Julie Ellen McConnell: What role do your students take in running programs such as the PASS docket program?
Bon Aire Atlantic Video:
In this video, juveniles are viewed as teenagers who need rehabilitation rather than punishment. Although the facility gives juveniles the opportunity to reflect and change their behavior there are many flaws with the facility/program itself. The first being that the building is outdated and for the most part feels just like a prison. Leaders of the JDC are looking to renovate and move the facilities closer the juveniles home town rather than far away. The far distance from home creates another program for juveniles as well as their parents. If centers were closer to home, parents would be able to more frequently participate in workshops and constructing new relationships with their children. Juveniles take a far different perspective than others may assume. They are aware of their harsher environments growing up but believe there are too high of expectations for them to behave when brought up in reckless childhoods. They believe they’re not as well understood but are thankful for the opportunity to have a second chance and connect with their families.
Conversation Article:
I’ve taken on a new perspective on juvenile convictions. It does seem ridiculous to sentence the youth to life in prison when their decision making isn’t fully developed. As the saying goes, “Time heals all wounds.” Through rehabilitation services and a mixture of jail time, juvenilles will have a better chance of behaving in the future. Of course the seriousness of the crime plays a crucial role in jail time because being a 17 year old and having 4 years apart from an adult shouldn’t excuse you from serving justice. For many juvenile cases however, the lack of rehabilitation services is not ideal and should be provided for prisoners despite how long they are sentenced in jail.