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Council transforms how juveniles are detained in King County

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Metropolitan King County
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Council transforms how juveniles are detained in King County

Summary

Council votes to implement restructure mission of Children and Family Justice Center and juvenile justice in King County

Story

The Metropolitan King County Council today voted to implement the recommendations of: Working to Reduce the Use of Secure Confinement a report by Dr. Eric Trupin, as policy guidance to transform the County’s approach to juvenile justice and the construction of the Children and Family Justice Center (CFJC).

“Earlier this year, Seattle City Council President Bruce Harrell and I called for a rethinking of the new youth jail,” said Council Vice Chair Rod Dembowski. “This report recommends major changes to the construction and operation of the new youth jail. I hope the Executive and County will take Dr. Trupin’s recommendations to heart and implement them.”

“Over the last decade, we have worked to create a ‘paradigm shift’ in the treatment of young people and people of color in the criminal justice system,” said Councilmember Larry Gossett, who played a key role in the implementation of the County’s Juvenile Justice Operational Master Plan (JJOMP). Accepting these recommendations are the vital next step in that shift. We must give youth the tools they need to succeed if we’re serious about our goal of zero youth detention.”

“I am pleased that the Council has continued to recognize the benefits of implementing policies and community based programs that will ultimately make our County a safer place for its citizens,” said Dr. Eric Trupin. “The recommendations of the report ‘Working to Reduce the Use of Secure Confinement,’ focus on many strategies that will redirect youth from the school to prison pathway. The Council’s commitment to follow the report’s recommendations in collaboration with the Executive is a truly positive indicator that our elected officials are committed to the most evidence based approaches to youth justice and community safety.”

Voters approved the construction of the CFJC in 2012. As the County shifted its focus toward achieving zero youth detention Dr. Trupin, a professor at the University of Washington and Vice-Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, reviewed several aspects of the new facility with an emphasis on:

• The impact of trauma on youth and the need to incorporate best practices into facility design,

• Staff training and interactions with youth in detention to better understand our current and future facility needs regarding a therapeutic environment for youth, including services and spaces in the facility,

• Existing services in juvenile detention and how they could be better aligned with our community alternatives to detention and Safe Spaces proposal.

Trupin’s report made several recommendations in how the CFJC can be used to help the county in its transition into a zero detention future:

• A continuing focus on alternatives to incarceration,
• Prioritizing expansion or development of programs to eliminate racial disparities,
• Incorporating trauma-informed care to all parts of the juvenile justice system,
• Increasing collaboration with community and faith-based organizations to improve outcomes for youthful offenders.

The legislation approved by the Council today makes the recommendations in Trupin’s report a framework for implementation and calls on the County Executive to work in partnership with our Courts, Prosecutor and Public Defender to deliver on our juvenile justice reform policies and goals.

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