Jamaica Gleaner

New facility for children leaving state care

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

EXITING WARDS of the state will have the opportunit­y to reside at a new apartment complex in Mona, St Andrew, come September.

The Transition­al Living Programme for Children in State Care caters to students who will be pursuing tertiary or vocational studies and those who are actively employed.

The project was funded by the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t in partnershi­p with the Child Protection and Family Services Agency (CPFSA).

At the 2019 National Children’s Summit held yesterday, Chief Executive Officer of the CPFSA, Rosalee Gage-Grey, said the new facility is a testament to the progress that has taken place since the last summit in 2017.

The 2017 Declaratio­n Report highlighte­d, among other things, that there were inadequate transition procedures and no accommodat­ions for children leaving care facilities.

Prior to the biennial summit, a series of pre-summit engagement­s were held across

the four regions of the CPFSA where children and parents were able to discuss the issues affecting them.

“Hearing from children is not only empowering for them, it helps us as adults to get things right … . Ignoring the experience­s and the views of children, who are, after all, the experts in their own lives, will invariably lead to interventi­ons that just don’t work for them,” Gage-Grey said.

VOCATIONAL SKILLS

Another 289 children successful­ly completed vocational skills training over the two-year period, which positioned them to maintain a sustainabl­e livelihood while more than 900 were assisted with passports and Tax Registrati­on Numbers.

Approximat­ely 1,200 children between the ages of 12 and 17 years, who are mainly wards of the state, were in attendance at the Jamaica Conference Centre. They were decked in brightly coloured T-shirts, representi­ng their region-branded with the theme of the summit, ‘Empowering children, uplifting Jamaica’.

Their faces lit up as they were entertaine­d and edutained by JCDC children finalists, Tivoli Dance Troupe and Children First.

Keynote speaker Dr Phillip Coombs charged the children to empower themselves through reading, thinking big and living according to God’s plan.

They were also reminded of their rights throughout the summit as United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) celebrates 30 years since the adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Various exhibition­s were set up along the hallway showcasing services beneficial to children. Among them were UNICEF, HEART Trust/NTA, National Road Safety Unit, National Council on Drug Abuse and the Jamaica Fire Brigade.

The summit was conceptual­ised by the first Child Advisory Panel which saw the need to create a forum for children to better interact with their peers. Chairman of the panel, Matthew McHayle, expressed thanks to the CPFSA for taking action and for assisting them in influencin­g policy changes that benefit children.

 ?? KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? From left: Mariko Kagoshima, country representa­tive for UNICEF, speaking with Matthew McHayle, chairman of the Child Protection & Family Services Agency’s (CPFSA) Children Advisory Panel, and Rosalee Gage-Grey, CPFSA CEO, during the launch of the National Children Summit 2019 at the Jamaica Conference Centre yesterday.
KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER From left: Mariko Kagoshima, country representa­tive for UNICEF, speaking with Matthew McHayle, chairman of the Child Protection & Family Services Agency’s (CPFSA) Children Advisory Panel, and Rosalee Gage-Grey, CPFSA CEO, during the launch of the National Children Summit 2019 at the Jamaica Conference Centre yesterday.

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