15A.065 Department of Juvenile Justice -- Powers and duties -- Advisory board.
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(a) Prevention of juvenile crime;
(b) Identification of juveniles at risk of becoming status or public offenders and development of early intervention strategies for these children, and, except for
adjudicated youth, participation in prevention programs shall be voluntary; (c) Providing educational information to law enforcement, prosecution, victims, defense attorneys, the courts, the educational community, and the public
concerning juvenile crime, its prevention, detection, trial, punishment, and
rehabilitation; (d) The operation of or contracting for the operation of postadjudication treatment facilities and services for children adjudicated delinquent or found guilty of
public offenses or as youthful offenders; (e) The operation or contracting for the operation, and the encouragement of operation by others, including local governments, volunteer organizations, and
the private sector, of programs to serve predelinquent and delinquent youth; (f) Utilizing outcome-based planning and evaluation of programs to ascertain which programs are most appropriate and effective in promoting the goals of
this section; (g) Conducting research and comparative experiments to find the most effective means of:
1. Preventing delinquent behavior; 2. Identifying predelinquent youth; 3. Preventing predelinquent youth from becoming delinquent; 4. Assessing the needs of predelinquent and delinquent youth; 5. Providing an effective and efficient program designed to treat and
correct the behavior of delinquent youth and youthful offenders; 6. Assessing the success of all programs of the department and those
operated on behalf of the department and making recommendations for
new programs, improvements in existing programs, or the modification,
combination, or elimination of programs as indicated by the assessment
and the research; and (h) Seeking funding from public and private sources for demonstration projects, normal operation of programs, and alterations of programs. (2) The Department of Juvenile Justice may contract, with or without reimbursement, with a city, county, or urban-county government, for the provision of probation,
diversion, and related services by employees of the contracting local government. (3) The Department of Juvenile Justice may contract for the provision of services, treatment, or facilities which the department finds in the best interest of any child,
or for which a similar service, treatment, or facility is either not provided by the Page 2 of 4 department or not available because the service or facilities of the department are at
their operating capacity and unable to accept new commitments. The department
shall, after consultation with the Finance and Administration Cabinet, promulgate
administrative regulations to govern at least the following aspects of this
subsection:
(a) Bidding process; and
(b) Emergency acquisition process. (4) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall develop programs to: (a) Ensure that youth in state-operated or contracted residential treatment programs have access to an ombudsman to whom they may report program
problems or concerns; (b) Review all treatment programs, state-operated or contracted, for their quality and effectiveness; and (c) Provide mental health services to committed youth according to their needs. (5) (a) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall have an advisory board appointed by the Governor, which shall serve as the advisory group under the Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, Pub. L. No. 93-415, as
amended, and which shall provide a formulation of and recommendations for
meeting the requirements of this section not less than annually to the
Governor, the Justice and Public Safety Cabinet, the Department of Juvenile
Justice, the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, the Interim Joint
Committees on Judiciary and on Appropriations and Revenue of the
Legislative Research Commission when the General Assembly is not in
session, and the Judiciary and the Appropriations and Revenue Committees of
the House of Representatives and the Senate when the General Assembly is in
session. The advisory board shall develop program criteria for early juvenile
intervention, diversion, and prevention projects, develop statewide priorities
for funding, and make recommendations for allocation of funds to the
Commissioner of the Department of Juvenile Justice. The advisory board shall
review grant applications from local juvenile delinquency prevention councils
and include in its annual report the activities of the councils. The advisory
board shall meet not less than quarterly. (b) The advisory board shall be chaired by a private citizen member appointed by the Governor and shall serve a term of two (2) years and thereafter be elected
by the board. The members of the board shall be appointed to staggered terms
and thereafter to four (4) year terms. The membership of the advisory board
shall consist of no fewer than fifteen (15) persons and no more than thirty-
three (33) persons who have training, experience, or special knowledge
concerning the prevention and treatment of juvenile delinquency or the
administration of juvenile justice. A majority of the members shall not be full-
time employees of any federal, state, or local government, and at least one-
fifth (1/5) of the members shall be under the age of twenty-four (24) years at
the time of appointment. On July 15, 2002, any pre-existing appointment of a
member to the Juvenile Justice Advisory Board and the Juvenile Justice Page 3 of 4 Advisory Committee shall be terminated unless that member has been re-
appointed subsequent to January 1, 2002, in which case that member's
appointment shall continue without interruption. The membership of the board
shall include the following:
1. Three (3) current or former participants in the juvenile justice system; 2. An employee of the Department of Juvenile Justice; 3. An employee of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services; 4. A person operating alternative detention programs; 5. An employee of the Department of Education; 6. An employee of the Department for Public Advocacy; 7. An employee of the Administrative Office of the Courts; 8. A representative from a private nonprofit organization with an interest in
youth services; 9. A representative from a local juvenile delinquency prevention council; 10. A member of the Circuit Judges Association;
11. A member of the District Judges Association;
12. A member of the County Attorneys Association;
13. A member of the County Judge/Executives Association;
14. A person from the business community not associated with any other group listed in this paragraph; 15. A parent not associated with any other group listed in this paragraph;
16. A youth advocate not associated with any other group listed in this paragraph; 17. A victim of a crime committed by a person under the age of eighteen (18) not associated with any other group listed in this paragraph; 18. A local school district special education administrator not associated with any other group listed in this paragraph; 19. A peace officer not associated with any other group listed in this paragraph; and 20. A college or university professor specializing in law, criminology, corrections, psychology, or similar discipline with an interest in juvenile
corrections programs. (c) Failure of any member to attend three (3) meetings within a calendar year shall be deemed a resignation from the board. The board chair shall notify the
Governor of any vacancy and submit recommendations for appointment. (6) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall, in cooperation with the Department for Public Advocacy, develop a program of legal services for juveniles committed to
the department who are placed in state-operated residential treatment facilities and
juveniles in the physical custody of the department who are detained in a state-
operated detention facility, who have legal claims related to the conditions of their
confinement involving violations of federal or state statutory or constitutional Page 4 of 4 rights. This system may utilize technology to supplement personal contact. The
Department of Juvenile Justice shall promulgate an administrative regulation to
govern at least the following aspects of this subsection:
(a) Facility access;
(b) Scheduling; and
(c) Access to residents' records. (7) The Department of Juvenile Justice may, if space is available and conditioned upon the department's ability to regain that space as needed, contract with another state or
federal agency to provide services to youth of that agency. Effective: June 26, 2007
History: Amended 2007 Ky. Acts ch. 85, sec. 44, effective June 26, 2007. -- Amended 2005 Ky. Acts ch. 99, sec. 85, effective June 20, 2005. -- Amended 2004 Ky. Acts
ch. 160, sec. 1, effective July 13, 2004. -- Amended 2002 Ky. Acts ch. 59, sec. 2,
effective July 15, 2002; and ch. 263, sec. 1, effective July 15, 2002. -- Amended
1998 Ky. Acts ch. 426, sec. 70, effective July 15, 1998; and ch. 538, sec. 4, effective
April 13, 1998. -- Created 1996 Ky. Acts ch. 358, sec. 1, effective July 15, 1996. Legislative Research Commission Note (6/26/2007). 2007 Ky. Acts ch. 85, relating to the creation and organization of the Justice and Public Safety Cabinet, instructs the
Reviser of Statutes to correct statutory references to agencies and officers whose
names have been changed in that Act. Such a correction has been made in this
section. Legislative Research Commission Note (7/15/2002). This section was amended by 2002 Ky. Acts chs. 59 and 263. Where these Acts are not in conflict, they have been
codified together. Where a conflict exists, Acts ch. 263, which was last enacted by
the General Assembly, prevails under KRS 446.250.