Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jun 2003 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Page: A13 Copyright: 2003 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Carol Rose Note: Carol Rose is executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts. Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) RACISM'S ROLE IN THE STATE'S JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM OUR FUTURE lies in our children, we must all be concerned about a recent ACLU report that illustrates how racism in the Massachusetts juvenile justice system is failing the most vulnerable of our society. The report notes, as the state has long acknowledged, that Massachusetts has a serious problem with over-representation of minority youth in its juvenile justice system. Simply put: Once arrested, African-American kids are imprisoned at far higher rates than white kids. Specifically, the report found that while black youth represent 23 percent of the Commonwealth's juvenile population and about a quarter of all youth arrested, they constitute 63 percent of all juveniles who are taken from their homes and locked up. These numbers suggest that institutional racism has infected the juvenile justice system. It is not a question of who gets arrested, but of what happens after an arrest is made. "White kids have more self-reporting of drug abuse than kids of color," says Joshua Dohan, director of Youth Advocacy of the Committee for Public Counsel Services. "But when kids from wealthier (often white) neighborhoods get in trouble, generally the police officer who is involved and the probation department look at the kids and say, 'Well, this kid could go to college, could be a doctor or lawyer. We might mess that up if we pull him out of home or school and give him a record.' When kids of color are involved, we tend to see only the bad behavior and how we need to punish him." The exercise of discretion that cuts against minority youth may lie at different places in the juvenile justice system. Consider the number of discretionary decisions that are made after an arrest: Officials must decide the nature and seriousness of the charge, whether the youth will be put on probation or held in detention, and the length and nature of the sentence. "One of the reasons that white kids have more potential is that we imagine it for them," says Dohan. "We need to do the same for our kids of color." Imagining a bright future is hard for the 3,300 children under commitment at any given time in the Massachusetts juvenile justice system. Most live in little prisons surrounded by barbed wire, in facilities that resemble locked dormitories. A lack of resources at the Department of Youth Services means that there are few hobby areas or outside spaces, so the kids spend endless hours watching television in a cafeteria. It's hard to imagine anyone - particularly an impressionable teenager - - who could envision a horizon beyond the criminal justice system from this vantage point. Not surprisingly, somewhere between 80-90 percent of kids in the juvenile system nationwide end up in the criminal justice system as adults. As a result, racial disparities persist into the adult system, as reflected in a recent Human Rights Watch report that found that blacks comprise only 5.4 percent of the Massachusetts population but constitute 26.3 percent of our adult prison population. Acknowledging the problem is a crucial - but only a first - step toward solving it. The ACLU report documents the Commonwealth's 10-year failure to address the problem of over-representation of minority youth in the juvenile justice system. It also provides specific proposals for the state to, at a minimum, comply with requirements of federal law. First, key state agencies - the Juvenile Justice Advisory Committee and the Executive Office of Public Safety - need to make the elimination of racial disparities a priority. Governor Romney's administration inherited this problem, but it is now the governor's responsibility to acknowledge the problem and commit to finding - and funding - a solution. Second, we need to keep track of our children. At this point, the Commonwealth doesn't even keep statistics on Latino youth in the juvenile justice system, and there is no centralized information system to track any of these kids from arrest to adjudication. We need to create indicators of our success and failure by collecting comparative race data on who is stopped, searched, and arrested. We also need to keep track of what happens to kids after they are arrested - who is confined and for how long, and who is allowed to return to their home and school? We need to know not only what is happening to our children in the system, but also why it is happening. Third, we need to attack the root causes of racial disparities in our justice system. All children deserve access to adequate legal counsel and educational alternatives to incarceration. The professionals at the Department of Youth Services are good at their jobs and generally know what works with these kids. What these professionals need are the educational resources to work with the teens who truly need to be in detention and an end to overcrowding of the system by kids who would be better served remaining at home and in school. It is time for Massachusetts leaders to acknowledge the pervasive racism in the juvenile justice system and to commit to working with all levels of law enforcement to change it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake