Keeping Kids in School

Activating education and justice communities to support youth in crisis

BECCA Statistic Card
Missing as few as two days of school per month can dramatically affect the likelihood of high school graduation. In 2018-19, 80,615 students were chronically absent in Washington State.
BECCA Floating Elements
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School Partnerships
Connecting educators with courts and service providers
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Truancy Reform
Evidence-based policy changes and best practices
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Statewide Conference
Annual training and networking for stakeholders
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Family Support
Early intervention and resource connection
Statewide Initiative

Too Many Students Fall Through the Cracks

Missing school creates cascading effects that hurt graduation rates and life outcomes. Washington’s Becca Laws provide intervention mechanisms, but significant gaps remain in our response to youth in crisis.

What are the Becca Laws?

In 1995, the Becca statutes were passed to create structured responses when youth are in crisis. These laws established mechanisms—truancy, CHINS (Children in Need of Services), and ARY (At-Risk Youth)—to allow courts, schools, and service agencies to intervene and provide support.

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Scale of Chronic Absenteeism

In Washington State's 2018-19 school year, over 1 million students were enrolled, yet 80,615 were chronically absent. Missing even a few days per month can dramatically hurt graduation chances and signal deeper family or personal crises.

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System Gaps

Despite large numbers of chronically absent students, fewer than 10,000 truancy petitions were filed that year. This leaves tens of thousands of students and families unaccounted for under the Becca system—falling through the cracks without support.

The Scale of the Crisis

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students chronically absent in WA (2018-19)
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truancy petitions filed despite much larger need
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CHINS & ARY petitions combined that year

Why Early Intervention Matters

Missing as few as two days of school per month dramatically reduces a student’s chance of graduating. Chronic absenteeism often signals other risk factors like family instability, making early, coordinated intervention critical for keeping youth on track and connected to support systems.

Our Solution

Bridging the Gaps

Through the Becca Task Force, CCYJ works to ensure no student falls through the cracks by bringing together schools, courts, and service providers to share best practices and advocate for meaningful reform.

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Becca Task Force

A multidisciplinary, statewide collaborative that helps schools, courts, and service providers implement best practices under the Becca Laws. We facilitate connections, share knowledge, and advocate for policies that keep youth engaged and supported.

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Training & Networking

Monthly stakeholder meetings and an online community where schools, courts, and agencies share ideas, challenges, and solutions. We facilitate knowledge exchange and build stronger collaborations across systems.

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Policy & Reform Advocacy

Educating stakeholders and lawmakers while proposing system reforms. We pushed for truancy reform measures adopted in 2011 and continue advocating for youth-centered, family-supportive practices.

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Best Practice Development

Working with frontline professionals to identify what works, document successful strategies, and ensure implementation aligns with evidence-based, trauma-informed approaches to supporting youth in crisis.

Annual Statewide Conference

Our flagship event brings together educators, court personnel, service agencies, and families to share what works, learn new strategies, and build stronger collaborations.

Bringing Together: Educators • Court Personnel Service Agencies • Families Community Leaders • Youth

Legislative Impact & System Reform

The Becca Task Force has successfully advocated for meaningful policy changes, including truancy reform recommendations that became law in 2011. We continue working with lawmakers to ensure systems are responsive, equitable, and effective for all youth and families.

2011 Truancy Reform: Key recommendations now codified in state law