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Legislative Year: 2023 Change
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Bill Detail: HB23-1249

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Title Reduce Justice-involvement For Young Children
Status Sent to the Governor (05/17/2023)
Bill Subjects
  • Children & Domestic Matters
  • Human Services
House Sponsors S. Gonzales-Gutierrez (D)
R. Armagost (R)
Senate Sponsors J. Coleman (D)
C. Simpson (R)
House Committee Judiciary
Senate Committee Judiciary
Date Introduced 03/20/2023
Summary

Under current law, counties are permitted to form a local
collaborative management program to provide services to youth. The bill
requires every county to participate in a local collaborative management
program and requires the local collaborative management program to
serve children 10 to 12 years of age and to form a service and support
team to create service and support plans for children 10 to 12 years of
age.
The bill provides an appropriation for local collaborative
management programs and requires the department of human services to
provide technical assistance to the programs.
The bill changes the minimum age of a child who is subject to the
juvenile court's jurisdiction. Under current law, children who are 10 years
of age or older can be prosecuted in juvenile court. The bill removes
children who are 10 to 12 years of age from the juvenile court's
jurisdiction and increases the age for prosecution in juvenile court to 13
years of age; except in the case of a homicide, then the juvenile court's
jurisdiction extends to children who are 10 to 12 years of age.
The bill clarifies that children who are 10 to12 years of age may
be taken into temporary custody by law enforcement for safety.
The bill provides that when children who are 10 to 12 years of age
have contact with law enforcement, law enforcement will complete a
form to refer the child to the local collaborative management program.
The local collaborative management program's individualized service and
support team is required to complete an initial plan for every child who
is referred, which may find that no services are needed, that one or more
specific services are needed and can be provided without an
individualized service and support team meeting, or that an individualized
service and support team meeting is required to develop a service and
support plan for the child and family. Victims have the right to be
informed and provide input to the plan.
The individualized service and support team is required to hold a
meeting and develop an individualized service and support plan for every
child who is 10 to 12 years of age who allegedly engaged in behavior that
would constitute a crime of violence or felony sex offense. The county
department of human or social services is required to attend the meeting
if the behavior would constitute a felony sex offense. The county
department of human or social services is required to make a
determination as to whether the department of human services will
provide prevention and intervention services or conduct a formal
assessment, investigate, provide services, or open a case.
The bill clarifies that victims of actions by children who are 10 to
12 years of age are still able to access existing victim services and
compensation. The bill provides that victims shall receive a free copy of
the form completed by law enforcement, which can be used to request
victim's compensation.
The bill provides that a minor child, or a parent or guardian
seeking relief on behalf of a minor child, shall not pay a fee to seek a
protection order. Courts that issue protection orders shall provide
assistance to individuals in completing judicial forms to obtain a
protection order. The bill changes the minimum age that a person can be
held in custody for contempt of court for failing to comply with a
protection order to a person who is 13 years of age. A child who is 10 to
12 years of age who fails to comply with a protection order may be court
ordered to participate in a collaborative management program.
The bill changes the minimum age of a county court's concurrent
original jurisdiction with the district court in criminal actions that
constitute misdemeanors or petty offenses to 13 years of age.
The bill changes the minimum age to be charged by a municipal
court for a municipal offense to 13 years of age.
Under current law, a juvenile court may transfer a child to district
court for adult criminal proceedings under certain conditions. The bill
eliminates the ability for the juvenile court to transfer children who are 12
or 13 years of age to the district court. For a child who is 14 years of age
or older, the bill changes the current authority of the juvenile court to
transfer the child's case for any delinquent act that constitutes any felony
to only any delinquent act that constitutes a class 1 or class 2 felony or a
crime of violence.
The bill extends certain sentencing protections that are currently
provided to children who are 10 or 11 years of age to children who are 13
or 14 years of age.

Committee Reports
with Amendments
Full Text
Full Text of Bill (pdf) (most recent)
Fiscal Notes Fiscal Notes (04/26/2023) (most recent)  
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