Juvenile Justice

Youth Facilities

 

The Division of Juvenile Justice oversees eight youth facilities around the state, in Anchorage, Bethel, Fairbanks, Juneau, Kenai, Ketchikan, Mat-Su, and Nome. Each of these facilities provides:

  • Secure facilities for youth awaiting determination of the outcomes relating to their offenses.
  • Highly structured core services such as short-term individual, group, and family counseling.
  • Education services from local schools and schools at some facilities.
  • Health screening and medical care.
  • Mental health diagnostics and services.
  • Substance abuse education and prevention.
  • Life-skills competency building.

Capacity by Facility
Fiscal Year 2007

  DETENTION
 BEDS
TREATMENT
BEDS
TOTAL
BEDS
Bethel Youth Facility  8 10 18
Fairbanks Youth Facility  22 20 42
Johnson Youth Center, Juneau 8 22 30
Kenai Peninsula Youth Facility 10 0 10
Ketchikan Regional Youth Facility 6 4 10
Mat-Su Youth Facility, Palmer 15 0 15
McLaughlin Youth Center, Anchorage 66 99 165
Nome Youth Facility  14 0 14
Statewide Total 149 155 304

Long-Term Treatment Programs:
Our youth facilities in Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau and Bethel also provide services for youth committed for long-term treatment. Their programs are specifically designed to intervene in entrenched delinquent behavior, to build value systems reflective of the local culture, and restore victims and the community to the fullest degree possible. Youth are assigned a treatment team that works with them and their families throughout their stay to break the cycle of offending.

Comprehensive treatment plans are developed with resident and family input targeting specific areas requiring change and growth. Educational services are provided by the local school districts, including services for special needs students. Comprehensive medical and mental health services are provided to all long-term residents as necessary. In conjunction with probation officers, aftercare services are being developed to ensure a greater number of youth will adjust to community placement and maintain the progress they have made while in secure treatment.

Eliminating Overcrowding:
The increased capacity of our youth facilities—along with an overall reduction in referrals and an increased number of community-based alternatives to detention—allowed our Division to meet an important, long-time goal this past year: to eliminate overcrowding. Although a few youth facilities did continue to have more youth referrals than beds available, most had decreased average daily populations and were able to meet the needs of youth remanded to them as well as the public’s need for insured safety.

Current Goals:
Tasks now before our facility staff around the state are the continued implementation of Restorative Justice principles and the challenges of personnel management: reducing staff turnover, filling vacant positions, and identifying new staff leaders in preparation for the impending retirement of longtime managers.