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December 2017

Stoughton 'no hit zone' looks to stop corporal punishment [channel3000.com]

STOUGHTON, Wis. - The city of Stoughton is training their staff to help end corporal punishment. The area is the first city in Dane County to become a "no hit zone." The policy passed City Council in 2016, however city staff just started training on the policy last week. The concept enables staff to offer help to parents in stressful situations, before they feel the need to use physical discipline. "We are not standing in judgement of anyone or anything like that. What we are saying is there...

She was sentenced to 30 years in prison after her baby died during childbirth: now her case goes back to trial in El Salvador [univision.com]

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — It’s been 10 years since Teodora del Carmen Vásquez lost consciousness in a bathroom at work when she was nine months pregnant and delivered a stillborn baby. After police accused her of killing her newborn, she was sentenced to 30 years in prison. A third of the way through her sentence, she passes the weeks and months at the Ilopango Women’s Prison reading books. “In the 10 years I’ve been here, I’ve probably read 500 books,” the 34-year-old Vásquez told...

What’s Christian in the Season of Trump? [themarshallproject.org]

At the small home gatherings that are a center of evangelical Christian life across the United States, the topics of discussion range from the previous Sunday’s sermon to the latest Christian spiritual help book, from marriage to addiction to the Bible’s diet guidance. Add to the list: mass incarceration. Prison Fellowship, the nonprofit prisoner advocacy group, has created “Outrageous Justice,” a small-group study guide intended to transform more evangelicals into political evangelists for...

Peace Rooms and Mindfulness: New School Discipline Philosophy One Year Later [peoriapublicradio.org]

School districts had a year to implement a state law that banned zero-tolerance policies and emphasized restorative justice practices. We check back in with five districts we visited in the summer of 2016 to see how school discipline has changed. On the second day of the school year, Amber Owens got the kind of jolt every parent dreads. She was called to the nurse’s office at Champaign’s Bottenfield Elementary, where she found her 7-year-old son, Simon, sobbing uncontrollably and bleeding...

Across the Great Divide [psmag.com]

The best revolutions end in topplings—of statues, regimes, and Weinsteins. Others prove to be more smoke than flame. While heady days of Occupy Wall Street are long over, the national conversation they ignited about economic inequality still smolders. Since protesters decamped from Zuccotti Park, Thomas Piketty has become a household name, a populist has claimed the presidency, and universal basic income has gone from fantastical subreddit to serious policy proposal. Among developed...

Busted toilets, peeling paint, sewage backups, lice: a peek inside juvenile lockups [centerforhealthjournalism.org]

This article and others in this series were produced as part of a project for the University of Southern California Center for Health Journalism’s National Fellowship, in conjunction with the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. On a Monday in early October, the top administrator at the Bradenton youth lockup issued a terse order to subordinates: “Do not flush.” Three days earlier, on Sept. 30, the Manatee Regional Juvenile Detention Center’s plumbing went haywire. While...

Homelessness in High-Cost U.S. Cities Is Driving a Nationwide Increase [citylab.com]

On a single night in January 2017, 553,742 were homeless across the U.S. For the first time in seven years, this number has grown. In the past year, the nation has seen a one-percent increase in the nation’s homeless population. That’s 3,814 more homeless people since January 2016. On Wednesday, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development released its 2017 Annual Homeless Assessment Report —the report to Congress that analyzes the results of a nationwide point-in-time estimate,...

Health Risks To Farmworkers Increase As Workforce Ages [khn.org]

That bag of frozen cauliflower sitting inside your freezer likely sprang to life in a vast field north of Salinas, Calif. A crew of men and women here use a machine to drop seedlings into the black soil. Another group follows behind, stooped over, tapping each new plant. It is backbreaking, repetitive work. Ten-hour days start in the cold, dark mornings and end in the searing afternoon heat. More than 90 percent of California’s crop workers were born in Mexico. But in recent years, fewer...

Nothing Protects Black Women From Dying in Pregnancy and Childbirth [propublica.org]

This story was co-published with NPR. On a melancholy Saturday this past February, Shalon Irving’s “village” — the friends and family she had assembled to support her as a single mother — gathered at a funeral home in a prosperous black neighborhood in southwest Atlanta to say goodbye and send her home. The afternoon light was gray but bright, flooding through tall arched windows and pouring past white columns, illuminating the flag that covered her casket. Sprays of callas and roses dotted...

What Native Americans Stand to Lose if Trump Opens Up Public Lands for Business [psmag.com]

On Monday, in the largest reduction of federal land protections in United States history, President Donald Trump signed proclamations slashing the area of two national monuments in Utah. That same day, with just minutes to spare before midnight on the East Coast, the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition —a first-of-its-kind alliance between the Hopi, Ute Mountain Ute, Ute Indian, Zuni, and Navajo Nation tribes—filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, claiming that the president's...

Documentary, "Portraits of Professional CAREgivers" Airing on Public Television

CAREgivers film will be airing on most public television stations around the US beginning this month in Philadelphia, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Orlando, Cleveland, Spokane, Boise, Springfield-Holyoke, Youngstown, Idaho Falls, Twin Falls, Fairbanks, ETC. Please check your local public TV stations for future dates and times. Broadcast times will also be posted in advance whenever possible at: http://caregiversfilm.com/screenings/see-the-film/ This documentary addresses secondary trauma (aka...

Bringing trauma-informed care to children in need can ease toxic stress [statnews.com]

During my 22 years as a pediatrician in an urban area, I have seen the worst of what America’s children must sometimes endure. Severe medical illness in children is thankfully rare. But severe adversity in homes and communities is all too common and causes toxic stress that has long-term consequences for my patients and future generations. A 6-year-old patient of mine called 911 on the third day that she and her younger siblings couldn’t wake their intoxicated mother. We cared for their...

How Architects Can Design 'Coherent and Peaceful Cities' [citylab.com]

Three years ago, demonstrators in Burkina Faso set fire to the National Assembly in Ouagadougou. The Burkinabé uprising led to the ouster of the country’s longtime president Blaise Compaoré followed by a short-lived military takeover. Today, Burkina Faso is rebuilding. Diébédo Francis Kéré designed the next National Assembly building to reflect the reality of life in Ouagadougou. The design by the Berlin-based architect (and Burkina Faso native) is open and transparent, a pyramid whose...

The Preventable Problem That Schools Ignore [theatlantic.com]

Nearly 1.5 million high-school students in the U.S. are physically abused by dating partners every year. More than one-third of 10th-graders (35 percent) have been physically or verbally abused by dating partners, while a similar percentage are perpetrators of such abuse. Youth from low-income backgrounds, those from marginalized racial and ethnic groups, and LGBTQ students are at the greatest risk of experiencing such harm. The consequences are devastating. Data from the Centers for Disease...

Learn to Build a Trauma-Informed System: 2-Day Intensive

"There is no blueprint for rolling out trauma-informed practices; however, Emily's use of a systems approach to educate those of us working to create our own blueprints is exactly what's needed. The way in which Emily conducts her workshops promotes collaboration of ideas no matter your educational background or current title. You leave feeling inspired and empowered to move this revolution forward!" - Dawn Daum, HERE this NOW workshop participant, co-manager of ACES Connection Building...

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