Last year, approximately one in three children in state custody remained in foster care for more than a year, according to a new report by the Tennessee Commission on Children and Youth.
Communications and Policy Specialist with the Commission Kylie Graves said bouncing from home to home can further traumatize a child already experiencing disruption from being taken away from their parents.
“And then,” said Graves, “being placed in three other spots over the course of a year – that’s three more times that you’re having to learn a new home, learn a new family, potentially siblings, potentially a new school.”
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Graves also pointed to reducing the school-to-prison pipeline as a factor in improving Tennessee kids’ safety and success.
The Commission’s Executive Director Richard Kennedy said the state should be investing in evidence-based, cost-effective and safe alternatives to youth incarceration.
“And I think that it’s kind of a clear road map,” said Kennedy, “to really look at trying to expand and increase those community programs, those safe alternatives to youth incarceration. “
According to the report, it cost Tennessee taxpayers around $180,000 a year to detain a single child in a secure facility.
