A Fresh Start for young offenders
Transcription
A Fresh Start for young offenders
aaffrreesshhstsartat rt g un yo r fo n u o foofrfenydersg offenders When young people offend, we want to help them face up to it, make amends, and get their lives on track so that they can be sorted, safe and strong: sorted ted sorsafe safe strong strong by learning from mistakes and gaining new skills by making good choices with a great future ahead. Contact Child, Youth and Family at 0508 FAMILY (0508 326 459) www.cyf.govt.nz FRESH START “It’s a big challenge to try and turn lives around, but these young people deserve another chance in life.” social worker Young people who commit offences should be held to account, but they also need the right support and interventions to address their offending behaviour and turn their lives around. Fresh Start builds on work we are already doing in the youth justice sector, enabling more effective approaches to addressing youth offending. By expanding and extending the range of youth justice interventions, we can work more intensively, and over a sustained period of time, to help young people get their lives on track. Every child or young person who comes to our attention will require a unique response. Fresh Start places a greater focus on identifying and addressing the underlying causes of the young person’s offending behaviour. By managing young people on the basis of their risk to the community and themselves, and what needs to be done to reduce that risk, we can better target resources. outcomes: The road to better outcomes lies in building on the gains that have been made, evolving the things that work, and building and supporting stronger and more responsive services. We will know we are making a difference when we impact on these key outcomes for children and young people and their communities: 1 2 The community is safer 3 Young people’s behaviour, attitudes and values are improved The right service is provided to the young person, and their family, at the right time. A Fresh Start for young offenders our priorities 1 we will respond to community needs and expectations We want communities to feel safe, and confident that we are responding appropriately to youth offending. We also want to empower communities to develop their own solutions and early intervention options to address the needs of at risk children and young people. We will: • ensure responses and interventions are appropriate to the level of risk posed by the young person, and that those at higher risk are appropriately supervised during the course of their intervention • partner up with key community agencies to deliver services and programmes to young people who offend in their communities • engage with our communities, so that we are aware of all the service options available to support young people • encourage communities to deliver their own solutions to local youth offending problems • work with our iwi and Mäori providers in the development of solutions for Mäori children and young people. 2 WE WILL strengthen family group conference decision making The FGC is the most important process in youth justice. By strengthening practice around engagement, information gathering, assessment and analysis, prior to the FGC, we can enable participants at the conference to make more informed decisions, and develop more appropriate responses for the child or young person. We will: • give FGC participants full information about risks, needs, strengths and options, so that families can make informed decisions • screen young people to identify alcohol and drug misuse, mental health issues, risk of suicide, and health and education needs • assess the strengths, risks and needs of young people, and identify their level of offending related risks • ensure the family group conference involves all the right people, including family members, victims, and professionals • inform the family group conference and the Court of the identified risks and needs, and appropriate intervention options available. 3 WE WILL actively manage the family group conference plans It’s important that the FGC plan is supported and closely monitored, to make sure that everything agreed is actioned and working well. We also need to ensure the plan is reviewed and evaluated to determine whether the desired outcomes for the young person, the victim, and the community have been achieved. We will: • give each task a completion date, and check things get done • stay connected with the young person, to monitor any changes in their situation, attitudes and behaviour • measure outcomes through reassessment at various points of the young person’s journey. 4 WE WILL team up to achieve In everything we do, we will work as one team to effectively meet the needs of each young person, reduce re-offending rates, and ensure the community is kept safe. We will: • work with our colleagues in sites and residences, to ensure a joined up approach with young people • specifically include care and protection for dual status cases • link up with Work and Income to ensure young people are connected with training and employment opportunities • work with health and education to ensure assessments and screenings are completed for children, and high-risk young people • work closely with iwi and pacific providers, to ensure the cultural needs of our young people are met. team up 5 WE WILL help create a bigger, better, brighter future for each young person To ensure a bright future for each young person, we must acknowledge the child or young person’s strengths, and identify ways to build their self-esteem and pro-social attitudes and behaviours. We will ensure: • children and young people are encouraged and helped to participate in decision making, to help them ‘own’ the plan • the underlying causes of the child or young person’s behaviour are identified and addressed in an individualised way • each family group conference considers whether the young person should attend a parenting, mentoring or alcohol/drug programmes • children and young people have safe living environments, and that the FGC considers whether parents or caregivers should attend a parenting programme • plans focus on engaging the child or young person in purposeful activity, education, training or employment. 6 WE WILL make sure victims are engaged and supported in the FGC process We want victims of youth crime to feel safe, supported and to have their say. Having victims attend the family group conference helps both the victim come to terms with how the crime affected them, and helps the young person to face up to what they’ve done. We will respect the interests and views of victims by: • ensuring every victim is invited to attend a family group conference • giving victims other options to have their views heard if they can’t attend, for example someone else attending on their behalf or writing a letter • keeping victims informed about the young person’s progress • ensuring reparation payments agreed in the plan are kept on track • seeking victims feedback, to ensure that our services are effective, supportive and meet their needs. > “Young people need the opportunity to succeed. So many times when you get to know them, you hear stories of how they’ve always been told they’re ‘useless’. They need someone to build them up, help them find their potential and show them there are opportunities out there for them.” social worker CYF145 Aug 10
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