Chicago Sun-Times

ASHOWOF SUPPORT

Initiative seeks to interrupt prison pipeline, help kids of incarcerat­ed parents

- MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA mihejirika@ suntimes. com | @ maudlynei

Ask those fighting intractabl­e violence in some South andWest Side Chicago neighborho­ods, and they’ll tell you. With resources— education, jobs, mentoring or trauma counseling— youth can transcend any dysfunctio­n.

It’s what activists like the Rev. Michael Pfleger, whose decades- long crusade against violence led to the weekend shutdown of the Dan Ryan, have long hammered.

Two women launching a new volley in that crusade are saying that as well.

But while naysayersm­ight argue with solutions demanded by others, there’s no arguing with Liz Dozier, former principal of Fenger High School, and Nneka Jones Tapia, former executive director of the Cook County Department of Correction­s, who have walked the path of the youth they are now targeting and climbed to profession­al peaks.

“Our primary focus is on children with incarcerat­ed parents. That comes from my personal experience, as well as what I saw day in and day out at that jail,” Jones Tapia said.

The clinical psychologi­st was recently selected to head the inaugural “Leadership Venture” program of Dozier’s two- year- old organizati­on, Chicago Beyond. It involves research and implementa­tion of best practices supporting mental health of children of the incarcerat­ed.

Statistica­lly, some 2.7 million children nationally are separated from parents in prison, with one in nine African- American children separated from incarcerat­ed parents, vs. one in 17 white children.

“The demand is so great,” said Jones Tapia, who as a child was separated from a father who did several prison stints for drugs.

“Those numbers are just the prison population. A lot of work is being done in prisons, but little is being done in jails. We don’t really know how many children are impacted by jail incarcerat­ion.”

Jones Tapia, who was warden at Cook County Jail until resigning in March for field work, is charged over the next 18 months with investigat­ing the programs and capacity of organizati­ons serving such youth, to help expand successful models and develop new ones to fill unmet need.

“It’s essentiall­y a fellowship on steroids,” said Dozier, who left the Chicago Public Schools in 2015 to lead the organizati­on supported by private investors, which funds organizati­ons focused on youth education and safety, then partnerswi­th them to help them grow.

“Our Leadership Venture is an opportunit­y for an incredible leader to have not just monetary resources but the full resources of Chicago Beyond behind them, to work on a problem that hasn’t gotten a lot of attention,” she said.

Chicago Beyond has invested $ 30 million in 12 community groups to date, partnering with the University of Chicago Urban Labs and other research organizati­ons to measure impact, and share and expand best practices.

The Leadership Venture will now also fund the youth work of innovative individual­s.

This first project is personal. Until the age of 5, Dozier too was separated from a father in prison, and drug addiction would take him out of her life again at age 13.

“My first memory of him is driving down with my mom to Joliet on weekends to see him. It wasn’t until he was released that I got to experience what it was like to have two parents in the home. Before that, I thought everybody visited a family member in prison on weekends,” she said.

“But I had my mom, my grandmothe­r and my uncle, who provided this like wraparound support,” added the educator who was thrust into the national spotlight in 2009 with the fatal beating of 16- year- old Derrion Albert outside Fenger, a video that went viral and brought the city and its school district internatio­nal notoriety.

But it also brought a four- year federal grant that helped the new, young principal turn the school around — the dropout rate going from 19 percent to 2 percent, and the graduation rate from 30 percent to 80 percent— in her six- year tenure.

“A lot of my students had parents who were incarcerat­ed, but not every child had that family support. I saw firsthand the sense of loss that can be coupled with depression, sense of shame. There’s all these things that can be residuals,” she said.

“Without those supports, we start to see our young people go into these cycles, which makes what we’re doing so critical and imperative,” Dozier added.

And it’s those cycles that feed the schooltopr­ison pipeline, said Jones Tapia, who spent 11 ½ years in the county correction­s division. Sheriff Tom Dart drew national attention in appointing her warden in 2015, underscori­ng his complaint the jail had become “the largest mental hospital in the country.”

“The very people Liz was helping in their younger years, I saw matriculat­ing into the criminal justice system,” Jones Tapia said.

“Any time we separate children from families, it’s traumatic to say the least. So building a strong support system for those youth is critically important, as is maintainin­g an ongoing bond with the incarcerat­ed parent,” she said.

“While my father was incarcerat­ed, my mother had to work two and three jobs. But I had the support of that village, and thankfully, my mom made sure we maintained that connection with my dad. With those two things, you can overcome many obstacles. So today, we’re saying to those youth, ‘ You’re not alone. Many people want to see you succeed. We’re here. And we’re coming.’ ”

 ?? MAXHERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Nneka Jones Tapia and Liz Dozier of Chicago Beyond on July 5.
MAXHERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Nneka Jones Tapia and Liz Dozier of Chicago Beyond on July 5.
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