Close
the Doors of Youth Prisons
By Deborah Carlos
May 7,
2005
It's been
a long year of fear and worry since last Mother's Day. I spent
that day agonizing about my daughter. She's locked inside
the California Youth Authority, or CYA, one of the most dangerous
kid prisons in the nation. She's been there for a year and
a half. For a year and a half, I haven't slept through the
night, knowing that she isn't safe.
Two years
ago my daughter was jumped on the street and badly beaten.
She was terrified for her life. There was no help for her,
and she was never the same after the attack. Two months later
she got into a fight and really hurt her assailant.
As a parent,
I knew that I needed to get my daughter help. The juvenile
justice system promised rehabilitation and restoration
for my daughter and our community. But that's not what happened.
Instead, she was sent to the CYA.
And since
then, my daughter has changed. When she went in she was a
warm but confused girl of 17. Now she's a hardened young woman,
untrusting and fearful. And it's no wonder after all she's
been through in the CYA. I'm more scared than ever.
But change
is coming to the CYA. As news of the prison's abuse and violence
has made waves across the nation, the CYA is expected to release
its long-awaited reform plan later this month. As a mother,
I know those reforms can't come soon enough. That's because
while I've waited and worried, three young men have died in
the CYA and guards were caught on videotape viciously beating
prone young people. This kind of abuse isn't the exception.
It's the rule.
These
youth prisons are broken, plain and simple: The staff is apathetic
or abusive, the facilities are crumbling, and inside them,
a culture of fear, violence and alienation only grows stronger
by the year. Dressing them up is not going to work. Prettying
them is not going to make Californians safer or our kids healthier.
The only
thing that's going to work is closing these prisons down and
replacing them with real rehabilitation. Californians know
that. The governor knows that. The Legislature knows that.
The families of kids in the CYA sure know that. It's time
to shut down CYA prisons.
There
is a better way. How do you rehabilitate a young person in
trouble? Not with beatings. Not with sexual assault. Not with
solitary confinement for months at a time. That kind of treatment
just perpetuates the cycle of abuse. It means that nine out
of 10 kids get in trouble again after their release from the
CYA. Rehabilitation means holding kids accountable and giving
them an opportunity to turn their lives around.
And rehabilitation
just works better. It's less expensive, and it has a proven
track record. Some states have closed their kid prisons and
replaced them with small-scale rehab centers staffed by teachers
and counselors, not prison guards. In Missouri, which has
such a program, the recidivism rate is 25%. In California,
nine of 10 kids return.
This new
plan won't be worth the paper it's written on unless it closes
these brutal youth prisons and starts moving California forward.
California
can move out of the dark ages of juvenile justice. And I,
for one, won't give up until the last kid prison is closed
and Mother's Day can be a celebration for all families.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deborah
Carlos is a leader in Books Not Bars, the statewide campaign
to overhaul the California Youth Authority.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-vo-carlos7may07,0,7327870,print.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions
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