Pubdate: Fri, 23 Feb 2007 Source: South Bend Tribune (IN) Copyright: 2007 South Bend Tribune Contact: http://www.southbendtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/621 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) THE INS AND OUTS OF JUVENILE JAIL During 2006, the St. Joseph County Juvenile Justice Center housed 3,798 children. That was some 500 more than in 2005. The change, according to JJC officials, reflects an increase in property crime and offenses against people committed by juveniles. The numbers could cause one to believe that incarceration, along with the threat of incarceration, isn't necessarily an effective deterrent to juvenile crime. Putting kids in jail doesn't seem to reduce the number of kids who are put in jail. The concern of Mishawaka Police Cpl. Mark Fedder, a resource officer at Mishawaka High School, is understandable, nevertheless. Fedder expressed his frustration in a Feb. 18 report by Tribune Staff Writer Alicia Gallegos about a policy change at the JJC. Detention at the JJC no longer is assured when a student is caught with marijuana. The cases are referred to the prosecutor's office where they're handled as they were in the past. But the process no longer begins with a "scared straight" ride to the JJC, unless a history of offenses or some other factor raises the level of the crime's seriousness. Fedder believes the policy change costs him and fellow resource officers some of their effectiveness. It might. But JJC administrators have to consider the facility's overall effectiveness, too, as well as the effectiveness of non-detention options. Besides, they have little choice but to prioritize the offenses that lead to detention. The facility may not exceed its allowable capacity -- something that has happened in the past and resulted to early release of some young offenders. The JJC has data to show that other ways of addressing juvenile offenders might be more fitting in many cases: - -The Juvenile Electronic Monitoring Program, which increases supervision, has a successful completion rate above 85 percent. - -The Juvenile Day Reporting Program aims to help medium- and high-risk young people manage their anger and solve problems without resorting to violence. Its rate of success is 75 percent and higher. - -The Youth Justice Project is a collaboration between the court and the Robinson Center. It has a 69 percent success rate in guiding kids away from serious trouble. - -Families are part of the equation in the High Impact Program, which combines intense supervision by a probation officer with home-based family therapy. Few juveniles who have gone through the program have reoffended. Anyone who has ever raised a child (or been one) knows that fear of getting in trouble can be a strong incentive to do the right thing. So we understand why school resource officers think a frightening night at the JCC is just the thing to get a get a youngster to focus on the consequences of his actions. But overall success in crime prevention and juvenile rehabilitation are what matter most. That means developing and using programs that work. It also means keeping kids out of the JCC when there are effective alternatives. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman