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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 ...
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 ...
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.
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 ...
Sources, including former students, have told The Star that calls were made to Missouri’s child abuse and neglect hotline in the past 15 years. The state is investigating whether “our team ...
"Not only for the people who abuse children in the camps and juvenile halls, but also the entities that continue to allow this happen." Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter.
In 1982, Childhelp started the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline, 1-800-4-A-CHILD (1-800-422-4453). The hotline, staffed 24 hours a day, 365 days a year by professional crisis counselors has received over two million calls since its inception. The hotline receives calls from children at risk for abuse, parents or guardians looking for ...
Judges throughout the state began demanding that Pahokee be closed. During a July 1999 hearing, Palm Beach County Juvenile Judge Ron Alvarez warned that keeping the facility open without improvements courted disaster. “Treatment of these children comes dangerously close to being inhumane,” the judge said. “We’re dealing with human beings.