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The first state library for incarcerated youth will open at Echo Glen Children’s Center next month.
Felice Upton, the Assistant Secretary for Juvenile Rehabilitation, says at any given time the state has about 450 youth at its facilities.
"We have two secure facilities, eight partial confinements as well as parole services for the state of Washington,” said Upton.
Echo Glen Children's Center, the juvenile detention center in Snoqualmie, is where Upton has been on a mission because of something she learned at her previous job with the state's Department of Corrections.
"I watched the transformations that were able to happen through having a library,” said Upton who added that the library at the women's prison was unlocking protentional in people.
When Upton arrived at Echo Glen Children’s Center, she says the same services were not available.
"There's no human in the library and there's nobody to connect with kids and teach them that they can find and lose themselves in a book,” Upton said.
Upton reached out to Institutional Library Services (ILS), which agreed that there was a need for a full-time, experienced librarian to be on campus.
A partnership between the Department of Children, Youth and Families, the Secretary of State’s Office, and Washington State Library, ILS is why the first state library for incarcerated youth is about to open.
“We have some federal resources from the Institute of Museums and Library Services that helped us make this happen, both with materials but really primarily with the staff person,” said Sara Jones, the Washington State Librarian.
“We did get a really good substantial state funding in the last legislative session,” Jones added. "This investment here and the resources that we're putting into this and hopefully the outcomes that we will see will be able to show that that kind of investment really matters."
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https://www.king5.com/article/news/local/first-state-library-incarcerated-youth-open-next-month/281-fccd9dd0-d8fb-474b-a109-5ff5536948c2