Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Missouri Family Support Division (FSD) is a state agency that provides child support services to: Custodial parents - parents who live with the children. Noncustodial parents - parents who do not live with the children. Custodians - relatives or non-relatives if the non-relative has legal custody or guardianship. Adult children - persons ...
He dismissed the board of the State Board for Training Schools, the juvenile correctional authority. [3] It closed in 1983. [5] Missouri Training School for Girls - Chillicothe. It opened in 1889, [3] and closed in 1981. [5] Missouri Training School for Negro Girls - Tipton - Opened in 1926, closed in 1956 and consolidated into the school in ...
There are 46 judicial circuits, each with various divisions, including associate circuit, small claims, municipal, family, probate, criminal, and juvenile. Each circuit covers at least one of Missouri's 114 counties and one independent city, St. Louis. [2]
The Jan. 17 assault of a Hickory Hills Middle School student sent a 14-year-old to the hospital and three classmates to juvenile court. 3 Springfield juveniles placed in state DYS custody after ...
A 2016 Juvenile Law Center report found that, in Indiana and at least 21 other states, families can “pay their way out” of juvenile justice system. Juvenile injustice: Low-income families pay ...
The National Runaway Safeline (also known as NRS or 1-800-RUNAWAY; formerly known as the National Runaway Switchboard) is the national communications system designated by the United States federal government for runaway and homeless youth, their parents and families, teens in crisis, and others who might benefit from its services.
Randi Jaffe said they are looking to reunite kids of all ages -- from babies and toddlers to teens -- with comfort items that are as close to their original item as possible.
In 1907 the JCC merged with the Juvenile Protection League, an organization devoted to preventing juvenile delinquency, and renamed itself the Juvenile Protective Association. [3] From 1907 until the 1940s, JPA engaged in many studies examining such subjects as racism, child labor and exploitation, drug abuse and prostitution in Chicago and ...