Illinois Compiled Statutes - Full Text

Illinois Compiled Statutes (ILCS)

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730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-105

    (730 ILCS 5/3-2.5-105)
    (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date)
    (This Section is scheduled to be repealed on June 1, 2029)
    Sec. 3-2.5-105. Child First Reform Task Force.
    (a) The Child First Reform Task Force is created. The purpose of the Task Force is to review and study the current state of juvenile detention centers across the State. The Task Force shall consider the conditions and administration of individual juvenile detention centers, identify the resources needed to consistently meet the minimum standards set by the Department of Juvenile Justice and the Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts, evaluate complaints arising out of juvenile detention centers, identify best practices to provide detention center care, propose community-based alternatives to juvenile detention, and advise on the creation of the Youth Advisory Agency with youth justice advisors and district youth advisory offices in each circuit court district. The Task Force shall also make recommendations for policy changes at the Department of Juvenile Justice to support child-first directives aligned with the policies and practices established in the Convention on the Rights of the Child that was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on November 20, 1989, and became effective as an international treaty on September 2, 1990.
    (b) The Task Force shall consist of the following members:
        (1) A member of the Senate appointed by the President
    
of the Senate.
        (2) A member of the Senate appointed by the Minority
    
Leader of the Senate.
        (3) A member of the House appointed by the Speaker of
    
the House.
        (4) A member of the House appointed by the Minority
    
Leader of the House.
        (5) A member appointed by the Director of Juvenile
    
Justice.
        (6) A member appointed by the Director of Human
    
Rights.
        (7) A member appointed by the Independent Juvenile
    
Ombudsperson.
        (8) A member appointed by the Independent Juvenile
    
Ombudsperson who represents an organization that advocates for a community-based rehabilitation or systems impacted individuals.
        (9) A member appointed by the Independent Juvenile
    
Ombudsperson who represents an organization that advocates for juvenile justice reform.
        (10) Two members appointed by the Illinois Juvenile
    
Justice Commission.
        (11) A member appointed by the Director of the
    
Governor's Office of Management and Budget.
        (12) One member appointed by the Lieutenant Governor
    
who is a member of a county board of a county operating a county detention facility.
        (13) One member appointed by the Lieutenant Governor
    
who is a juvenile detention officer, probation officer, or other facility employee at a county detention facility who makes the determination on whether to detain a juvenile at the county detention facility.
        (14) A member appointed by the Lieutenant Governor
    
from the Justice, Equity, and Opportunity Initiative.
        (15) Two members appointed by the Director of
    
Juvenile Justice who are over the age of 18 and who have served any amount of time in a county juvenile detention facility.
        (16) A member appointed by the Director of the
    
Illinois State Police.
        (17) A member appointed by the Secretary of Human
    
Services.
    The Task Force may include 2 additional members appointed by the Illinois Supreme Court.
    (c) Appointments to the Task Force shall be made within 90 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly. Members shall serve without compensation.
    (d) The Task Force shall meet at the call of a co-chair at least quarterly to fulfill its duties. The members of the Task Force shall select 2 co-chairs from among themselves at their first meeting.
    (e) The Task Force shall:
        (1) engage community organizations, interested
    
groups, and members of the public for the purpose of assessing:
            (A) community-based alternatives to detention and
        
the adoption and implementation of such alternatives;
            (B) the needs of juveniles detained in county
        
detention facilities;
            (C) strategic planning for a transition away from
        
juvenile detention facilities;
            (D) the establishment of more accountability
        
between county facilities and the Department of Juvenile Justice, or if there would be a benefit for the State in operating detention centers for persons awaiting sentencing or court determination, in lieu of counties providing this service, when in extreme cases the county detention center is unable to pass minimum standards;
            (E) evidence-based best practices regarding the
        
delivery of services within detention centers, including healthcare and education;
            (F) the integration of restorative practices into
        
the juvenile detention system, focusing on healing, accountability, and community restoration;
            (G) the implementation of child-first directives
        
within the Department of Juvenile Justice and throughout the State;
            (H) strategic planning for creating a Youth
        
Advisory Agency with district youth advisory offices in each circuit court district;
            (I) the implementation of youth justice advisors
        
within the Youth Advisory Agency to guide juveniles through the juvenile justice process, including through interactions with law enforcement, the courts, and community-based alternatives to detention;
            (J) how county juvenile detention facilities are
        
currently funded;
            (K) how to encourage the Illinois Supreme Court
        
and relevant authorities to require, as a consistent part of continuing education, training on child-first directives, child rights, and the unique needs of minors in the justice system; and
            (L) the establishment of training requirements by
        
the Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board for law enforcement on child-first directives, child rights, and the unique needs of minors in the justice system;
        (2) review available research and data on the
    
benefits of community-based alternatives to detention versus the benefits of juvenile detention;
        (3) review Administrative Office of the Illinois
    
Courts, Department of Juvenile Justice, and Independent Ombudsperson monitoring reports to identify specific instances of non-compliance arising out of county juvenile detention facilities and patterns of noncompliance Statewide; and
        (4) make recommendations or suggestions for changes
    
to the County Shelter Care and Detention Home Act and the Unified Code of Corrections, including changes and improvements to the juvenile detention system.
    (f) On or before January 1, 2029, the Task Force shall publish a final report of its findings and non-binding recommendations. The report shall, at a minimum, detail findings and recommendations related to the duties of the Task Force and the following:
        (1) the process and standards used to determine
    
whether a juvenile will be detained in a county facility;
        (2) information and recommendations on detention
    
facility standards, including how to ensure compliance with minimum standards, which facilities are chronically noncompliant and the reasons for noncompliance, including specific instances of noncompliance, and penalties for noncompliance;
        (3) strategic planning suggestions to transition away
    
from juvenile detention;
        (4) how county juvenile detention facilities are
    
currently funded;
        (5) recommendations on whether to establish more
    
accountability between county facilities and the Department of Juvenile Justice, or whether the operation of all detention centers should be transferred to the Department of Juvenile Justice;
        (6) how to incorporate restorative practices into the
    
juvenile justice system;
        (7) implementing child-first directives throughout
    
the State;
        (8) strategic planning suggestions on creating a
    
Youth Advisory Agency with youth justice advisors and district youth advisory offices in each circuit court district;
        (9) recommendations on the duties of youth justice
    
advisors and the role they will serve in assisting juveniles through the juvenile justice process, including through interactions with law enforcement, the courts, and community-based alternatives to detention, and recommendations on how many youth justice advisors to staff for each circuit court district;
        (10) strategic planning suggestions to encourage the
    
Illinois Supreme Court and relevant authorities to require, as a consistent part of continuing education, training on child-first directives, child rights, and the unique needs of minors in the justice system; and
        (11) strategic planning to require the Illinois Law
    
Enforcement Training Standards Board to establish training for law enforcement on child-first directives, child rights, and the unique needs of minors in the justice system.
    The final report shall be submitted to the General Assembly, the Offices of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, the Chief Judge of each circuit court operating a county detention facility, the county board of each county operating a county detention facility, and the Office of the Attorney General.
    (g) The Department of Juvenile Justice shall provide administrative support for the Task Force.
    (h) This Section is repealed on June 1, 2029.
(Source: P.A. 104-449, eff. 6-1-26.)