Pubdate: Wed, 06 Sep 2006 Source: Hattiesburg American (MS) Copyright: 2006 Hattiesburg American Contact: http://www.hattiesburgamerican.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.hattiesburgamerican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1646 Author: Rachel Leifer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) FORREST CO. GETS YOUTH DRUG COURT Young drug offenders will have new resources to overcome abuse problems and avoid further contact with the justice system with the advent of a Forrest County Youth Drug Court. Youth Court Judge Michael McPhail on Tuesday told the Forrest County Board of Supervisors the court received a $300,000 grant from Hattiesburg's Asbury Foundation. The grant, distributed over two years, will provide seed money for the juvenile drug court that is expected to open Jan. 1. "We try to keep children from further penetrating the justice system," McPhail said. "This will help give them resources to stem alcohol and drug abuse." The Forrest County Youth Drug Court would join only a handful of such programs in the state. Judges supervising the programs have touted their success in keeping young offenders from embarking on the path to long-term criminal activity, said State Drug Court Coordinator Joey Craft. "We're hearing you get the most bang for the buck when you're dealing with juveniles," Craft said. "Better to deal with them when they're abusers rather than addicts." Youth Drug Courts are operating in Adams, Madison and DeSoto counties, and others are planned for Rankin, Leflore and Pike counties, Craft said. Young offenders with substance abuse problems currently face probation and periodic drug tests, Youth Court prosecutor Pamela Castle said. But the Youth Drug Court will provide more intensive supervision and treatment. "A child on probation is monitored, but this will increase that monitoring and step up (an offender's) accountability before the bench," she said. McPhail and Castle said they hope the Youth Drug Court will start with a case capacity of about 40 participants, and could eventually grow to as many as 100. The Asbury Foundation grant allows the court to hire a coordinator, after which state funds can be sought as the program grows. Youth Drug Court is designed to encourage family involvement in children's lives and offer troubled kids opportunities for positive reinforcement when they make progress while enforcing sanctions for their setbacks. "Unlike the adult system, a lot of kids find themselves in certain situations because their parents need assistance," Castle said. Counselors and court personnel will be able to provide adult family members with tools and advice to better supervise and discipline their children. Participants are expected to receive individual, group and family counseling and small incentives like movie tickets, snacks and family portraits for staying clean. "You have to reward them and acknowledge their progress," McPhail said. "With kids, the spotlight effect is a big thing - they want to be recognized and to stand out, and it may be that so far they have stood out for all the wrong reasons." Among the Youth Drug Court's most important contributions could be its impact on petty crimes committed by young people in search of drug money, McPhail said. "With these juveniles committing house burglaries, they're not trying to be violent - they may just be trying to get the penny jar in your house to get money to buy more drugs," he said. McPhail said he does not like to think of Youth Drug Court as furnishing "second chances." "I call this a court of opportunity," McPhail said. "A lot of these kids are tired of the way they feel, tired of being on the lowest rungs. Some of them are just saying, 'Look at me, pay attention to me, ask me questions and show concern about my life.'" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake