Previous Page  22 / 32 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 22 / 32 Next Page
Page Background

V

irginia

C

apitol

C

onnections

, W

inter

2016

22

demonstrating that longer lengths of stay do not limit recidivism but

can actually increase it, DJJ has sought to safely reduce the number

of youth who are confined in Beaumont and Bon Air. Through a

more effective approach to release decisions, the implementation

of a new length of stay system, the continuing decline in new

admissions, and the development of alternative placements in

local detention centers, the Department has begun the process of

safely reducing the population in its facilities. For example, DJJ

partners with locally-operated juvenile detention centers to operate

Community Placement Programs (CPP) and place appropriate

committed youth in local detention centers, keeping them closer to

home. This reduction also makes it easier to reform programming

within the facilities and provides opportunities to reinvest savings

into more effective community alternatives.

DJJ is also using data and research to improve probation

practices to ensure that the local probation officers are making

the right dispositional recommendations to judges, allocating

supervision resources effectively, and engaging and strengthening

families.

R

EFORM

To achieve better outcomes for committed youth as well as staff

in the facilities, DJJ is implementing a more rigorous rehabilitative

approach to youth corrections, overhauling out-of-date reentry

practices and working closely with juveniles’ families.

DJJ has introduced the Community Treatment Model with

the goal of improving services and safety in the facilities and

decreasing recidivism after release. It is focused on developing

a consistent, rehabilitative community within each living unit in

the facilities. By training an interdisciplinary cohort of staff, and

placing them in a unit with a consistent group of youth, this model

results in more rigorous rehabilitation and engagement throughout

the day.

The new model works better for staff as well. They receive

more training, have a consistent group of youth with whom they

work, and a consistent team of colleagues of which they are a

member. As they convert to their new units, their work shifts are

decreased from 12 hours to 8 hours per day. There are now seven

units converted at Beaumont and Bon Air Juvenile Correctional

Centers and DJJ expects full conversion by the end of 2016.

Additionally, this fall, Virginia became one of only three

states to receive a major federal grant ($725,000) to create a

model reentry system. These resources will provide for increased

training; transportation for families to visit incarcerated youth; new

technology to improve remote contacts between staff, families, and

confined youth; and the development of a new system to improve

both planning and outcomes.

R

EPLACE

As a result of many years of state and federal budget cuts

impacting DJJ, Virginia has lost the range of community-based

services and local placement alternatives to state commitment.

For comparison, less than 15% of committed youth nationwide are

held in facilities with more than 200 beds while more than 85%

of committed youth in Virginia are placed in either Beaumont or

Bon Air Juvenile Correctional Center, each of which has more than

250 beds.

Department of

Juvenile Justice

from page 21

Residents in Garden.