On Page 120 of the Judith Jones 2021 report into abuse at children’s homes, there is a subheading that states: “There are inadequate transitioning plans in place.”
That section goes on to say that oftentimes, on becoming 18 years of age, residents who by law must leave the homes become either homeless or get pregnant soon after.
In one eye-opening case, it was found that in the now defunct Margaret Kistow Home, “multiple male residents resided at the personal residence of the Assistant Chief Executive Officer upon attaining the age of 18 while others were placed on the staff listing at the Home without any formal training or experience.”
The Division of Gender and Child Affairs said it was very aware of those challenges and for that reason has launched a Transition Support Programme.
Speaking at the orientation yesterday, Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister Ayanna Webster-Roy told the audience which comprised mostly residents from children’s homes, that this programme is geared towards improving their quality of life when they leave the facilities.
“It’s so important in this time, besides the academics, to get a skill. One thing I can tell you, once you have a skill, you always have the opportunity to eat,” Webster-Roy told the crowd made up mostly of residents from at least five children’s homes.
The pilot project will focus on barbering, cooking, photography and radio and television broadcasting. This will be in addition to their secondary school education.
“Don’t ever lose the essence of who you are, despite the circumstances, despite whatever may be thrown at you,” Webster-Roy advised.
She said that this pilot programme was just the beginning, and they anticipate the standardisation of their capacity-building mechanisms, so all wards will receive training and mentorship.
Manager of the St Jude’s School for Girls, Deoraj Sookdeo, at yesterday’s orientation session for the Transition Support Programme at the Office of the Prime Minister.
KARLA RAMOO
While the manager of the St Jude’s School for Girls is grateful the State is preparing children for life after the homes, he believes more can be done. Deoraj Sookdeo, who has 65 girls in a currently unlicensed facility, said age 18 is still too young to say goodbye to the girls.
“If they’re in an educational programme they sometimes don’t get to complete it because they have to go home because of the system and there’s no continuity, so we need sometimes to keep them in a structured environment with support for completion of more of these programs so maybe 21 might be pretty much more appropriate for girls at these institutions,” Sookdeo said.
He expressed concern that often he saw girls leaving at 18, knowing they were going into a toxic family environment.
“We’re seeing them having one baby, two, sometimes at 21 they have three kids, and the cycle repeats itself,” he said.
Sookdeo, whose St Jude’s facility was described on Monday as being 70 per cent ready for its licence, was asked what is holding them back from full compliance.
“It’s primarily physical infrastructure that’s our major issue. We would have had all the relevant other documentation submitted, there are some challenges with the age of the building, so they need to do some remedial work. St Jude’s has been there since 1809, so a lot of the things are archaic and not in keeping with the new legislation,” he explained.
On Monday, Permanent Secretary for the Division of Gender and Child Affairs Vijay Gangapersad said that last week Port-of-Spain’s city engineer visited the Belmont facility, and they are awaiting an assessment of the structural integrity of the building.
Sookdeo is hoping the State goes the way of getting them an entirely new location.
“I personally, this is Deoraj Sookdeo speaking, I want a new facility, I will lobby for that,” he said.
Infrastructure aside, Sookdeo was asked what was done to remedy the issues relating to abuse highlighted in the 2021 report, including the need for staff with special skills and training to manage the behavioural needs of the girls and to offer support.
In a series of Guardian Media reports last year, staff members said they were afraid of the violent residents as they were not trained to deal with them.
Sookdeo said that currently there was one psychologist and four social workers on staff. He is hoping to add one more psychologist and a few more social workers. The Office of the Prime Minister is also recreating a training programme to help residents cope with their anger.