I read not long ago that the State of Georgia is sending released sex offenders to live in a camp in the woods near Marietta, Georgia—even those who own their own homes. There are a myriad of factors that have lead to this situation—zoning laws, parole requirements necessitating these individuals to stay a certain distance from children, and lack of suitable housing (the Associated Press reported that "there is only one homeless shelter in Georgia that fulfils the residency requirements for sex offenders, but it only has two beds, which are usually occupied."). I don't think it's acceptable for our leaders to throw up their hands about the inevitability of this situation, as if they were powerless to effect change.
I find this to be part of a troubling change in our view of the acceptability of treating ‘undesirable’ fellow citizens inhumanely. I think this change in thinking is a threat—a slippery slope in the floor of acceptable treatment—for the consumers we serve. One day it's okay to send people to jail because they have no mental health treatment (they need to exhibit some self control and not act in ways that will land them in jail); the next day it's acceptable to close critical health care services that will result in the death of uninsured persons (who should work hard enough to have insurance); and then we can sentence people (dastardly people who prey on children) to living in encampments without even the human supports of leper colonies of old.
In the behavioral health and social service niche, we serve and advocate for a group of individuals unattractive in popular culture. Runaway teens living on the streets, drug addicts, "the retarded", and more. I caution us all to not stand by when this growing acceptance of inhumanity occurs. For those of you who are not swayed by dewy-eyed humanitarian thinking, you can ponder the immortal words of Ronald Reagan who said, "Protecting the rights of even the least individual among us is basically the only excuse the government has for even existing…”
No Person Left Behind: Georgia’s Slippery Slope
Friday, November 06, 2009 | behavioral health, community support networks, community-based services, correctional reentry programs, Georgia, housing, OPEN MINDS, prison, residency, sex offenders, social services, treatment | 0 comments »
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