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Screening, Assessment and Detention Continuum for Juveniles

Screening, Assessment and Detention Continuum for Juveniles. Presented by: Jeff McDonald April 12 – 13, 2011. Why an Assessment Center?. Why an Assessment Center for Jefferson County?. 1992-93. Lack of coordinated juvenile services Juvenile information exchange

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Screening, Assessment and Detention Continuum for Juveniles

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  1. Screening, Assessment and Detention Continuum for Juveniles Presented by: Jeff McDonald April 12 – 13, 2011

  2. Why an Assessment Center?

  3. Why an Assessment Center for Jefferson County? 1992-93 • Lack of coordinated juvenile services • Juvenile information exchange • Increased lethality of juvenile violence • Need for a single point of entry • Too many separate juvenile court filings • Lengthy time between arrest and court • Low-level offenses-high level of intervention

  4. JSPC Mission The mission of the Jefferson County Juvenile Assessment Center: We are an assessment center that is responsive to the safety and well being of youth, families, victims, and the Jefferson County Community.

  5. JCJAC Goals The goals of the Jefferson County Juvenile Assessment Center: • Family and youth have a single access point • Reduce time officers spend with juveniles • Respond comprehensively to the whole juvenile • Provide multi-agency screening and assessment • Ensure community safety

  6. Ten Essential Elements of a Juvenile Assessment Center

  7. First Essential Element Target Population

  8. Target Population • Juveniles from the age of 10 - 17 • Mildly Intoxicated (BAC below .05) • Mild drug impairment • Delinquent youth • Truant, suspended, expelled youth • Fire setters • Beyond control of parent • Parent/child conflict • Mental health issues • Municipal juvenile violators/warrants

  9. Referrals Second Essential Element

  10. Who Refers to JCJAC ? School District Truant At risk youth School based threat assessment Suspended and expelled youth District Attorney Sheriff’s Dept. Low risk offenders and case management services JCJAC District Attorney SB-94 R-1 Schools JCMH Community Education Juvenile Justice education and training: Semi-annual police training Teacher in-services Advice Center: In person or by phone Self referral Parents who need help with children Human Services Runaways & homeless Beyond control of parent Abused and neglected Arvada & Golden Municipal probation and diversion services Municipal warrants: all police agencies Police officers: Whether to detain Alternative to detention Criminal and academic information

  11. Single Point of Entry Third Essential Element

  12. Law enforcement Stakeholder referrals Family referrals Self referrals No wrong door Single Point of Entry

  13. Law enforcement transports from municipalities and the sheriff's office make up 85% of the youth seen at the JCJAC Average length of stay of the officer is 5 minutes Average length of stay of the youth is 4 hours Financial benefit per transport avg. $90.00 per hour 1594 youth served in 2008 1594 X $360 = $573,840 1594 X 4 hours = 6376 officer hours saved 3 years transport: 2008-1594; 2009-1337; 2010-1267 JCJAC Benefits for Law Enforcement

  14. Primary Services: Law Enforcement Transport • After Transport to JCJAC • Screening and assessment • Referral and recommendations • Release to parents/adults • Detain/placement via Human Services • Psychiatric hold • Detention

  15. Comprehensive Assessments Fourth Essential Element

  16. Strength based needs assessment Validated/evidence based screening and assessment tools Best principles and practices interventions All community focused Immediate and Comprehensive Assessment

  17. Colorado Juvenile Risk Assessment (CJRA) Massachusetts Youth Screening Instrument Second Version (MAYSI-2) Substance Use Survey Second Version (SUS-2) FEMA Fire Risk Interview Forms Kearney School Refusal Assessment Scale Immediate and Comprehensive Assessment

  18. Youth assessed in the field with the Colorado Juvenile Detention Screening and Assessment Guide (JDSAG) 1. Mandatory hold factors 2. Juvenile warrants 3. Risk of serious/repeated delinquency 4. Risk of self harm (weapons) 5. Public safety risk 6. Family or community resources Primary Services: Detention Screens

  19. Linkage to services made based on screens and assessment: Counseling services Anger management Drug/alcohol intervention Mentoring School based interventions Mediation services Primary Services: Community Based Treatment Referrals:

  20. Primary Services Detention Screens Law Enforcement Transports Phone Screens Court Information Juvenile Justice Training Community Intervention Referrals Case Management Menu of Services • Secondary Services • Arson Education • Time Out • Bonding • Sex Offender Supervision • School Risk Assessment • School Notification • Data Access • Future….

  21. Terms of Participation Fifth Essential Element

  22. Voluntary participation Limited length of stay Controlled entrance Informed consent and confidentially Terms of Participation

  23. Confidentiality Sixth Essential Element

  24. Follow federal and state guidelines Memorandum of Understanding Mandatory reporters Protect to the best ability Confidentiality

  25. Juvenile Information Systems Seventh Essential Element

  26. Access to view multiple databases All systems web based JAC based systems are individualized All systems secure JUVENILE INFORMATION SYSTEMS Juvenile Information Systems

  27. Colorado Trails Lexis Nexis / Courtlink Case Management Systems Record Management Systems Information Systems Based or used by JAC’s • Juvenile Information Sharing • C.O.P.S. • COPLINK • CCIC/NCIC • Infinite Campus • Mental Health databases

  28. (10.5) "Assessment center for children", as used in sections 19-1-303 and 19-1-304, means a multi-disciplinary, community-based center that provides services to children and their families, including, but not limited to, detention screening, case management, and therapeutic intervention relating to delinquency, abuse or neglect, family conflict, and truancy. http://www.michie.com/colorado/lpext.dll?f=templates&fn=main-h.htm&cp= From the Office of the Colorado Attorney General

  29. (4.3) School and school district personnel, employees of the state judicial department, employees of state agencies, employees of criminal justice agencies, and employees of assessment centers for children who share information concerning a child pursuant to this part 3 shall be immune from civil and criminal liability if such personnel or employee acted in good faith compliance with the provisions of this part 3. http://www.michie.com/colorado/lpext.dll?f=templates&fn=main-h.htm&cp= From the Office of the Colorado Attorney General Sharing of Information

  30. National JIS Initiative • A national OJJDP initiative supported by the Center for Network Development • JCJAC is the local pilot site vetting the Juvenile Justice XML Data Model (JJXDM) • JJXDM is based on the National Information Exchange Model (NIEM) • JCJAC is participating with the State of Colorado’s Children and Youth Information Sharing Project using the JIS Guidelines and the NIEM. • JJAC will be the first site in the nation to conduct data exchanges in a juvenile environment using the JJXDM

  31. Juvenile Information Sharing Colorado Children and Youth Information Sharing http://www.juvenileis.org/ccyis.html

  32. Program Administration Eighth Essential Element

  33. Diverse board representation Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for multi-agencies Multi-funding of program Federal, state and local Established mission/goals Program Administration

  34. Sustainability Ninth Essential Element

  35. Multi-agency co-location Ongoing assessment of community needs Diversity of board Multi-funding streams Sustainability

  36. The breakdown for contributing partners in the Inter-Governmental Agreement (IGA) is as follows: Jefferson County (including the District Attorney, Social Services, Mental Health) 46% Jefferson County Public Schools 14% 12 Local Municipalities and Sheriff’s Office 40% JCJAC IGA Contributions

  37. Why JCJAC Works

  38. Statewide Initiative Tenth Essential Element

  39. JAC written into Colorado statues in 2001 Memorandum of Understanding between JACs Collaboration in ongoing training of center staff Sharing of information Description is included in Title 19 of the Colorado Children’s Code Colorado’s six sites Colorado Juvenile Assessment Center Coalition

  40. Questions from Participants?

  41. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention www.ojjdp.gov or Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention National Training and Technical Assistance Center www.nttac.org For more information or assistance

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