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Crossover Youth: Research, Policy and Practice CYPM Overview

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Presentation on theme: "Crossover Youth: Research, Policy and Practice CYPM Overview"— Presentation transcript:

1 Crossover Youth: Research, Policy and Practice CYPM Overview
Shay Bilchik Nebraska Juvenile Justice Association Conference May 6, 2015

2 For more information on the various programs, visit: http://cjjr
CJJR Overview Crossover Youth Practice Model Juvenile Justice Leadership Network Center for Coordinated Assistance to States Juvenile Justice System Improvement Project Juvenile Justice Reform and Reinvestment Initiative Certificate Programs (Diversion; Multi-System Integration; Racial and Ethnic Disparities; School Justice Partnerships; Youth in Custody) Public Information Officers Learning Collaborative

3 Who Are Crossover Youth?
Dually-Involved Dually-Adjudicated

4 Pathways to Crossing Over
1. Open CW Case  Arrest  Enter JJ System 2. Open CW Case  CW Case Closed Arrest  Enter JJ System 3. No Previous or Current CW Case  JJ Investigation after Arrest or upon Release from Custody  Referral to CW

5 Research Supporting the CYPM

6 Prevalence Juvenile Justice Referrals Child Welfare Population
10-29% of youth ≥ 8 years old in CW are subsequently arrested Juvenile Justice Referrals Overall Cases: 67% with some type of CW history (King County) Diversion Cases 1% (4 Arizona Counties) 34% (King County) Juvenile Justice Adjudicated Cases Overall: 35% (New Mexico) Probation Supervision: 7% (4 Arizona Counties) Probation Placement: 42% (4 Arizona Counties) Herz, D. (2014) Building A Multi-Systems Approach: Defining and Identifying “Crossover Youth”

7 What Contributes to Crossing Over?
Experiences w/ Child Welfare System Placement Type Adolescent-Limited and Persistent Maltreatment Absence of Positive Attachments Placement Instability

8 Characteristics of Youth
Living in group home at time of arrest 26% AWOL at time of arrest 47% Attending school 94% (80% of whom had academic or behavior problems)

9 Characteristics of Youth
African American Youth Overrepresented About 1/3 Female Enter System Young and Remain into Adolescence Families with History of Criminal Behavior, Mental Health and/or Substance Abuse Problems Truancy Academic and Behavioral Problems at School Prior Contact with the Juvenile Justice System (½ to ¾) High Rates of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Problems

10 System Experiences Overrepresented in detention (25-50%) and underrepresented in diversion 5 years avg. time in child welfare 59% had a prior criminal history 22% arrest was related to placement 56% had a placement change 6 months prior to arrest

11 Overview of the CYPM Phases

12 CYPM - Phases Phase I: Arrest, Identification and Detention
Phase II: Joint Assessment and Planning Phase III: Coordinated Case Management

13 Goals Reductions in: the number of youth placed in out-of-home care
the use of congregate care the disproportionate representation of youth of color, particularly in the crossover population the number of youth crossing over and becoming dually-adjudicated

14 Process and Practice Goals
Reduce Juvenile Justice Penetration Use of Pre-Adjudication Detention Rate of Recidivism Re-entering CW from JJ

15 Process and Practice Goals
Increase Information Sharing Family Voice In Decision Making Youth/Parent Satisfaction Joint Assessment and Case Planning Coordinated Case Management Family and Youth Engagement Pro-Social Bonds Diversion

16 Coordinated Case Management
Themes Permanency Coordinated Case Management Information Sharing Family Engagement Funding / Resources Gender Disproportionality

17 What do CYPM sites do? Clarify how to legally share information
Identification of youth at the point of arrest Develop Prevention Strategies Ensure youth are not held in detention for extended time Ensure there is no foster care bias in offering diversion Creation of a consolidated case plan Utilization of a joint assessment process Creation of a Crossover Court Permanency/Self-Sufficiency Planning

18 CYPM Data Collection Process
Baseline Comparison Target Youth

19 Highlights from the 2010 Data Pathway 1 Youth Only
CYPM Outcomes Highlights from the 2010 Data Pathway 1 Youth Only

20 2010 CYPM Sites (N=12) Seattle Portland Rochester Sioux City
Austin Miami Seattle Cincinnati Rochester Sioux City Denver Portland Los Angeles Polk Philadelphia Broward

21 Who Are CYPM Youth in These Sites?
60% Are African American 31% Not Attending School 84% Have a MH and/or SU Problem 79% Have Academic and/or Behavioral Problems at School 40% Are Female

22 Child Welfare Characteristics of CYPM Youth in These Sites
55% Had One or More Placement Changes in the Past 6 Months 35% Living at Home at Time of Arrest 55% Involved with CW for Neglect 25% Living Congregate Care at Time of Arrest Average Time in CW 4.3 years (Median 2.2 years)

23 Juvenile Justice Characteristics of CYPM Youth in These Sites
61% Had at Least One Prior Offense 25% Detained at Arrest 41% Violent Offense Charge Type for Current Offense 37% Other Offense* 70% Assaults 22% Property Offense 39% At Living Situation 20% At School *Other offenses include alcohol and drug offenses, resisting arrest, and status offenses

24 Focus of CYPM Reform Efforts in These Sites
100% Enhanced Coordination 91% Joint Assessment Multi- Disciplinary Teams 82% Arrest at School 82% Increased Diversion 82% Focus on Permanency 82% Early Identification 64% Reduced Detention 64% Arrest at Living Situation 55% Crossover Courts/ Units 85% of CYPM youth across sites received a Promising Practice compared to 37% of Pre- CYPM youth.

25 % of Sites Showing Improvement in Educational Outcomes
Increased Enrollment (42%) Austin Miami Portland Rochester Seattle Los Angeles Philadelphia Sioux City Improved Academic Performance (33%) Austin Reduced Behavior Problems at School (58%) Denver Los Angeles Miami Philadelphia Sioux City Circuit 17 Portland Indicates a greater than 10% improvement between the initial and tracking data for CYPM youth. Indicates that of those sites showing improvement for CYPM youth, the improvements held when compared to the Pre-CYPM youth.

26 % of Sites Showing Increased Contact with Support Systems
Parents (83%) Cincinnati Los Angeles Miami Seattle Sioux City Circuit 10 Circuit 17 Denver Philadelphia Portland Austin Circuit 10 Circuit 17 Cincinnati Los Angeles Miami Seattle Portland Other Family (92%) Denver Philadelphia Sioux City Non-Family (58%) Philadelphia Portland Rochester Denver Seattle Sioux City Indicates a greater than 10% improvement between the initial and tracking data for CYPM youth. Indicates that of those sites showing improvement for CYPM youth, the improvements held when compared to the Pre-CYPM youth.

27 % of Sites Showing Improvement in Behavioral Health (CYPM v
% of Sites Showing Improvement in Behavioral Health (CYPM v. Pre-CYPM at tracking only) Mental Health (42%) Circuit 10 Cincinnati Los Angeles Portland Sioux City Substance Use (25%) Cincinnati Miami Portland Indicates more than a 10% difference between CYPM youth and Pre-CYPM youth.

28 Status of Disposition Outcome. for the Current Arrest (CYPM vs
Status of Disposition Outcome* for the Current Arrest (CYPM vs. Pre-CYPM) 43% Diversion 23% Probation Supervision 19% Placement 15% Dismissed 35% Diversion 29% Placement 25% Probation Supervision 11% Dismissed *Pending cases were removed from analysis. Average across sites for CYPM youth. Average across sites for Pre-CYPM youth.

29 Status of Permanency Goal at the End of Tracking (CYPM vs. Pre-CYPM)
65% Remain Home or Reunification 24% PPLA Emancipation Sup. Ind. Living 12% Guardianship or Adoption 47% Remain Home or Reunification 33% PPLA Emancipation Sup. Ind. Living 19% Guardianship or Adoption Average across sites for CYPM youth. Average across sites for Pre-CYPM youth.

30 Status of JJ and CW cases at the End of Tracking (CYPM Vs
Status of JJ and CW cases at the End of Tracking (CYPM Vs. Pre-CYPM only) 40% Both Cases Open 34% CW Open JJ Closed 18% Both Cases Closed 8% CW Closed JJ Open 51% Both Cases Open 20% CW Open JJ Closed 12% CW Closed JJ Open 18% Both Cases Closed Average across sites for CYPM youth. Average across sites for Pre-CYPM youth.

31 % of CYPM Sites with Lower Recidivism than Pre-CYPM Sites
Had a New Arrest (42%) Austin Circuit 17 Cincinnati Philadelphia Seattle Had a New Sustained Petition (17%) Portland Seattle Indicates more than 10% difference between CYPM youth and Pre-CYPM youth.

32 CYPM Jurisdictions Since Spring 2010, CJJR has worked in 88 counties in 20 states across the U.S. implementing the CYPM

33 QUESTIONS & ANSWERS


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