Sen. Danny Carroll, R-Benton, called on the Kentucky legislature to put more funding into improving treatment and conditions for Kentucky kids being held in detention. (LRC photo)
Two Senate bills aimed at addressing Kentucky’s juvenile justice issues cleared the Senate Appropriations and Revenue committee unanimously on Wednesday.?
The first, SB162, would allot millions of dollars to the Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ)? for salaries, retention, new workers, security upgrades and more – among other things.?
Those price tags are:
“We must ensure DJJ never returns to the state it has functioned in over the past few years,” Sen. Danny Carroll, R-Benton, told colleagues while presenting the latest version of his bill.?
Additionally, the bill would require:?
A second bill, sponsored by Sen. David P. Givens, R-Greensburg, would allocate $500,000 for an independent review of Kentucky DJJ.?
“This legislation would tell the Office of the Auditor to contract with an outside independent third party to perform a full performance review of these DJJ pre-adjudication facilities,” Givens told colleagues, stressing the “independent” part.?
“We’re saying whatever entity that the auditor contracts with cannot be the current entity that accredits these facilities,” he said.?
The audit scope, Givens said, would include:
The report would be due on Oct. 15.?
In February, a?Republican-backed bill that would reopen a juvenile detention center in Louisville passed the House 79-18 and?may now go to the Senate for a vote.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.