The National Juvenile Justice Network has released a new policy platform document on Youth Reentry/Aftercare – providing policy makers and advocates some basic guidelines and ideas to work toward when youth are placed in residential or correctional facilities. One of the things we do know about almost all youth who are placed in a facility is that they will be coming back to the community. Even in the best of worlds where the facility programs are well-run, in which youth learn new useful skills, and youth are motivated to make positive changes, making that transition back successfully will not just happen. Like other platforms from NJJN, this one covers the basics of what can be a pretty complex component – but, the bottom line is that we need to spend as much, if not more, time and resources on reentry as we do on placement. Check it out!
Tell Congress: No cuts to Medicaid
As the President’s Executive Order threw the country into chaos earlier this week, temporarily freezing federal funds, we all got a sense of just how catastrophic not having Medicaid could be. One in Three Children As the nation’s largest health insurer, Medicaid...