MAIA MCDONALD

MAIA MCDONALD ✿

A Crash Course in Youth Homelessness and Runaways

By Maia McDonald Sept. 1, 2023 | City Bureau

A closer look at the nuts and bolts of local government and civic power. This week we’re recapping the latest Public Newsroom co-hosted by City Bureau and the Invisible Institute.


Building on a soon-to-be-published City Bureau and Invisible Institute collaboration from reporters Sarah Conway and Trina Reynolds-Tyler into how Chicago police handle missing persons cases and how the families of missing persons are affected, City Bureau hosted its latest Public Newsroom on Wednesday, Aug. 30. 
So far, their reporting found that Black people make up nearly two-thirds of all missing person cases reported to the Chicago Police Department over the last 20 years, and nearly 60% of those cases involve Black children under the age of 21. 
The panel, moderated by Reynolds-Tyler, featured three experts discussing the prevalence of missing Black teens and how a variety of factors can lead youth to homelessness, sex work, trafficking and other challenges. Here are some key takeaways:

Youth who choose to run away or who are considering it often do so after failures from adults in their lives to help them address and navigate complex issues.

From teachers to doctors to managers at work and other community members they encounter, Dr. Forrest Moore said these adults may fail to notice the ways a youth is struggling. Moore is a policy fellow at Chapin Hall who helps youth-serving agencies by providing guidance on research and evidence use.
Susan Frankel agreed, saying that when she talks to young people who call in to the National Runaway Safeline, very few received help from adults, often still attending school while living on the street, engaging in sex work or navigating abusive family dynamics. Frankel is CEO at NRS.
“One young woman was with her dad, at 14 years old, almost daily at the hospital. Someone at the hospital should have asked, ‘Why are you not at school; what do you need; how can we help?’” Frankel said.

To successfully address youth homelessness, community members and local stakeholders will need to meet young people where they are. 

To help youth who are in crisis, Frankel and others at the NRS look at what their options are and what they need to feel safe and have agency in their lives, she said. 
“What we are seeing is that it’s very, very brave and courageous for anybody to reach out for help,” Frankel said. “So we are really working with them to look at what their options are, and to help them think through what their safest choice might be … instead of us deciding what’s best for them.”
Additionally, Chicago activist and mother Nikki McKinney said they believe active players in the child welfare system like the Department of Children and Family Services need to rebuild systems from the ground up to help youth — including re-evaluating how they employ local police officers and security guards, which some youth may not trust. McKinney is the lead organizer and co-creator of the Street Youth Rise Up Campaign.

Systems of oppression are a big contributing factor to youth homelessness. 

“What happens in society [is] we immediately go to blaming the family,” said Moore, adding, “There’s a tremendous amount of family breakdown for a young person to be left alone.” 
However, Moore believes it’s important to recognize how youth homelessness is a symptom of oppression, and how larger systems fail to serve youth and their families. This recognition helps to identify where problems occur and how to support familial structures to remain intact, he said.
“Due to oppression, people are stripped of a lot of things and left to sort of figure it out, to build and create agency,” he said. 
When systems like the health care industry, schools and the police fail to communicate, this can contribute to youth homelessness, Moore said. Because they’re not designed to work holistically and collaboratively, communication issues discourage young people from sharing when they’re experiencing challenges. 
Because data-sharing and interaction between these groups is often limited, helping youth at risk of homelessness is limited as well.

MAIA MCDONALD

MAIA MCDONALD ✿