Juvenile Hall Becomes a Place of Learning and Healing for Youth
 oung people who have been incarcerated often have learning disabilities,
communication deficiencies and mental health problems that prohibit them from leading
healthy, nonviolent lives upon release from prison. Many of these youth lack positive role
models and, without the proper direction, often return to familiar lives of crime, drugs
and gang affiliation after emancipation.
Although crime rates are dropping, violence is still a serious public health problem
among youth in California. TCWF provided a two-year, $100,000 grant to Pacific News
Service (PNS) to offer violence prevention activities to incarcerated youth to help them
live healthier lives, both as detainees and upon their release.
  PNS produces a weekly, 38-page newsletter, The Beat Within, which
is written by 450 incarcerated youth and has a circulation of 1,400. The publication
provides an opportunity for the youth to express themselves in constructive ways, have a
voice in the public forum and build communication skills that can contribute to their
success once they return to community life. Those that receive the newsletter include
judges, probation officers, teachers, counselors, print and broadcast media and family
members.
"There is an enormous need and hunger for these children to connect through
communication," said Sandy Close, executive director of PCN. "Seventy percent of
the 2 million prisoners in America today are functionally illiterate. When you help
enhance these youths communication skills, youre in essence giving them the
most important tool to survive in society."
PNS also conducts weekly, hour-long workshops that unite professional writers and
former detained juveniles with incarcerated youth to help improve reading and writing
skills. At each workshop, the young people express their personal experiences through
essays, poetry, letters, short stories and art, which are profiled in the newsletter.
Currently, 26 writing workshops are offered each week at five county juvenile detention
facilities in Northern California.
"This program offers a unique tool for violence prevention by building
communication skills, providing civic engagement opportunities and making rehabilitation
for incarcerated youth a much more effective, healthy process," said Tawnya Lewis,
TCWF program officer. "Skills such as writing, self-expression and listening are
essential to living a healthy, meaningful life, both when young people are incarcerated
and after they have been released."
On April 29, PNS held its first "Expo of Youth Communicators" at the Youth
Guidance Center, which is San Franciscos juvenile hall. Civic arts and community
organizationssuch as the San Francisco Opera, the San Francisco Ballet, the American
Conservatory Theatre, jazz artists, skateboarding clubs, muralists and
librariansparticipated in the Expo alongside detained youth who showcased their
skills through choral singing, rapping, skits, dancing, speech, art and poetry. Many of
these groups were visiting juvenile hall for the first time.
"The Expo gave the community a new sense of whats possible working with
incarcerated youth," Close said. "And it gave the Youth Guidance Center the
ability to position itself as a place of learning for the youth rather than just a
detention facility."
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