement of issues once below the
radar such as drunk driving, sexual abuse and domestic assault. “We as a
province need to acknowledge the level and the depth of violence,” said
Finlay. “As adults, we have to begin believing young people and taking
their voice at face value and engaging them and doing something fairly
dramatic about it.” Finlay said she would like to see government,
institutions and schools include young people on committees and boards
when they discuss issues concerning violence.
The paper is the result of round-table discussions
that brought together 80 young people, aged 13 to 24, from regions
across Ontario including Kenora, London, Manitoulin Island, Ottawa,
Thunder Bay and Toronto.
Cassandra Szklarski 15 November 2004
http://www.canada.com/reddeer/story.html?id=d0d889ab-cbb5-4bb1-907b-25f31e327473
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