|
 
OHIO
State seeks to reduce youth prison recidivism
The state's juvenile prisons are trying to develop a
better way to prepare youths for life after their release because about
half are locked up again within three years. Providing the youths more
job training, help finding employment and mentors to offer advice are
among the planned changes at the Department of Youth Services, according
to a report released Monday.
Starting next week, the department will
recruit volunteers in towns and cities near each of its eight prisons to
provide tutoring and mentoring, said Christine Money, who oversaw
development of the plan at the agency. The new approach is partially a
reaction to problems the agency has in recent years, including abusive
guards and untrained social workers. Gov. Bob Taft fired the
department's longtime director in 2004.
Finding new ways to help the youths merge back into
society has been a priority for Director Thomas Strickrath since he took
the post a year ago. Social service agencies and nonprofit groups,
including religious groups, will administer the programs, Strickrath
said.
Some funding will come from a $1 million federal work force
investment grant. Many young people get into trouble again because they
go back to abusive homes or neighborhoods where their friends are gang
members, Strickrath said. Eventually, each of the 1,500 youths who are
released each year will have a mentor, he said. Any adult who passes a
background check can be a mentor or tutor, Money said.
Churches will be asked to send members, and university
students who are studying criminal justice will be encouraged to
participate, Money said. Parole officers can offer some counseling to
released inmates, but a mentor is also important since parole officers
can't always act as a cheerleader or a parent-like figure, said Donna
Hamparian, a Columbus resident who was a consultant in the 1990s to the
Department of Justice on juvenile justice issues. "The most effective
thing they can do, if they want to reduce recidivism, is provide good
aftercare," Hamparian said.
The report was the first time the agency has compiled
the recidivism rate for juvenile offenders. The state also found that 30
percent of paroled youths were back in prison within a year, according
the report that compiled data from 2002 through 2004.
The department
also plans to introduce a standardized, statewide form to help judges
decide whether a juvenile should be sent to prison, placed on probation
or sent to a day-treatment program. Until now, each of Ohio's 88
counties has had a different way of determining whether a youth should
be locked up.
AP
6 June 2006
http://www.wcpo.com/news/2006/local/06/05/oh_juv_prisons.html
home
/
Previous viewpoint |