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The New York Times, N. Confessore, December 14, 2009 New York's system of juvenile prisons is broken, with young people battling mental illness or addiction held alongside violent offenders in abysmal facilities where they receive little counseling, can be physically abused and rarely get even a basic education, according to a report by a state panel. |
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Child Welfare Watch, Center for New York City Affairs, Volume 18, Fall 2009 Edited by Andrew White, Clara Hemphill and Kendra Hurley Coming in the wake of a federal Department of Justice investigation that found widespread use of excessive force by staff at four OCFS facilities upstate, the Fall 2009 issue of Child Welfare Watch identifies shortcomings in mental health services and explores possible solutions, including the expansion of alternatives to incarceration for juvenile delinquents. |
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Inside the Budget, NYC Independent Budget Office, July 11, 2006 Each year the city sends roughly 1,200 juvenile lawbreakers to jail-like facilities in upstate New York. At an average annual cost to the city totaling well over $100 million, some of the youth are placed in institutions run by the state's Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS) and others go to privately operated facilities under contract with OCFS. But two new programs with an alternative approach are now saving the city considerable expense and may prove to be more effective at rehabilitation than the institutional approach. |
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Daily News, E. Einhorn, June 26, 2007 They were smart children who tested into a gifted kindergarten at Harlem's Public School 36 in 1994, but Lance Patterson and Ronnie Rodriguez would each fall in with the wrong crowd. |
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City Limits, B. Pierson, July 17, 2006 Study shows two programs for juvenile lawbreakers reduce city's payments to state. |
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