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Report: Kentucky is Locking Up Fewer Kids

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013   

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Mirroring a national trend, the percentage of Kentucky youths who are being locked up after getting in trouble with the law is steadily declining.

A report released today by the Annie E. Casey Foundation shows that Kentucky is below the national average for youth incarceration. Child advocate Tara Grieshop-Goodwin, chief policy officer with Kentucky Youth Advocates, said work remains to be done on what she called "striking the right balance." About 3.8 percent of young people in detention in Kentucky are there because of violent offenses, she said.

"Which means that as a state, we are locking up children who don't pose a threat to community safety," she said. "We need to continue to look for solutions to find other ways of intervening."

In 2010, the Casey Foundation report shows, Kentucky incarcerated 186 young people out of 100,000 - down 21 percent from 1997. The national average has dropped to 225 youths per 100,000 - still above Kentucky's rate, which is the 18th lowest in the nation.

The report shows the 35-year low in youth incarceration has not led to a surge in crime. Instead, it says juvenile crime has fallen sharply.

Laura Speer, the Casey Foundation's associate director of policy and research, said locking up youths is counterproductive because, nationwide, three-fourths of them were jailed for nonviolent offenses.

"They have a chance to get their lives back on track, she said, and so we want to make sure they get put in the best possible program to get them back on track."

Grieshop-Goodwin said the state needs a greater focus on upfront services, especially for status offenders - youths who are runaways or skip school.

"Often, the most effective thing we can do is to look at that child as a child in need of services and provide those services to them," she said. "What we find is that when kids are incarcerated for small offenses, we might be pushing them down a path, actually, to more serious crimes later."

Another potential change, she said, could be how the state handles children as young as 5 and 6 who commit offenses. The idea, she said, is to move them outside the court system into community-based services that are heavy on family counseling.

The report, “Reducing Youth Incarceration in the United States,” is online at aecf.org.


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