Senate President Pro Tem David Givens cited the need for hospitals and nursing homes to be able to protect against COVID-19 in opposing the bill. (Photo by LRC Public Information)
FRANKFORT — The Kentucky Senate Tuesday unanimously passed two bills aimed at stemming what lawmakers called a crisis in Kentucky’s Department of Juvenile Justice.
Senate Bill 162, sponsored by Sen. ?Danny Carroll, R-Benton, would allot more than $50 million for salaries, retention, new workers and security upgrades, including $30 million for workers in the adult corrections system. ?
Carroll included the Department of Corrections (DOC) in addition to DJJ because, he said on the floor, “Make no mistake: DOC is another crisis waiting to happen.”?
Carroll’s bill, which would take effect immediately, provides:
Senate Bill 158, ?sponsored by Sen. David P. Givens, R-Greensburg, would allocate $500,000 for an independent, third-party review of Kentucky Department of Juvenile Justice.?
Senate Bill 158 was amended to say auditors would need to interview local law enforcement as well as DJJ frontline employees.?
“There’s a lot of concern that fact finding can’t happen in an atmosphere of oppression,” Givens said on the floor. “And sadly enough, the culture in the atmosphere in these facilities has been ‘don’t tell, don’t talk.’”?
The bills now go to the House.
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