Twenty-three-year-old Amber Graves was just five when her parents abandoned her and her one-year-old brother in the Bronx, New York. Graves and her brother spent years bouncing between homelessness and foster homes, with Graves also at times incarcerated for crimes she committed to help them get by. “My main priority wasn’t a dollhouse,” says Graves of the experience. “It wasn’t the race cars. No type of kid toys. It was making sure that my brother and I were safe and getting us out of this predicament.”
It has been estimated that 4.2 million youth between thirteen and twenty-five experienced homelessness during 2017, a significant increase over previous years. In an effort to find out just how many of these adolescents have had experience with law enforcement, the Family and Youth Services Bureau conducted a survey of 654 teens in 11 major cities across the U.S. Their findings were stark: eight out of every ten youths had at least one interaction with police in their lifetime, six in ten teens had been arrested at least once, and four in ten had spent time in a detention center, prison, or jail.
For homeless youth, avoiding interactions with law enforcement is an almost impossible endeavor. The daily reality of life on the street makes these types of interactions a given. As with non-homeless youth, status offenses lead to many of the homeless teen arrests and detainments every year, including truancy, curfew violations, and running away from home. Truancy is a significant problem for homeless youth, as finding reliable transportation to and from school each day can prove to be difficult. This can even hold true in major metropolitan areas with well-established public transportation systems, as homeless individuals often cannot afford to pay the fares. Curfew violations are difficult to avoid as well. With no stable location to stay every night, many homeless teens are forced to find a place outdoors to sleep. This reality can lead to other issues with law enforcement. If a young person is staying out in the open, they risk being cited for a curfew violation. If instead they try and find someplace more sheltered, they risk being cited for trespassing, even for something as simple as sleeping on a park bench past dusk. Another big contributor to youth homeless interactions with the police is survival crimes. Among the most common survival crimes is the shoplifting of food or other necessities, as well as stealing money with which to buy meals.
In recent years, homelessness within the U.S. has become an ever-increasingly complicated topic. In decades past, the homeless population was mostly comprised of single men, who were often black. The 2008 housing crisis, along with the recession that followed it, began an enormous shift in homelessness across the country. Shelters noticed a surge in the number of families looking to them for assistance, coming from a myriad of ethnicities and economic backgrounds. Many had lost their homes, and though some were still employed, finding affordable housing had become almost impossible. Not long after the housing crisis came the nationwide opioid epidemic. The two factors combined created an even bigger population of homeless youth.
The uptick in homeless families coming to shelters for assistance meant that shelters were operating at capacity most of the time and having to turn people away as their beds were filled each night. Young males most frequently encounter this issue, as shelters prioritize beds for small children and young females, at times not allowing any males over a certain age. “We see where boys have been put out so that the rest of the family can have a safe place to stay,” said Trish Hobson, executive director of the non-profit The Relatives, which serves homeless youth in North Carolina. Hobson says that it isn’t unusual for them to try and assist young males over fifteen that aren’t allowed in local shelters, only to find them sleeping in the organization’s doorway the following morning because they couldn’t find anywhere to stay.
Despite the ever-growing demand for resources to serve the homeless population, across the nation, programs that aim to assist youth who are on the streets are “incredibly underfunded,” according to Amy Louttit, a public policy associate at the National Network for Youth in Washington, D.C. “The runaway and homeless youth programs have not experienced the cuts in funding other federal programs have,” Louttit said. “[But] we’re still far under the authorized amount, which was $165 million under Obama. Congress hasn’t approved that amount yet but we’re at just over $120 million for the entire country. We’re incredibly underfunded.”
To fully address the issue of youth homelessness, we first need to fully understand the underlying issues that lead to it. From there, it is possible to determine what kind of aid to provide adolescents in order to meet their needs. Orbis Partners assesses and minimizes risk among vulnerable populations. Orbis’ risk assessment tools for adults and youth, including a special risk/needs assessment for women, are designed to guide the casework process by incorporating an individual’s unique set of needs. The Youth Assessment and Screening Instrument (YASI), an innovative juvenile risk assessment tool that measures risk, needs, and protective factors (strengths) in at-risk and juvenile justice-involved youth, can help professionals in many areas understand the numerous factors that cause teens to struggle, get into trouble, or offend, and determine areas of needs, such as intervention strategies. Through the casework process, professionals can help give youth resources and find suitable programs they need to succeed and to thrive in the future.
Orbis Partners provides solutions for criminal justice and human services systems, specializing in designing and implementing services for at-risk client groups. Orbis’ risk/needs and strengths assessment and case planning tools for youth are designed to guide the casework process by incorporating an individual’s unique set of needs. For more information about assessments related to at-risk youth, visit our Assessment page by clicking here.