| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: DORINDA CARTER |
| November 16, 2006 |
615-741-1000, EXT. 8144 (OFFICE) |
|
877-909-5128 (PAGER) |
TDOC SEEKS HELP FOR CHILDREN OF INMATES
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - They are often
considered the forgotten victims of crime. Children of inmates are
the most severely at-risk children and youth in American today. In
fact, they are six times more likely than other children to end up in
prison themselves. The holidays present a particularly hard time
for them.
"Image being a child waking up on Christmas morning
not to have your father there or any gifts," said TDOC
Volunteer Services Director Richard Dixon. That's why the
Tennessee Department of Correction and the Prison Fellowship Ministries
Angel Tree Program have teamed up to help make the holidays a little
better for thousands of Tennessee children.
The public's help is desperately needed in this
effort. Inmates sign up for their children to receive Christmas
gifts from Angel Tree volunteers on behalf of the incarcerated
parent. "When kids receive a Christmas gift from a parent who
is away, they know that they are loved and remembered even if they can't
be together," said Mary Kay Beard, an ex-inmate who founded the
Angel Tree Christmas Program in 1982.
There are 2,800 children of inmates in Tennessee in need
of help this season. They include:
Memphis - 685 children
Nashville - 600 children
Jackson - 204 children
Knoxville - 91 children
Murfreesboro - 42 children
Columbia - 61 children
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