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Our local heroes

Working behind the scenes
By JOHNETTE RODRIGUEZ and DAVID SCHARFENBERG  |  April 15, 2009

In the twelfth annual edition of the Providence Phoenix's Best issue, we highlight people and organizations who are doing exceptionally good work — local heroes who often labor behind the scenes. Yet they are changing the communities in which they're based for the better. Regardless of what neighborhood you live in, all of us in Rhode Island are in their debt.

090417_Alston_m
THE BIG PICTURE "We all have to work together on some level," Alston says. 

JAMETTA ALSTON
PROTECTING, SUSTAINING, NURTURING

For a mild-mannered Quaker who grew up in Philadelphia, Jametta Alston has a powerful voice. The Office of the Child Advocate, an autonomous watchdog agency within the state system, was created in the late '80s in response to child fatalities that had occurred within the purview of the Department of Children and Families. Alston (and her skeletal staff of 5.7) are charged with overseeing the policies, procedures, and practices of DCYF to ensure that no child in state care is being harmed.

In the summer of 2007, just two years after her appointment to this office by Governor Carcieri, Alston and her staff filed a lawsuit against DCYF and the governor because of systemic issues relating to maltreatment of Rhode Island's children. The state's statistics were the highest in the country for maltreatment, both in foster care and in the children's own homes, the latter indicating wrongly-timed returns to unsafe environments.

Because the judge who originally heard this case has been ill, both the Child Advocate's office and DCYF have been forced to play a waiting game. Nonetheless, the lawsuit pushed DCYF to implement new procedures and to hire "family-connected community providers" to link families with services that could help them function better, whether that be housing, employment, food, health care, education, or transportation.

"What do we need to wrap around this family to make it strong and stable?" Alston pondered during a recent conversation at her Cranston office. "What are the natural resources and strengths of this family to make them stronger? At some point, there may be none, because mom or dad has burnt the bridges or they're from another state or country and they don't have that community."

Alston herself, at 52, has developed quite a community since coming to Rhode Island. She has been the president of the Rhode Island Bar Association, and she was a prosecutor for the attorney general's office for 10 years, where she established protocols in dealing with domestic violence and hate crimes in police departments around the state. From 2002 to 2005, Alston served as Cranston's city solicitor, while also sitting on boards as diverse as the West Elmwood Neighborhood Development Corporation and the Rhode Island Foster Parent Association.

By far, her hardest task in her current job is dealing with a lack of understanding on the part of the state legislature and the citizenry as a whole about the importance of helping children.

"If you don't deal with children — protect, sustain, and nurture them — at this point," she stressed, "you will have a larger problem down the road, because it will be harder for them to become productive, tax-paying citizens. We're always driving home the point that you have to take care of children's basic need for safety, stability, permanency, and nurturance.

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  Topics: News Features , Health and Fitness, Social Issues, Brown University,  More more >
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