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Cindy had flown into a rage and grabbed her mother by the hair. Medical records from various psychiatric hospitalizations and evaluations describe how she has overturned furniture, broken electrical equipment, thrown knives at her sister and threatened to break her neck, and cut her own wrists. Of the many diagnoses assigned to the teenager, two remain: post-traumatic stress disorder from physical violence she and her family suffered at the hands of her late father, and "mood disorder, not otherwise specified."
In Alameda County and about fourteen other US counties, attorneys have teamed up with judges, social workers, psychologists, psychiatrists, and families to offer treatment and services to minors with psychiatric problems who've broken the law. The idea is to get teenagers like Cindy out of the penal system and help them lead productive lives. Instead of watching kids get thrown out of school for behavior problems, advocates attempt to create environments that would enable them to stay in school. Rather than cycling through group homes, these kids get help so they can live with their families. Instead of simply handing out referrals for psychiatric help, mental-health court makes sure that teens actually attend their appointments. And rather than simply sentencing kids to jail for violating probation, mental-health court tries to address the problems that caused the violation.
In exchange, a team that includes the court's judge, probation officers, legal aid advocates, law students, the district attorney, and mental-health counselors help the family chart a path to recovery. The goal? For the family to survive together, and the child to remain in school.
Each family brings its own history to the table. But all arrived at a breaking point. And most of the plans designed to help them have been shaped and reshaped due to an ever-shifting landscape of family problems, a maze of eligibility requirements, and a new and imperfect understanding of how to identify and treat mental-health problems in children and teens.
"I learned that the hard way in family therapy when she screamed it at me," Judith said. "I warn others, too, that you can say relax, take a deep breath, but never use the words 'calm down.' We've also learned to respect each other more. I don't like her using God's name in vain. She does periodically and she says, 'I'm sorry.' That's just respecting each other more."
On the last day of 2008, juvenile detention at the Alameda County Juvenile Justice Center in San Leandro was more than half full. Some 255 minor teens had been locked up for breaking the law or violating probation. Some were in between placements in group homes. Some were there because their families could no longer handle them. Girls walked in single file down a long hall, their hands clasped together against their backs. Most looked down.
Before the Juvenile Collaborative Court began in January 2007, probation officer Kevin Day had few options for dealing with mentally ill teens, other than putting them into custody. Now he has other ways to get them help. Unlike regular probation, where kids who break the rules often end up in detention, the collaborative court team examines possible causes for the slipups. A tipping point for bad behavior could be an inappropriate school placement that the court members work on correcting. Or perhaps a change in diagnosis. Or different medication.
That net is what mental-health court tries to provide. For example, shortly after Cindy Crane was released from juvenile hall, her family was evicted from its ranch-style home after their landlord received a foreclosure notice. From the time Cindy was accepted into the mental-health court through the end of the year, Brian Blalock, an attorney with Bay Area Legal Aid who is the court's civil legal services coordinator, negotiated more time for the eviction and for move-out expenses. He also helped Cindy and her sister secure survivor benefits after their father died. And just after Cindy was released from detention, Blalock helped prevent her from losing a good school placement because of confrontations with her school therapist. "I advised the mom what her rights were as a parent to ask for another therapist," Blalock said.
That teens with mental-health problems have trouble in school is hardly surprising. But if they're not able to finish high school, the prospects for family unity become more tenuous. "One of the first things that happens is families get calls from school saying, 'Please come and pick up your child,'" said Darcy Gruttadaro, the director of the National Child and Adolescent Action Center of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill. "There's disruption in the work day, and also days where kids with serious mental-health needs don't want to go to school. Ultimately, the needs become so serious they realize they can't focus at work because the child needs them. We hear quite frequently that parents lose their job, divorce, families fall apart."
During that time, our family moved from the east coast to the mid west where there was a revolution going on. Girls were wearing boy's jeans, which actually fit. Of course, I begged and begged my parents to get me boy's jeans, and they finally, unwillingly, relented.
The Language You Cry In. California Newsreel. 1998. 53 mins.California Newsreel promotion pageTraces the history of a Mende burial song brought by slaves to the rice plantations of the Southeast coast of the United States over two hundred years ago, and preserved among the Gullah people there. In the 1930s a pioneering Black linguist, Lorenzo Turner, recognized its origin, and in the 1990s scholars Joe Opala and Cynthia Schmidt discovered that the song was still remembered in a remote village in Sierra Leone. Dramatically demonstrates how African Americans retained links with their African past, and concludes with the visit of the Gullah family which had preserved the song to the Mende village, where villagers re-enact the ancient burial rites for them.
Sin País (Without Country). New Day Films. 2010. 20 mins.New Day Films promotional pageWith intimate access and striking imagery, Sin País (Without Country) explores one family's experience as they are separated by deportation. Sam and Elida Mejia escaped a violent Civil War in Guatemala and came to California. After raising their family for nearly 20 years in the Bay Area, immigration agents stormed the Mejia's house in 2007. After a passionate fight to stay in the U.S., Sam and Elida are deported back to Guatemala, and leave their two teenage ch[i]ldren in the U.S. This short documentary explores the complexities of the Mejia's new reality: parents living without their children, and children doing their best to succeed without their parents.
Life on the Line: Coming of Age Between Nations. New Day Films. 2014. 27 mins.New Day Films promotional pageJust two years ago, the Torrez family looked a lot like many American families: Mexican-American with immigrant roots, multilingual and multicultural, working class with two kids in public schools getting a decent education, living in a mid-sized American city and weathering the economic downturn with any work the primary bread-winner could find. But in an instant, everything changed. After fourteen years of living undocumented in the U.S., Vanessa Torrez crossed into Mexico when visiting her dying mother, and as the only family member without U.S. citizenship, was not allowed to return to her family in the U.S. So the Torrez family left everything behind and moved to Nogales, Sonora, committed to remaining together. Now, while the family lives in a dilapidated public housing compound at a dangerous border crossing, Kimberly must cross the border daily on foot to go to school in the U.S. Meanwhile, her father, Rick, finds himself unemployed, stricken with Hepatitis C, and in dire need of a liver transplant. Vanessa travels to Juarez to obtain the visa that will allow her to live in the U.S. with her children if her husband dies. Told through the eyes of adolescent Kimberly over the year in which her family is forced to straddle two countries, Life on the Line offers an intimate story from a quintessentially American place, illuminating the changing face of America and the impact of our immigration policies through the story of one girl and her family. 041b061a72