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Arkansas Study: Rehabilitation Better Than Prison for Non-violent Youthful Offenders


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Updated: 2/01 1:01 pm Published: 2/01 12:57 pm
A new Arkansas study finds that locking up non-violent youthful offenders is costly and ineffective.

That's according to Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families.

The group says its research finds that using community-based alternatives to incarceration – like education, job training, drug treatment, and rehabilitation programs – saves the state $41,786 per youth and reduces their chances of ending up back in the juvenile justice system.

The report, “Serving Non-violent Youthful Offenders in Their Communities: The Costs and Benefits of a More Effective Juvenile Justice System in Arkansas,” looked at Arkansas data on non-violent youthful offenders to determine the costs and benefits of placing youth in secure confinement and alternatives to incarceration. In addition to reducing the state’s cost per youth, using community alternatives reduced crime and led to an increase of $171,245 in earnings over the lifetime of the youth. This produces a total cost benefit of more than $200,000.

Most youthful offenders do not pose a serious threat to public safety and do not need to be confined. Using secure confinement to lock up youth who do not pose a serious threat is a waste of taxpayers’ money and diminishes the likelihood of rehabilitation and a brighter future for young offenders. The state spends $29.5 million annually for confining youth committed to the custody of the Department of Human Services Division of Youth Services (DHS DYS). The recidivism rate for kids in Arkansas’s secure juvenile facilities is 46.5 percent.

AACF Senior Policy Analyst Paul Kelly authored the report. He says 80 percent of youth incarcerated at Arkansas correctional facilities from 2009 to 2013 were deemed to be a low or moderate risk to public safety.

“There is ample evidence that using secure confinement for low- or moderate-risk youthful offenders is not cost-effective and it’s not achieving the results desired when you compare it to proven-effective community alternatives,” Kelly says. “Arkansas has already shown its capacity to reduce secure confinement of low-risk offenders, save money, and reinvest the savings in more effective programs. But we can achieve even greater cost savings and improve the outcomes for rehabilitated youth.”

According to the report, overall commitments, commitments for misdemeanor convictions, and length of stay for secure confinement have all been reduced in the past three years. This was achieved by making better use of local community-based programs to serve low- and moderate-risk offenders as an alternative to incarceration.
“Using community-based programs as an alternative to locking these kids up is really a win, win,” Kelly says. “It saves the state money, it reduces the chances that these kids will end up back in the system, and it gives them a shot at a better future.”

Click here to read the full six-page report.
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The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of FOX16 - Breaking News and Weather to Plan Your Day for Little Rock and Central Arkansas

ArkansasYankee - 2/2/2013 4:08 PM
0 Votes
Gotta go with pat on this one. I don't believe this horse hockey.

pat72209 - 2/2/2013 10:29 AM
2 Votes
Went back and read some more. THIS WUNNNERFUL REPORT states in the first Q AND A of the actual report that in FY2012,486 youths were incarcerated. NOW, Little Rock would have that many calls on UNRULY kids in 4 months. IF THEY CAN'T EVEN GET THEIR NUMBERS RIGHT...comeon...how ACCURATE IS THE REPORT...I say it is B.S. from some "group" that is dreaming.

pat72209 - 2/2/2013 10:20 AM
1 Vote
Before I read the comments....IMO this is ridiculous. The police get numerous calls daily from parents whose 13 yr. olds are assaulting them or each other. THOSE KIDS ARE NOT GOING TO BE REHABILITATED NOT TO ACT OUT. They have to be punished....that's what is wrong with them now is too much FREEDOM and NO SELF DISCIPLINE. Incarcerate them and work on raising them properly. Now to see what y'all think.

jwLonokeCo - 2/1/2013 3:26 PM
2 Votes
wow - maybe PARENTING could reduce the number of the offenders even more....

wpsark - 2/1/2013 3:09 PM
1 Vote
duh...I wonder how much that stupid study cost tax payers? They want to criminalize kids and throw them in juvie for doing stupid things that kids just do. And maybe they should stop throwing kids in jail for school yard fist fights too.

itsmenotyou - 2/1/2013 2:23 PM
2 Votes
Ya think Arkansas welcome to the 21st century. You did a great job your only 1520 years behind 90% of the country. Maybe somebody in Mississippi will read this and they will get on board. GEEZZZZZZZZZZZ
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