CrimProf Blog

Editor: Kevin Cole
Univ. of San Diego School of Law

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

"The Seemingly Endless Cycle of Reforms in Juvenile Justice"

From The Marshall Project, via NACDL's news update:

On Tuesday, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine announced that the state will try to shut down its three large youth correctional facilities in favor of building smaller and less centralized units. DeWine cited findings that young people “do not respond well to adult-style incarceration,” Crain’s Cleveland Business reported.

. . . .

Los Angeles County may serve as a cautionary tale for Ohio. Four years ago, the county’s own juvenile justice working group made similar proposals in a plan called “Youth Justice Reimagined.” Like in Ohio, one of the centerpieces of the reform was to decentralize the county’s juvenile halls and replace them with “smaller, more homelike ‘safe and secure healing centers,’” according to the Pasadena Star-News.

Then last year the county reopened the previously shuttered Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall, reasoning that consolidating youths into the facility would let the county system operate more efficiently. Officials are still trying to lower the number of young people at the hall, but violence and drugs have proliferated, youths report feeling unsafe and the threat of another shutdown looms constantly.

https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/crimprof_blog/2024/09/the-seemingly-endless-cycle-of-reforms-in-juvenile-justice.html

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