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In the few days left before senators head back to their states, they should immediately pass the updated HEROES Act, not only because families need it to survive, but also because it could spare children engaged in the juvenile justice system damage to their health, education and mental wellbeing.
In The News
Nadia Mozaffar and Diane Smith Howard, Juvenile Justice Information Exchange •

The COVID-19 crisis has laid bare the very real and dangerous problems of educational inequity in this country — and it has exacerbated them. Nowhere is this more stark than in the experiences of youth in the juvenile justice system — youth already routinely ignored, disenfranchised and left behind.

In The News
Marsha Levick, Esq. and Riya Saha Shah, Esq. , The Pennsylvania Capital-Star •

As the U.S. Senate continues its mad dash to confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett for a life term on the United States Supreme Court, not one senator has questioned how youth might fare under this Court.

In The News
Lois M. Collins, Deseret News •

A new report found students in the juvenile justice system often don’t get credit for their school work and end up falling behind and in more trouble.

In The News
The Waiting Room with Nadine Graves •

In this episode Christina Sorenson, 2019 Soros Justice Fellow at the Juvenile Law Center shares how she has turned the pain from growing up in the foster care system into a passion for helping create space for youth caught up in the child welfare. She acknowledges that her experience was traumatizing, yet it was contrary to what Black youth, especially Black girls experience.

In The News
Katie Rose Quandt, In These Times •

Efrén Pare­des Jr.’s life out­side prison was over before he was old enough for a driver’s license.

In The News
Public News Service •
A new report puts some weight behind arguments that young adults should not be prosecuted in adult court in Illinois.
In The News
Bethany Ao, The Philadelphia Inquirer •

Steven “Speedy” Yates was separated from his mother when he was a 5½-year-old and placed into Philadelphia’s foster care system. The traumatic experience caused him to act out in anger and confusion, throwing frequent temper tantrums. At age 6, Yates was put on medication for his behavior, at the recommendation of a physician.