Head of Northern Ireland’s only secure care facility has warned that the sector is failing vulnerable young people
Young people as young as nine are being locked up for their own protection and that of others, according to the head of Northern Ireland’s sole secure care education facility for those under 18.
Jon Bleakney, principal of Co Down’s Lakewood School, maintains the secure care sector is experiencing a crisis and letting down our most vulnerable youngsters.
His comments come ahead of his inauguration as President of the Ulster Teachers’ Union at its annual conference in Limavady this week.
“We work with children who have already faced extremely adverse circumstances in life and so require very specific support and intervention in order to progress as positive and productive citizens,” Mr Bleakney said.
“However, without a major restructure our secure care sector is struggling to cope, placing the safety of these young people and the wider community at risk.
“Most of them – whose ages range from 13 to 17 – come via care homes, but because of the level of their needs and behaviours, they can no longer be supported there. They need a more intensive and secure environment.
“In the 30-plus years I’ve worked in this sector those behaviours have become increasingly distressing and our students younger, as evidenced by the nine-year-old we had recently.”
Mr Bleakney said that while once it was those caught up in petty criminal activity who the school saw, now it’s young people with significant mental health problems, additional educational needs, neurodiversity issues and multiple addictions.
“Often victims of sexual or criminal exploitation, adverse childhood experiences and developmental trauma, they’re being referred for support which isn’t here,” he said.
“Some end up sent away to facilities in the Republic and GB, only compounding their problems by ripping them from family.
“The NI Review of Children’s Care Services in 2023 made a range of recommendations yet nothing’s changed. We must not allow this to be yet another report commissioned by Stormont which goes nowhere.
“These are our most vulnerable young people who, from even before birth, have faced unimaginable disadvantage, born to mothers with addictions or into violent homes.
“Even their brain development in the womb can be compromised, affecting how they’ll react to danger, their fight, flight or freeze responses.
“Aggression and violence is the only way they know how to and it’s kept them safe even though it’s not acceptable within our societal norms.
“So it’s about supporting them to change that.”
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