Right TRAC helps young offenders in Wayne County make better choices

Right TRAC helps young offenders in Wayne County make better choices
The 2018 Youth Summit at Black Family Development in Detroit, which is a partner in the new Right TRAC program for young offenders in Wayne County. — http://www.blackfamilydevelopment.org/
0Comments

A Wayne County program has given young offenders the opportunity for a clean slate. 

The Right TRAC (Taking Responsibility and Accepting Consequences) program is designed for Wayne County youths who have committed low-level offenses like truancy and disturbance of the peace, WXYZ Detroit reported. The program allows young offenders to complete a 90-day course on decision making and responsibility with a counselor at Black Family Development in Detroit. 

At the end of a successfully completed program, the court has the option to dismiss the case. Approximately 70-80 percent of the children that enroll in the program complete it successfully, and Black Family Development CEO Alice Thompson says the main goal is to give the children hope and joy. 

Dealing with wayward children is different from rehabilitating adult criminals because of their unrealized mental development, Wayne County Juvenile and Youth Services Director Dr. Shennetta Coleman said in an interview with WXYZ. 

“Because the mind is not fully developed, you have an opportunity to really help, mold, offer up other options and other positions,” Coleman said. “Sometimes kids just need additional support, that’s it.”

The hope behind the Right TRAC program is that by removing children from the juvenile justice system and rehabilitating non-violent and low-level-offense behavior, these children will be on a better track to learn decision-making, responsibility and other life skills. But hope for the future is one of the main things these children need.

“We help them create broader visions for themselves in this world, see themselves as being successful, and you can do it, but it first comes from discipline,” Thompson said. “It comes from education and right decisions.”



Related

Dr. Mehmet Oz CMS Administrator

Dearborn Medicaid spending on alcohol and drug treatment rises 6.1% in 2024

Medicaid payments for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment services in Dearborn increased by 6.1% in 2024, highlighting shifts in both usage and reimbursement trends.

Dr. Mehmet Oz CMS Administrator

Alcohol and drug abuse treatment tops Garden City Medicaid spending at $20.6 million in 2024

Medicaid allocations for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment grew by 0.9% in Garden City in 2024, reflecting adjustments in service use and payment structures.

Dr. Mehmet Oz CMS Administrator

Medicaid payments for Medicine Services and Procedures in Inkster rose to $1,775,975 in 2024

Inkster’s Medicaid providers billed $1,775,975 for Medicine Services and Procedures in 2024, representing a 4.3% increase from the prior year.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Western Wayne Today.