(1) The department of social and health services shall
establish a medium security juvenile offender basic training camp
program. This program for juvenile offenders serving a term of
confinement under the supervision of the department is exempt
from the licensing requirements of chapter 74.15 RCW.
(2) The department may contract under this chapter with
private companies, the national guard, or other federal, state,
or local agencies to operate the juvenile offender basic training
camp.
(3) The juvenile offender basic training camp shall be a
structured and regimented model emphasizing the building up of an
offender's self-esteem, confidence, and discipline. The juvenile
offender basic training camp program shall provide participants
with basic education, prevocational training, work-based
learning, work experience, work ethic skills, conflict resolution
counseling, substance abuse intervention, anger management
counseling, and structured intensive physical training. The
juvenile offender basic training camp program shall have a
curriculum training and work schedule that incorporates a
balanced assignment of these or other rehabilitation and training
components for no less than sixteen hours per day, six days a
week.
The department shall develop standards for the safe and
effective operation of the juvenile offender basic training camp
program, for an offender's successful program completion, and for
the continued after-care supervision of offenders who have
successfully completed the program.
(4) Offenders eligible for the juvenile offender basic
training camp option shall be those with a disposition of not
more than sixty-five weeks. Violent and sex offenders shall not
be eligible for the juvenile offender basic training camp
program.
(5) If the court determines that the offender is eligible
for the juvenile offender basic training camp option, the court
may recommend that the department place the offender in the
program. The department shall evaluate the offender and may
place the offender in the program. The evaluation shall include,
at a minimum, a risk assessment developed by the department and
designed to determine the offender's suitability for the program.
No juvenile who is assessed as a high risk offender or suffers
from any mental or physical problems that could endanger his or
her health or drastically affect his or her performance in the
program shall be admitted to or retained in the juvenile offender
basic training camp program.
(6) All juvenile offenders eligible for the juvenile
offender basic training camp sentencing option shall spend one
hundred twenty days of their disposition in a juvenile offender
basic training camp. This period may be extended for up to forty
days by the secretary if a juvenile offender requires additional
time to successfully complete the basic training camp program. If the juvenile offender's activities while in the juvenile
offender basic training camp are so disruptive to the juvenile
offender basic training camp program, as determined by the
secretary according to standards developed by the department, as
to result in the removal of the juvenile offender from the
juvenile offender basic training camp program, or if the offender
cannot complete the juvenile offender basic training camp program
due to medical problems, the secretary shall require that the
offender be committed to a juvenile institution to serve the
entire remainder of his or her disposition, less the amount of
time already served in the juvenile offender basic training camp
program.
(7) All offenders who successfully graduate from the
juvenile offender basic training camp program shall spend the
remainder of their disposition on parole in a juvenile
rehabilitation administration intensive aftercare program in the
local community. Violation of the conditions of parole is
subject to sanctions specified in RCW 13.40.210(4). The program
shall provide for the needs of the offender based on his or her
progress in the aftercare program as indicated by ongoing
assessment of those needs and progress. The intensive aftercare
program shall monitor postprogram juvenile offenders and assist
them to successfully reintegrate into the community. In
addition, the program shall develop a process for closely
monitoring and assessing public safety risks. The intensive
aftercare program shall be designed and funded by the department
of social and health services.
(8) The department shall also develop and maintain a
database to measure recidivism rates specific to this
incarceration program. The database shall maintain data on all
juvenile offenders who complete the juvenile offender basic
training camp program for a period of two years after they have
completed the program. The database shall also maintain data on
the criminal activity, educational progress, and employment
activities of all juvenile offenders who participated in the
program.
[2002 c 354 § 234; 2001 c 137 § 1; 1997 c 338 § 38; 1995 c 40 § 1; 1994 sp.s. c 7 § 532.]
NOTES:
Short title -- Headings, captions not law -- Severability -- Effective dates -- 2002 c 354: See RCW 41.80.907 through 41.80.910.
Finding -- Evaluation -- Report -- 1997 c 338: See note following RCW 13.40.0357.
Severability -- Effective dates -- 1997 c 338: See notes following RCW 5.60.060.
Findings and intent -- Juvenile basic training camps -- 1994
sp.s. c 7: "The legislature finds that the number of juvenile
offenders and the severity of their crimes is increasing rapidly
statewide. In addition, many juvenile offenders continue to
reoffend after they are released from the juvenile justice system
causing disproportionately high and expensive rates of
recidivism.
The legislature further finds that juvenile criminal
behavior is often the result of a lack of self-discipline, the
lack of systematic work habits and ethics, the inability to deal
with authority figures, and an unstable or unstructured living
environment. The legislature further finds that the department
of social and health services currently operates an insufficient
number of confinement beds to meet the rapidly growing juvenile
offender population. Together these factors are combining to
produce a serious public safety hazard and the need to develop
more effective and stringent juvenile punishment and
rehabilitation options.
The legislature intends that juvenile offenders who enter
the state rehabilitation system have the opportunity and are
given the responsibility to become more effective participants in
society by enhancing their personal development, work ethics, and
life skills. The legislature recognizes that structured
incarceration programs for juvenile offenders such as juvenile
offender basic training camps, can instill the self-discipline,
accountability, self-esteem, and work ethic skills that could
discourage many offenders from returning to the criminal justice
system. Juvenile offender basic training camp incarceration
programs generally emphasize life skills training, prevocational
work skills training, anger management, dealing with difficult
at-home family problems and/or abuses, discipline, physical
training, structured and intensive work activities, and
educational classes. The legislature further recognizes that
juvenile offenders can benefit from a highly structured basic
training camp environment and the public can also benefit through
increased public protection and reduced cost due to lowered rates
of recidivism." [1994 sp.s. c 7 § 531.]
Finding -- Intent -- Severability -- 1994 sp.s. c 7: See notes following RCW 43.70.540.