RI KIDS COUNT: RI Juvenile Arrest Rate Down 56% since 1995

GoLocalProv News Team

RI KIDS COUNT: RI Juvenile Arrest Rate Down 56% since 1995

The Rhode Island juvenile arrest rate fell 56% between 1995 and 2011, and the total number of youth in the care and custody of the state's training school declined from 1,069 in 2004 to 498 in 2013, according to a new issue brief, "Juvenile Justice in RI," released Monday by RI KIDS COUNT. 

RI KIDS COUNT, the statewide children's policy organization focusing on improving the health, economic well-being, safety, and education of Rhode Island's children, organized a roundtable discussion Monday afternoon with KIDS COUNT Executive Director Elizabeth Burke Bryant, DCYF Director Janice DeFrances, and juvenile justice advocates, and community and state leaders to discuss the report's findings and best practices for improving youth outcomes and community safety.

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KidsCount coordinates the Annie E. Casey Foundation's Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative (JDAI) to "reduce inappropriate and unnecessary use of secure detention, reduce racial and ethnic disparities, and improve public safety. "

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"Rhode Island KIDS COUNT is proud to partner with the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the Family Court, the RI Department of Children, Youth, and Families, and other community agencies and service providers on the Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative," said Bryant.  "Through JDAI, Rhode Island is focusing attention on the key strategies that we know will decrease delinquency, promote healthy development, and prevent future involvement with the justice system."

In addition to statistics of juvenile crime rates in the state, the Issue Brief touches upon areas of focus including preventing juvenile justice system involvement, working with schools on juvenile justice, addressing detention reform, improving services for incarcerated youth, and improving cultural competence to reduce ethnic and racial disparities. 

Among its findings, KIDS COUNT found that minority youth are disproportionately more likely than white youth to be detained or sentenced to the Training school.  At the end of 2013, 37% of youth in the Training School were Hispanic and 26% were Black, while being 21% an 6% of Rhode Island's childhood population.

A full report can be found here at 3 PM Monday.

Editor's note: A previous headline had the crime rate down since 2005.  It is down sine 1995. 


14 Facts from 2014 RI Kids Count Factbook

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