Juvenile Planning Committee Crossover Youth Plans
Juvenile services planning committee - crossover youth - plan. The act requires local juvenile services planning committees to devise a plan to manage dually identified crossover youth. A dually identified crossover youth is a youth involved in both the juvenile justice system and the child welfare system. The plan must contain descriptions and processes to include the following:
- A process for the identification of dually identified crossover youth at the earliest reasonable point of contact;
- A method for collaborating and exchanging information with other judicial districts consistent with the data-sharing policies of the collaborative management program;
- A process for promptly communicating information about the youth's crossover status between the child welfare and juvenile justice systems and to notify each other of the new involvement in the respective system or information that may aid in the identification of dually identified crossover youth;
- A process for identifying the appropriate services or placement-based assessment for a dually identified crossover youth;
- A process for sharing and gathering information in accordance with applicable laws, rules, and county policy;
- A process for the development of a single case management plan and identification of the lead agency for case management purposes;
- A process that facilitates the sharing of assessments and case planning information and includes policies around sharing information with other judicial districts;
- A process for a multi-disciplinary group of professionals to consider decisions that include: Youth and community safety, placement, provision of needed services, alternatives to detention and commitment, probation, parole, permanency, education stability, and case closure; and
- A requirement that dually identified crossover youth placed in a secure detention facility who are deemed eligible for release by the court be placed in the least restrictive setting whenever possible to reduce the disparity between dually identified crossover youth and nondually identified crossover youth in secure detention.
The act allows marijuana tax cash fund money to be used for the development of local dually identified crossover youth plans and services.
(Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)