Faulkner
Member
I recently attended a briefing in a county quorum court meeting regarding a grant application from the American Rescue Plan funds that were distributed to our county from the U.S. Treasury. The grant applicant was a non-profit organization with the mission of assisting teenage juveniles who were in trouble with the law but didn't necessarily need to be locked up in the county juvenile detention.
I found the discussion very interesting that was led by a circuit judge who is assigned the juvenile court docket and was advocating for the non profit organization. With statistics in hand the judge said that truancy from school post COVID was up over 300% and he was adamant that one of the worst actions taken during COVID was to send kids home and close the schools. Again, with statistics that he presented, suicide rates among teens during the school closings along with increased drug and alcohol use FAR outweighed the potential hazards of COVID in youths. He advised that not only in our jurisdiction is there a silent epidemic of mental health issues resulting from the response to COVID and that additional jail and prison space was not the venue to address these issues.
There were a number of school teachers and administrators who also spoke of how damaging closing the schools during COVID was to the students and families, and how the negative impact is far outweighing the perceived risks, which turned out to be significantly less in school age children than the rhetoric during COVID.
I'm not advocating pulling the scab off of the many COVID debates, but I think there is enough post COVID evidence to indicate some things that we suspected did not work indeed did not work and in many cases have lasting unintended consequences. The judge indicated that the "we gotta do something" mentality in response to COVID in too many instances was counter productive.
Although COVID itself may be diminishing, the long term social, economic, and mental impact is with us for some time to come. I hope we can learn from it.
I found the discussion very interesting that was led by a circuit judge who is assigned the juvenile court docket and was advocating for the non profit organization. With statistics in hand the judge said that truancy from school post COVID was up over 300% and he was adamant that one of the worst actions taken during COVID was to send kids home and close the schools. Again, with statistics that he presented, suicide rates among teens during the school closings along with increased drug and alcohol use FAR outweighed the potential hazards of COVID in youths. He advised that not only in our jurisdiction is there a silent epidemic of mental health issues resulting from the response to COVID and that additional jail and prison space was not the venue to address these issues.
There were a number of school teachers and administrators who also spoke of how damaging closing the schools during COVID was to the students and families, and how the negative impact is far outweighing the perceived risks, which turned out to be significantly less in school age children than the rhetoric during COVID.
I'm not advocating pulling the scab off of the many COVID debates, but I think there is enough post COVID evidence to indicate some things that we suspected did not work indeed did not work and in many cases have lasting unintended consequences. The judge indicated that the "we gotta do something" mentality in response to COVID in too many instances was counter productive.
Although COVID itself may be diminishing, the long term social, economic, and mental impact is with us for some time to come. I hope we can learn from it.