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SB202 SUB1 Senate Bill 202 History

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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted

COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE

FOR

Senate Bill No. 202

(By Senators Kessler(Acting President), Hall, Unger, Wells, Stollings, Plymale, Prezioso, Wills and Klempa)

____________

[Originating in the Committee on Health and Human Resources;

reported February 24, 2011.]

____________

 

 

A BILL to amend the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, by adding thereto a new article, designated §18-33-1, §18-33-2, §18-33-3 and §18-33-4, all relating to creating a commission to develop a pilot program to help at-risk youth in West Virginia; creation of commission; composition of the commission; powers and duties of the commission; outcome recommendations for pilot program; goals of the pilot program; and operation of the pilot program.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

    That the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended by adding thereto a new article, designated §18-33-1, §18-33-2, §18-33-3 and §18-33-4, all to read as follows:

ARTICLE 33. THE GOVERNOR’S COMMISSION ON IMPROVING OUTCOMES FOR                 AT-RISK YOUTH.

§18-33-1. Legislative findings and definitions.

    (a) The Legislature finds and declares:

    (1) That fourteen percent of pregnant women do receive adequate prenatal care;

    (2) That nearly twenty percent of pregnant women abuse alcohol, prescription or illegal drugs;

    (3) That West Virginia has the highest rate of women who smoke during pregnancy;

    (4) West Virginia has one of the nation’s highest rates of child abuse and neglect;

    (5) Over one thousand children are in-state or home placement;

    (6) Nearly four hundred children are in out-of-state placement;

    (7) Over two thousand children are in Department of Health and Human Resources custody;

    (8) Over three thousand children are in the West Virginia foster care system;

    (9) Over four hundred minority youth are in Division of Juvenile Services custody;

    (10) Almost seven thousand children drop-out of school each year;

    (11) Almost seven thousand children appear before the Juvenile Court each year;

    (12) West Virginia has been cited by the United States Justice Department for having the highest over-representation of minority youth in its juvenile justice system;

    (A) These negative outcomes for many of West Virginia’s youth drains financial resources, depletes the workforce and lowers the tax base; and

    (B) The cost of housing a youth in the Division of Juvenile Services in West Virginia is over $90,000 a year;

    (13) West Virginia has the lowest workforce participation rate in the country at fifty-five percent and the workforce participation rate for young adults age sixteen to twenty-four has dropped significantly over the last few years;

    (14) According to the West Virginia Picture Funding Report for Children and Families there are more than two hundred fifty different state and federal funding streams that provide over $5.2 billion for services that benefit children, directly support families or strengthen communities;

    (A) These services lack coordination and there is no comprehensive planning process that would provide adequate and appropriate resources when they are most needed;

    (B) There is not an effective delivery system at the local community level to deliver these services.

    (15) Many youth aging out of the juvenile justice and foster-care system graduate into the adult criminal justice system and therefore contributes to and exacerbates the overcrowded prison population and costs the state money; and

    (16) There is a growing need to help at-risk youth, that have entered the juvenile justice system, reform their lifestyle through educational tutoring and mentoring, to help them on a path where crime is no longer necessary in their life and therefore avoid the adult criminal justice system.

    (b) As used in this article:

    (1) “At-risk youth” means all children between birth and seventeen and young adults between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one who are low income still receiving benefits from the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources, legally under the jurisdiction of the Department of Health and Human Resources in custody of the West Virginia Division of Juvenile Services or the selected counties Juvenile Court/Probation Department, or the selected counties school system;

    (2) “Commission” means The Governor’s Commission on Improving Outcomes for At-Risk Youth; and

    (3) “Status offenders” means youth guilty of behavior that would not be a crime if they were an adult.

§18-33-2. Creation and composition of the commission.

    (a) Effective July 1, 2011, there is created the Governor’s Commission on Improving Outcomes for At-Risk Youth.

    (b) The commission is composed of fourteen members: Governor of the State of West Virginia, or his or her designee; Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources, or his or her designee; two members from the West Virginia Division of Juvenile Services, appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate; one member from the West Virginia board of education, appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate; the West Virginia State School Superintendent’s Director of Institutional Education; one representative from the Governor’s Workforce Investment Division, appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate; three community representatives from the county that houses the state’s largest juvenile delinquency population, one of which will be from the local Workforce Investment Board Youth Council, appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate; the Chief Juvenile Probation Officer, from the county with the most court involved youth; a member from the private mental health profession, appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate; a member of local law enforcement whose county has the highest number of juvenile arrests, appointed by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate; and the county school superintendent or his or her designee whose county has the highest number of students drop out of school.

    (c) The Governor shall appoint a chairperson for the commission that will determine meeting agendas and preside over those meetings.

    (d) The Speaker of the House of Delegates shall appoint a member of the House of Delegates and the President of the Senate shall appoint a member of the Senate to serve as advisors to the commission.

    (e) Members of the commission are not entitled to compensation for services performed as members but may be reimbursed for actual and necessary expenses incurred for each day engaged in the performance of their official commission duties in a manner consistent with the guidelines of the Travel Management Office of the Department of Administration.

§18-33-3. Commission powers and duties.

    The commission shall:

    (1) Identify a county with the most at-risk youth, that also has adequate facilities and community leadership, to run a community based pilot program that brings together both state and local organizations, to work collaboratively to provide comprehensive, intense wrap around services to at-risk youth and their families in a seamless coordinated system; and

    (2) Identify the challenges confronting the most at-risk youth and their families and make specific recommendations to the pilot program administrators to improve the outcomes for these youths; specifically, to reduce the number of abuse and neglect cases, to reduce high school drop-out rates, to reduce substance abuse among youth including smoking, to reduce teen pregnancies, to reduce juvenile delinquency and to reduce the number of juvenile delinquents and youth aging out of foster-care that eventually enter into the adult criminal justice system.

§18-33-4. Organization and goals of the pilot program.

    (a) The pilot program shall be operated by a local community-based organization in partnership with the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources, West Virginia Division of Juvenile Services, Prestera Center for Mental Health Services, West Virginia State School Superintendent, county superintendent’s office, local juvenile probation department and with other partner agencies to serve as a clearing house to coordinate comprehensive youth and family services. The pilot program shall be housed within the community and will be directed by a local community-based nonprofit organization.

    (b) The pilot program shall operate out of a centrally located building to coordinate service to youth and their families in the selected county from birth to twenty-one years of age who are referred by Department of Health and Human Resources, the counties juvenile court and probation department, West Virginia Division of Juvenile Services, the selected counties school system, social service agencies, churches, community based organizations and parents.

    (c) The goal of the pilot program is to improve outcomes for at-risk youth as measured by the following objectives:

    (1) Coordinate services for at-risk youth and their families in the county chosen for the pilot program;

    (2) Reduce the number of youth in out-of-home placement;

    (3) Reduce the number of youth in out-of-state placement;

    (4) Reduce the number of status offenders referred to Department of Health and Human Resources;

    (5) Reduce the number of status offenders that progress to being adjudicated delinquent;

    (6) To reduce the number of youth that appear before the courts within the selected county;

    (7) Enroll, at least, one hundred of the most at-risk youth in a program where they receive intensive tutoring and mentoring;

    (8) Increase the academic performance of youth enrolled in the tutoring and mentoring program; and

    (9) Reduce the dropout rate for youth enrolled in the program.

 

 

    This article is new; therefore, strike-throughs and underscoring have been omitted.

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