Highly recommended reading this morning:
It’s time for Maryland to treat kids as kids, Erika Strauss Chavarria, Guest Commentary, Baltimore Sun
Don’t have a subscription to the Sun? I don’t either. Do you have a library card? Follow the directions here to gain access via HCLS.
Chavarria, known locally as the founder and executive director of Columbia Community Care, makes the case for the Youth Charging Reform Act under consideration in Annapolis. It would eliminate automatic adult charging for children ages 14 and 15 and would also narrow the list of offenses triggering automatic adult charges for youth ages 16 and 17.
Ms. Chavarria’s experience and professional expertise as an educator informs her analysis.
Maryland ranks near the top nationally for its number of children incarcerated in adult facilities, an embarrassment for a so-called progressive state. Black children make up over 80% of the children held. This reflects a historical and fundamental societal disregard for Black children, particularly Black boys, as human beings — a society that does not extend to them the same presumption of childhood or worthiness of grace that is typically afforded to white children. Black children are seen as threats to be neutralized, not as children who make mistakes.
This is not some touchy-feely emotional response but rather one that comes from both first-hand knowledge and is aligned with current research.
I also learned that there is always a context, a backstory or an unmet need when harm occurs. Young people are navigating so many life challenges such as poverty, lack of holistic supports and lack of safe spaces, realities that shape the choices they make.
Her commentary reminds me yet of these words by the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu:
There comes a point where we need to stop just pulling people out of the river. We need to go upstream and find out why they’re falling in. - - Desmond Tutu
It is both disheartening and infuriating that attitudes towards juvenile incarceration are driven so often by racism.
Black children are seen as threats to be neutralized, not as children who make mistakes.

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