King County is building a new youth detention center in Seattle.
There is a group of people who want the building stopped. They've filed a lawsuit. They've chained themselves to the construction site fence.
Attorney and activist @NikkitaOliver is part of that group. #KUOWrecord
-
Show this thread
-
Oliver says building a new $233M detention center flies in the face of our zero detention goal, when the current facility could be remodeled for $1M.
1 reply 4 retweets 13 likesShow this thread -
KUOW Public Radio Retweeted KUOW Public Radio
Aside:
@kcexec was on#KUOWrecord yesterday discussing this issue.https://twitter.com/KUOW/status/986319159205117952 …KUOW Public Radio added,
1 reply 1 retweet 0 likesShow this thread -
Nikkita Oliver cont'd: No one has said we need to close down the old facility. We're saying that building a new facility is investing $233M in a system we know doesn't work. A zero-detention county requires a public health approach.
1 reply 3 retweets 7 likesShow this thread -
Oliver: When Angela Davis was here she said in her keynote speech: If you build it, you will fill it.
1 reply 1 retweet 7 likesShow this thread -
Oliver: The county has written in its own report that the old youth detention facility can be useable. Our county is huge. We need to dislocate services from jails and courts and put them in young people's communities
1 reply 1 retweet 6 likesShow this thread -
Oliver: If we're willing to spend $233M on a new facility for the old method of punitive justice in Dr. Martin Luther King County, then we need to ask ourselves what we'll spend on restorative justice. King said there's no time like the present to do the right thing.
1 reply 9 retweets 12 likesShow this thread -
Oliver: We have to start moving resources into community-based resources. Every city in King County doesn't have same needs. What's going to stop young people from committing crimes or acts of violence? Stronger communities.
2 replies 5 retweets 11 likesShow this thread -
This Tweet is unavailable.
-
Strong communities is the outcome of investment. The answer is changing how we invest in communities so that they/we are empowered to respond in healthy pro social ways to our needs. When commutes are strong and healthy crime goes down. That’s a social science fact.
1 reply 2 retweets 3 likes
Here's another tangible example of investments King County is making to put more people on a path toward success so fewer end up in incarceration: Opening an integrated treatment detox facility on Beacon Hill: https://bit.ly/2HuRbMn - staffpic.twitter.com/7bwCMBzlgo
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.