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Interrupting the "School to Prison Pipeline"

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Monday, November 25, 2013   

MANCHESTER, Conn. - A few years ago, Manchester High School had one of the highest arrest rates in Connecticut. After a single incident in 2010 in which 19 pupils were arrested, concerned youth workers pulled together a broad spectrum of individuals to address the problem in the community, from top school officials to religious leaders to the police chief.

Just one of the solutions they devised is the School Safety Review Board, according to school social worker Heidi Macchi.

"It focuses on students with chronic behavioral issues - referrals, suspensions, arrests - and we bring these children forward, with their parents, so there's a parent-engagement piece as well, to look at what are underlining factors and how can we as a community, as a collaboration, support them."

In the first year post-intervention, arrests were down 78 percent, from 138 to 30.

Erica Bromley, director of the Manchester Youth Service Bureau, who pulled the collaborators together, said it's important to be aware of problems that can pop up elsewhere.

"If you reduce your arrests, you have to be very careful to not balloon in other areas, and that sometimes it's easy to just say we're not going to arrest anybody, and then you see the repercussions of that elsewhere," she cautioned. "So we definitely tried to keep our eye on suspensions, in school and out of school, and expulsions."

Bromley admitted that in-school suspensions did go up, but said out-of-school suspensions and expulsions went down significantly, post-intervention.

She added that the Wilderness School in northwest Connecticut has been a great resource.

"We use that as an intervention for kids who may be struggling," she said. "We've been able to create some specialized programs that are just for Manchester kids."

And Heidi Macchi added that a program kids can volunteer to participate in during detention, called Play by the Rules, encourages them to think about their behavior.




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