Kuwait Times

Free of court oversight, Ohio youth prisons look to future

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CIRCLEVILL­E: Guards at Ohio’s juvenile detention centers are now called youth specialist­s, and school uniforms are replacing prison garb during classes.

Free from court oversight for the first time in nearly a decade, Ohio’s youth prison system is adjusting to a long-term mission of housing and rehabilita­ting the state’s most troubled juvenile offenders. “What we’ve done in the past is treat the children who are incarcerat­ed like mini adults,” said Linda Janes, deputy director for the Department of Youth Services. “We know better now through research and through all kinds of evidence that that’s a mistake. Children have to be treated like children.”

States have been rethinking juvenile justice for several years as alternativ­es to a tough-on-crime approach that did little to rehabilita­te children. Arkansas, Hawaii, Kansas, South Dakota and West Virginia are among several states that adopted changes to juvenile justice approaches in the past five years, according to the National Conference on State Legislatur­es.

The Change

At Circlevill­e Juvenile Correction­al Facility, about 30 miles south of Columbus, gone are the days when youths walked a literal line down a hall with hands behind their backs, meant to instill discipline and discourage flashing of gang signals.

Today, they take classes in a high school that on the inside looks like most other schools in Ohio, with walls sporting colorful stripes and inspiratio­nal signs, such as “Hope is the new dope!” The boys help raise vegetables, including broccoli and tomatoes, in a greenhouse, as well as tilapia in a large plastic tank. The vegetables are donated to food banks while the popular table fish is used to help them develop their cooking skills. They use a machine to turn food waste into compost for the grounds.

“When you take the time out to actually find out who you are, it’s a whole new ball game,” said Tyrone, an 18-year-old inmate from Cincinnati who recently graduated from the high school at the Circlevill­e facility. He hopes to study business and law at Central State University once released. Because he originally was charged as a juvenile, The Associated Press agreed to identify him by his first name only. Tyrone, serving a four-year sentence for armed robbery, said the most important thing he has learned behind bars was also the hardest - the need for self-control and understand­ing that hitting first is not always the way to solve arguments. He credits a drum beat of encouragem­ent from staff for his turnaround. A 2004 lawsuit accused the Ohio youth agency of excessive use of force against children, providing inadequate education, medical and mental health care and failing to adequately train and supervise staff. That year, Ohio had seven juvenile detention centers that housed around 1,800 children. Last December, federal Judge Algenon Marbley ended the court-ordered oversight establishe­d in 2008 to settle the lawsuit. Today, the department has three facilities and four alternate placement sites and houses fewer than 500 children. It has no girls’ detention center and instead houses them in three of the alternate sites.

The outcomes

In Ohio and other states that have taken a new look at rehabilita­ting juveniles, many youths going through the criminal justice system now serve their time in local centers close to family and community support networks.

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