Glossary Fiscal Year 2000 - Juvenile Rehabilitation Administration
Juvenile Rehabilitation Administration (JRA) serves youth who have
been adjudicated in Juvenile Court and sentenced for a minimum and maximum term.
CSDB reports data for JRA youth in residential placements, or who have been in
residential placement and moved out on parole. Learning and Life Skills Services
and Consolidated Juvenile Services which JRA funds are not included. Specialized
Mental Health, Substance Abuse, and/or Sex Offender treatment services are
provided to all JRA youth as necessary in its Institutional, Youth Camp,
Community, and Parole placements.
Parole counselors supervise juvenile offenders
released to parole status. Counselors provide structure, supervision,
family and client support, and access to needed community services.
Several distinct types of Parole are provided:1. Regular, 2. Intensive,
3. Sex Offender, and 4. Basic Training Camp Aftercare.
Community Placement: JRA clients
are housed in the following types of small group facilities while working
and/or attending schools in the community: 1. JRA-operated Community
Facilities, 2. Contracted Community Facilities, and 3.Community Commitment
Placements.
JRA Institutions and Youth Camps:
All JRA institutions and youth camps provide treatment, education, and/or
work experience in a secure facility. JRA Institutions include:Green
Hill, Maple Lane, and Echo Glen. JRA Youth Camps include: Naselle,
Mission Creek, Indian Ridge, and Basic Training camps.
Some services are small and unlike the others. Programs may choose to include
these only in the program total, rather than with dissimilar services. Client
counts and expenditures for the following services appear in the program total
only:
Special Sex Offender Disposition Alternative (SODA) services are designed
for first-time juvenile sex offenders allowing for community supervision and
treatment as an alternative to standard institutional confinement.
Chemical Dependency Disposition Alternative (CDDA) services are designed
for substance abusing juvenile offenders allowing for community supervision
and treatment as an alternative to standard institutional confinement.
Changes from the Needs Assessment Data Base (NADB) produced for Fiscal Year 94:
Parole was reported as a single service in NADB for Fiscal Year 94. Four types of
Parole are reported in CSDB for Fiscal Year 99: (1) Regular, (2) Intensive, (3) Sex
Offender, and (4) Basic Training Camp Aftercare.
The Group Home service category reported in NADB for Fiscal Year 94 is now referred
to as Community Facilities in CSDB for Fiscal Year 99.
The Community Residential Placement service category reported in NADB for
Fiscal Year 94 is now referred to as Contracted Community Facilities in CSDB for
Fiscal Year 99.
Two new facilities are included for the first time in the JRA Institutions
and Youth Camps report group: (1) the Indian Ridge Youth Camp and (2) the
Camp Outlook Basic Training Camp.
Changes from CSDB for Fiscal Year 99
Option B services designed for lower risk juvenile offenders as an
alternative to standard institutional commitment have been eliminated. They
are not reported in CSDB for Fiscal Year 00.
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and Health Services, go to
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Copyright 2004 Washington State Department of Social and Health Services.