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Alaska covers fewer kids with public insurance vs. 2019; Judge Cannon indefinitely postpones Trump's classified docs trial; Federal initiative empowers communities with career creation; Ohio teacher salaries haven't kept pace with inflation.

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Former Speaker Paul Ryan weighs in on the 2024 Presidential election. President Biden condemns anti-semitism. And the House calls more college and university presidents to testify on handling pro-Palestine protests.

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Fewer Young People Ending Up in Jail

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013   

VERMILLION, S.D. - A new report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation shows a major change in the number of young people behind bars - but in South Dakota it's a different story.

The rate of youth confinement dropped by 41 percent nationally from 1995 to 2010, the report said, from 381 per 100,000 youths to 225 per 100,000. In South Dakota, however, the rate of incarceration increased during that time frame.

Carole Cochran, director of South Dakota Kids Count, said a judicial reform bill passed by the Legislature this year may help reverse the trend.

"With the initiative and the law that passed in this recent legislative session, signed by the governor to look at prisons and populations, this would be a good time to look at juvenile justice issues and juvenile incarceration rates," she said.

The report said improving public safety and youth development demand more effective interventions that correctional facilities can provide.

Laura Speer, associate director of policy and research at the Casey Foundation, said it's obvious that locking up youths doesn't work - which is why rates have declined nationally.

"We've gotten to where we are," she said, "because the research is pretty clear that incarcerating young people, especially those that don't pose a demonstrable public-safety risk, is not a smart thing to do. It doesn't work."

About three-quarters of young people incarcerated in the United States are there for nonviolent offenses, according to the report.

"They have a chance to get their lives back on track," Speer said, "and so we want to make sure they get put in the best possible program to get them back on track."

Cochran said many of the issues her group sees with children often stem from family problems, and many of those youngsters get locked up on nonviolent charges.

"If you are talking about primarily children in need of supervision, or status offenses meaning that it is curfew, they're truant or they're a runaway, I'm not clear that is something you want to lock kids up for," she said.

The report, “Reducing Youth Incarceration in the United States,” is online at aecf.org.


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