The Commercial Appeal

Juvenile facilities in Neb. hit by violence, escapes

State reorganize­s homes in response to outbursts

- Grant Schulte ASSOCIATED PRESS

LINCOLN, Neb. – A sudden and puzzling increase in violence and escapes at Nebraska’s two state-run homes for high-risk juvenile offenders has prompted officials to move some of the teenagers to other facilities and to consider spending millions of dollars on upgrades intended to enhance safety.

The incidents at the Youth Rehabilita­tion and Treatment Centers in central Nebraska, including an outburst that sent two employees to the hospital after a group of boys beat them with pieces of a metal bed frame, has shocked state officials, legislator­s and parents.

“It’s dangerous,” said state Sen. Sara Howard, who has taken a leading watchdog role over the facilities. “The people who are there, they want to work with kids. But if it’s not safe to do it, why would you stay?”

The complaints about the youth facility call to mind problems Nebraska has had at its adult prisons, where four people have died in the past five years amid riots and other altercatio­ns.

But whereas the prison problems have been largely blamed on staffing shortages and training issues, there has been more confusion about the problems at the juvenile centers.

The Youth Rehabilita­tion and Treatment Centers were created to serve juveniles ages 14-18 who have broken the law and been rejected by other private treatment facilities.

There were two main campuses in central Nebraska – one in Kearney for boys and one in Geneva for girls – until last month, when state officials revamped the system in response to the recent outbursts. The new system uses Kearney as the main campus for processing boys and girls, and the Geneva campus will treat lower-risk girls in a less restrictiv­e environmen­t. A third campus in Lincoln will serve higherrisk boys and girls who don’t respond to treatment at Kearney.

Officials who oversee the facilities said the uptick has been driven partly by youths with a history of violence and who often suffer from severe behavioral and mental health problems. But some parents with children at the lockups said they are hampered by poor communicat­ion, a lack of rehabilita­tive programs and constant power struggles between staff members and the youth.

“It’s a mess,” said Prudence Waters, whose 17-year-old daughter is being held at the Kearney facility. “How is she supposed to succeed and get on the right path when there’s so much chaos every day?”

Tensions at a girls’ facility rose to a boil in August after girls broke sprinkler heads in a sleeping area. Other girls complained that the water-damaged rooms where they were supposed to sleep smelled of mold and mildew, leading to a confrontat­ion with staff members. Lawmakers who investigat­ed days later found fire hazards, holes in the wall and water damage in campus buildings. They also were told that many of the girls weren’t getting rehabilita­tive programmin­g to deal with their anger or the trauma they had experience­d.

The boys’ facility in Kearney has faced problems of its own, with at least 39 confirmed escapes this year, up from four in 2018. The number surged despite a 10-foot-high chain-link fence that officials installed in July. Some child advocacy groups criticized the fence, saying it would create a prison-like atmosphere instead of focusing on rehabilita­tion.

 ?? KAYLA WOLF/OMAHA WORLD-HERALD VIA AP ?? Homes for Nebraska’s high-risk juvenile offenders, including one in Kearney, are being reorganize­d.
KAYLA WOLF/OMAHA WORLD-HERALD VIA AP Homes for Nebraska’s high-risk juvenile offenders, including one in Kearney, are being reorganize­d.

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