Pubdate: Fri, 13 Aug 2004 Source: Daily World, The (LA) Copyright: South Louisiana Publishing 2004 Contact: http://www.dailyworld.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1740 Author: Alain de la Villesbret Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) OFFICIALS DISCUSS BENEFITS OF ESTABLISHING JUVENILE DRUG COURT St. Landry Parish officials met Wednesday in the drug court office on Bellevue Street in Opelousas to discuss establishing a juvenile drug court for the parish. "The success we see in the adult drug court, we can carry that to the juvenile drug court," said Judge Jimmy Genovese, who is the chief justice of the 27th Judicial District Court. "That is important. The juvenile offenders who are not addressed today become the adult offenders of tomorrow." Each month, one of the four district court judges oversees drug court, which is funded by the Louisiana State Supreme Court. The responsibility rotates simultaneously with the responsibility of handling criminal cases for the court. However, as the chief justice, Genovese has administrative responsibility for the adult drug court. Drug court was established in Feb. 2002, and has been praised by St. Landry Parish District Attorney Earl Taylor, the four judges and members of law enforcement and the criminal justice system. Drug court is an 18-month-long program that involves treatment, counseling and drug testing. "It is a day-to-day, in-your-face kind of thing, and it is working. That person sees a judge every single week. We have had two graduating classes in the last two and a half years. We have a lot of success with it. It's a really touching, emotional thing when they graduate," Genovese said Wednesday. Pam Bollich is the adult drug court coordinator. She called the meeting to share ideas about establishing a juvenile drug court, which she says she hopes to create in coordination with the effort by parish government to build a juvenile detention center. A significant contributor to the meeting was Sonya Barbier, the coordinator for the 15th Judicial District drug court. She had a hand in establishing two drug courts, the one she currently presides over in Lafayette Parish and one for the 16th Judicial District Court in Iberia Parish. Bollich, Barbier, Genovese and drug court officials shared ideas with state Sen. Donald Cravins, D-Arnaudville. They talked about the need to address the juvenile drug problem, how the problem affects education, how to proceed for funding and how to coordinate their effort with other agencies and government entities, including the parish's developing juvenile detention center. "I think we have a need for a detention center if it is a comprehensive center that addresses more than the issue of incarceration," Cravins said. "It has to be a community-based program that deals with treatment and education so we can go beyond that need for incarceration. This meeting is a great step forward, but nothing happens overnight. Just as the adult drug court took a lot of planning and work, this will as well. But, thanks to these people involved, the mechanism already is in place." A detention center, Cravins and Genovese agreed, must be a temporary detention with treatment and education opportunities and a regimented schedule. Part of the problem with juvenile discipline is that the kids are opting out of the system by deliberately behaving badly to be expelled from school. "That's what they want, they want to run the streets or do nothing, to escape the regiment of the school system. These kids then fall off the edge of the earth," Genovese said. Barbier agreed with Cravins and said the center would be the perfect place to assess the juveniles and perhaps steer them toward more productive and responsible lives. She said the drug court and the detention center should have more stringent discipline so that going to it is not an opportunity to do nothing. "You have to have a regimented formula to address the overall problem," Cravins said. Cravins said about 10 percent of students in public schools have some kind of disciplinary issue. In St. Landry Parish, that translates into between 1,000 and 1,500 children who are starting trouble in school. "It is creating havoc in the classroom, causing problems for those kids who want to learn," Cravins said. "One of the most fundamental parts of that discussion is that the St. Landry School Board needs to really get serious and address this whole issue of an alternative school for this parish. Until that is resolved, the discussion of community based program for juveniles or even a drug court for juveniles is almost moot. Because we need to find a way for those kids who are disruptive. We need a real alternative program that addresses the real problems so that when they go back to the regular school system they are ready to behave and learn," Cravins said. Bollich said the preliminary meeting was a positive one. "There are a lot of people who need to be involved, including parents. It takes a village. Now that we have the adult drug court established, we think we can put both programs under the same roof and address the juvenile drug problem in our parish," Bollich said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh