Chicago Sun-Times

Youth offer public policy suggestion­s to city leaders through Mikva Challenge

- BY NICHOLE SHAW, STAFF REPORTER nshaw@suntimes.com | @nicholeksh­aw

Chicago youth offered their own public policy recommenda­tions to some of the city’s most influentia­l decision makers during a virtual town hall Wednesday.

Children and teenagers wrapped up a sixweek course through the civic organizati­on Mikva Challenge by presenting proposals on health, education, juvenile justice, public safety and more.

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e, Chicago Public Health Commission­er Dr. Allison Arwady and Chicago police independen­t monitor Maggie Hickey were among the officials who backed some of the recommenda­tions from seventh through twelfth graders in the program.

The kids’ feedback centered on school curriculum, an independen­t audit of the controvers­ial gunshot detection technology ShotSpotte­r and an expansion of restorativ­e justice court.

The Juvenile Justice Council under Mikva addressed suggested a minimum age of 14 for detainment, in addition to alternativ­es to juvenile detention.

“We talk a lot about what happens to youth after they get out of the detention,” said Octavio Montesdeoc­a, a UIC student who took part. “It’s a band-aid on a bullet wound. We need to provide resources before they get into the juvenile system to avoid trauma. We need to be providing community-based alternativ­es earlier to mitigate people being incarcerat­ed.”

Mikva Challenge is a national education organizati­on that aims to help youth better understand social and political issues. Kids in the program worked over the summer on citywide and neighborho­od youth councils to identify issues affecting their communitie­s.

“Anyone here that I’ve worked with before — youth and adults — knows that [Mikva] was a great way to keep us Black and Brown guys off the street and keep us occupied with something good, to keep our minds occupied in something positive,” said Emmanuel Hernandez, a Whitney Young High School student.

Their other approved recommenda­tions included improving transparen­cy in changes to the Chicago Public Schools student code of conduct; bolstering public informatio­n campaigns on COVID-19 vaccinatio­n, suicide prevention and sexual health education; and introducin­g a mini-curriculum with lessons related to police reform efforts.

Mikva Challenge CEO Verneé Green said “active youth voice and participat­ion are essential to creating a more equitable city during a time when we have been faced with unpreceden­ted challenges throughout a pandemic, with social unrest and numerous other unforeseen issues.”

The organizati­on will hold more programmin­g based on the student recommenda­tions in the fall.

 ??  ?? Mikva Challenge citywide youth council members meet with experts and city officials to help inform their policy recommenda­tions. In July, students met with Sen. Robert Peters (D-13th), pictured in the middle of the top row.
Mikva Challenge citywide youth council members meet with experts and city officials to help inform their policy recommenda­tions. In July, students met with Sen. Robert Peters (D-13th), pictured in the middle of the top row.

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