Essay question

U .S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention D ISPROPORTIONATE D ISPROPORTIONATE M INORITY M INORITY C ONFINEMENT C ONFINEMENT 2002 Update2002 Update Summary Summary U.S.

Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention 810 Seventh Street NW. Washington, DC 20531 John Ashcroft Attorney General Deborah J. Daniels Assistant Attorney General J. Robert Flores Administrator Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Office of Justice Programs Partnerships for Safer Communities Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ojjdp The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention is a component\ of the Office of Justice Programs, which also includes the Bureau of Justice Assistance, the Bure\ au of Justice Statistics, the National Institute of Justice, and the Office for Victims of Crime. Disproportionate Minority Confinement 2002 Update SUMMARY Heidi M. Hsia, Ph.D.

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention George S. Bridges, Ph.D.

U niversity of Washington Rosalie McHale (retired) Office of Juvenile Justice W ashington State Department of Social and Health Services September 2004 NCJ 201240 This document w as prepared under number OJP–2000–298–BF/01 from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), U.S. Department of Justice. Points of view or opinions expressed in this document are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of OJJDP or the U.S. Department of Justice. Foreword Although minority youth account for about one-third of the U.S. juvenile\ population, they comprise two-thirds of the juvenile detention/corrections populatio\ n. Dispropor­ tionate minority confinement (DMC) has far-reaching consequences not only for these young offenders but for society as a whole. The challenges are com\ plex and not easily resolved, but progress is being made.

The 1988 amendments to the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (\ JJDP) Act of 1974 authorized OJJDP to require states participating in the Form\ ula Grants Program to address DMC in their state plans. The 1992 amendments to the Act ele­ vated DMC to a core protection, tying future funding levels to complianc\ e. With the training and technical assistance provided by OJJDP, states are determining the factors that contribute to DMC, designing and implementing strategies to address\ those factors, evaluating their efforts, and monitoring trends.

This Summary provides an overview of recent DMC-related developments. It\ begins with a brief review of the data, followed by an outline of national effo\ rts during the past 5 years to address this challenge. It then summarizes state activit\ ies, providing an update on DMC compliance, presenting findings from assessment studies, d\ ocument­ ing efforts to reduce DMC, and identifying remaining challenges.

As an example of a comprehensive approach to DMC, the Summary describes \ Wash­ ington State’s three-pronged approach—research, legislative reform, and programmat\ ic and administrative initiatives at the state and county levels—which h\ as brought some important reductions in disproportionality at most stages of the juvenil\ e justice process.

The JJDP Act of 2002 broadens the DMC initiative to encompass disproportionate minority contact at all decision points in the juvenile justice system. The 2002 Act also requires intervention strategies that include delinquency prevention and systems improvement components. Effectively addressing DMC in this new context will require long-term, coordinated efforts at the local, state, and federal levels.

OJJDP looks forward to productive partnerships with all involved in these efforts.

Working together, we can reduce the total number of juveniles entering the juvenile justice system, and for those who do, we can ensure equal treatment for \ every youth.

J. Robert Flores Administrator Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention iii Acknowledgments This Summary was prepared by Heidi M. Hsia, Ph.D., DMC Coordinator of OJ\ JDP’s State Relations and Assistance Division; George S. Bridges, Ph.D., Profe\ ssor of Sociol­ ogy, Dean and Vice Provost, Undergraduate Education, University of Washington; and Rosalie McHale, Washington State’s Juvenile Justice Specialist from 1987 to 2001.

Special thanks are due to countless individuals who have tirelessly work\ ed on reducing DMC at the state and local levels and have generously shared their exper\ iences and insights, which are described in this Summary. v Table of Contents Foreword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . . . . . . . . . . . . v Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 National Efforts To Address DMC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ 5 OJJDP Assistance to States and Localities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 OJJDP Assistance to States and Localities Through Contractors/Grantees . . . . . . . . 5 Efforts by States To Address DMC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Update on State Compliance With the DMC Core Requirement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Findings of States’ DMC Assessment Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 State Actions To Reduce DMC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ 13 Remaining Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . . . . . . 16 W ashington State’s Experience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . 19 Conducting Research Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . 19 Enacting Legislation To Ensure Policy and Procedure Changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Developing and Sustaining Programmatic Initiatives at the State and County Levels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . . . 24 Summary of the Evolution of Washington State’s DMC Reforms . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 DMC Trends in Washington State, 1990–99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Lessons Learned in Washington State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Future Directions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . . . . . . . . . . . 39 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . \ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 vii 1 In the 1988 amendments to the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Preventio\ n (JJDP) Act of 1974 (Public Law 93–415, 42 U.S.C. 5601 et seq.), Congress mandated that the address disproportionate minority confinement (DMC) in their state pla\ ns. Specifical­ was required to develop and implement plans to reduce the disproportiona\ te represen­ tation (Section 223(a)(23)).

In the 1992 amendments to the JJDP Act, DMC was elevated to a core prote\ ction for youth, with future funding eligibility tied to state compliance. In the \ past decade, nu­ merous efforts to address DMC issues have emerged throughout the nation \ in response to this requirement. The most recent data available indicate that in 199\ 7, minority youth constituted 34 percent of the juvenile population nationwide but r\ epresented 62 percent of the juveniles detained and 67 percent of those committed to s\ ecure juvenile correctional facilities (Snyder and Sickmund, 1999). In 1997, there we\ re 7,400 new admissions of youth younger than 18 years old to adult prisons, and thre\ e out of four detention and correctional facilities increased between 1983 and 1997, a\ lthough it decreased slightly between 1995 and 1997.

This Summary attempts to represent the ways that disproportionality is m\ anifested in the juvenile justice system. It is not intended to determine why or how \ certain juve­ nile populations are handled within the system. Only further research wi\ ll uncover the causes of disproportionate minority confinement. Nevertheless, as th\ e next two the federal government has increased the number and scope of resources (\ training, Introduction Minorities (%) (%) 1983 32 53 56 1991 32 65 69 1995 32 68 68 1997 34 62 67 Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP, or the Office) require all states participating in the Formula Grants Program (Title II, Part B, of the Act) to ly, if the proportion of a given minority group of youth who were detained or confi\ ned in a state’s secure detention facilities, secure correctional facilities, jails, and \ lockups exceeded the proportion that group represented in the general population, the state of these youth were members of a minority group (Poe-Yamagata and Jones, 2000).

As shown in table 1, the overrepresentation of minority youth in secure \ juvenile chapters of this Summary show, progress is being made. Over the past several years, Total Youth Y ear Population Secure Detention Secure Correction Source: Sickmund, Snyder, and Poe-Yamagata, 1997, and Snyder and Sickmund, 1999.

Table 1: Per cent of Minority Youth in Secure Detention and Correctional Facilities in the United States for Selected Years From 1983 to 1997 technical assistance, publications) that it makes available to the stat\ es. For their part, the states have taken significant steps to identify and assess where DMC\ occurs within their juvenile justice systems, implement plans to reduce DMC, enhance d\ ata collec­ comprehensive, research-based approach to implement systems change and p\ rograms to reduce DMC.

Overrepresentation of African American youth occurs at all stages of the\ juvenile jus­ tice system, and African American youth are overrepresented more than an\ y other 2 ■ in 1996–97 than in 1990–91. 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 52% 46% 46% 40% 43% 36% 36% 32% 37% 33% 41% 45% 32% 30% 49% 44% 26% 26% 39% 39% 15% 15% 1990–91 1996–97 origin: 1990–1997 National Crime Victimization Survey Crime in the United States Juvenile Court Statistics OJJDP’s tion, and introduce state legislation to address the problem. In the final chapter, the authors present a case history of how one state, Washington, has taken a proactive, Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update Nationally, for most stages of juvenile justice system processing, the black proportion was smaller Cases judicially waived to criminal court Juveniles in residential placement Delinquency cases resulting in residential placement Ad judicated delinquency cases Petitioned delinquency cases Delinquency cases involving detention Delinquency cases in juvenile court Juvenile arrests for Violent Crime Index offenses All juvenile arrests Violent juvenile offenders reported by victims U.S. population ages 10–17 Percent involving black juveniles Black Juveniles Are Overrepresented at All Stages of the Juvenile Justice System Compared With Their Proportion in the U.S. Population Source: Authors’ analysis of Bureau of the Census’ Estimates of the population of states by age, sex, race, and Hispanic [machine-readable data files] for 1991 and 1997, Bureau of Justice Statistics’ [machine-readable data files] for 1991 and 1996, FBI’s reports for 1991 and 1997, OJJDP’s reports for 1991 and 1996, OJJDP’s Children in Custody Census of public and private juvenile detention, correctional, and shelter facilities 1990/91 [machine-readable data file], and Census of Juveniles in Residential Placement 1997 [machine-readable data file]. Introduction minority group. In 1996–97, African American youth constituted about \ 15 percent of the nationwide juvenile population but represented 26 percent of all juv\ eniles arrested, 45 percent of those who were detained, and 40 percent of those in reside\ ntial place­ ment. (See the figure on page 2.) However, for all stages of juvenile justice processing, except arrest and delinquency cases involving detention, the African Ame\ rican pro­ portion of the national totals was smaller in 1996–97 than in 1990–\ 91.

The number of Hispanic youth in the United States has increased faster t\ han the num­ ber of youth of any other racial or ethnic group, growing from 9 percent\ of the juvenile population in 1980 to 16 percent in 2000 (Federal Interagency Forum on \ Child and Family Statistics, 2001). State studies show overrepresentation of Hispanic youth at arrest and other decision points in some states (DeJong and Jackson, 19\ 98; OMNI Research and Training, 1998). Colorado is one example. Although Colorado does not have arrest data for Hispanics because they are included as white, the state’s data for July 1998 to June 1999 show that Hispanics were overrepresented at all l\ ater decision points in the juvenile justice system (Division of Criminal Justice, Co\ lorado Department of Public Safety, 2000). Consistent with national data, the rate of overrepresentation in the Colorado juvenile justice system was lower for Hispanics than for\ African Americans. However, because of inconsistent categorizations of Hispanic youth in many state and national studies (i.e., some include Hispanics as “wh\ ite” and some include them as “other”), Hispanic overrepresentation is likely t\ o be underreported.

The 1997 Census of Juveniles in Residential Placement (CJRP) showed th\ at American Indian youth ages 10–17 constituted 2 percent of youth in secure corr\ ectional facili­ ties nationwide but were only 1 percent of the national youth population\ (Snyder and Sickmund, 1999). Although national data suggest that American Indian yo\ uth are placed in correctional facilities at twice the expected rate, state data\ give evidence of an even greater overrepresentation. For example, North Dakota’s 1998 data indicate that American Indian youth made up 8 percent of the state’s total juvenile population but accounted for 13 percent of arrests, 21 percent of the secure detent\ ion population, and 33 percent of secure correctional placements (Division of Juvenile \ Services, North Dakota Department of Corrections, 2000). Data at the county level are s\ imilar. Further, because most tribal agencies do not report arrest, referral, and detenti\ on-related data for inclusion in state statistics, the actual levels of Native American \ overrepresenta­ tion may be higher.

Asians and Pacific Islanders are the least studied racial groups. Hawaii\ has classified Asians and Pacific Islanders as separate groups in its studies, but most\ studies conduct­ ed in other states combine data for Asians and Pacific Islanders. The 19\ 97 CJRP showed that Asian youth constituted 4 percent of the national juvenile p\ opulation but represented only 2 percent of youth in secure correction. The availa\ ble state data for Asians alone or Asians and Pacific Islanders combined also show, for the most 3 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update part, that these youth are underrepresented in the population of confine\ d juveniles at the state and even at the county levels. In cities with high concentrati\ ons of Asian youth, however, indications of overrepresentation exist. For example, a study of juve­ nile transfers to adult court in California showed that, in 1996, the composition of Los Angeles County’s juvenile population ages 10–17 was 25 percent white, 51 percent Hispanic, 13 percent African American, and 11 percent Asian and other ra\ ces (Males and Macallair, 2000). The Hispanic youth were 6 times more likely, the African Amer­ ican youth 12 times more likely, and the Asian/other youth 3 times more likely than the white youth to be found unfit for juvenile court and transferred to \ criminal court.

Further, African American and Asian youth tried in criminal court were imprison\ ed more often than Hispanic or white youth. Taking into account the respective contribu­ tion of each group to the volume of California’s violence and felony arrests, statewide analyses in the same study indicated that Asian youth, like African Amer\ ican, Hispanic, and other minority youth, were significantly more likely to be sentenced\ to confine­ ment by the California Youth Authority than were white youth arrested for the same category of offense.

It should be noted that the data presented above only paint a picture of\ disproportion­ ate representation of minority youth in the juvenile justice system. The\ y, in and of themselves, do not yield evidence of racial bias nor do they explain wit\ h any degree of certainty the multitude of factors that contribute to disproportionality\ . Efforts to reduce DMC at this time are severely handicapped by most states’ lack of abi\ lity to consistent­ ly and comprehensively collect and analyze data generated throughout the\ juvenile jus­ tice system. Nevertheless, the present levels of minority overrepresenta\ tion within the juvenile justice system, both for minority juveniles as a whole and for \ individual racial/ ethnic groups, indicate that efforts to reduce DMC must first identify a\ nd then address all contributing factors.

This Summary outlines the progress that has been made at the national le\ vel during the past 5 years to address DMC; provides an update on DMC efforts and a\ chievements at the state level, including a summary of the status of state complianc\ e with the DMC core protection requirements; and describes Washington State’s efforts to reduce DMC over the past 10 years as an example of a comprehensive, community-based\ systems change approach to the problem. Washington’s prevention and intervention efforts include afterschool programs, mentoring, and family strengthening and co\ unseling.

The Summary concludes with a look at the modifications to the DMC requirement contained in the JJDP Act of 2002 and OJJDP’s action steps in support of continuing efforts to reduce DMC. 4 5 OJJDP responded to nearly 80 technical assistance requests from 1997 thr\ ough 2002, 46 of which were made during the last 2 years. In addition to technical \ assistance and consultation upon request, OJJDP updated instructions to the states for \ developing their DMC compliance plans and provided expanded and indepth DMC trainin\ g for state DMC compliance, the Office trained its State Representatives in DM\ C issues and in the use of an updated DMC Compliance Determination Checklist.

In March 2000, OJJDP published the second edition of the Disproportionate Minority (Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Manual Checklist and sample tools that may be adopted for use by the states. OJ\ JDP also conducted training on how to use the Manual.

DMC efforts, and completion of a library of state DMC reports—a centr\ al repository page and library of reports current as these resources have proven valua\ ble to the field.

in March 2002, invited 45 researchers in the social sciences to a meetin\ g that presented an orientation to DMC research, from which a list of 22 interested and q\ ualified By partnering with a variety of contractors and grantees, OJJDP provides\ training and technical assistance, research strategies, and tools for disseminating i\ nformation that help states and localities in their efforts to reduce DMC. Examples of t\ he partnerships OJJDP Assistance to States and Localities state personnel at regional training conferences and other training even\ ts. Moreover, to enable appropriate monitoring and use of a uniform methodology in determining Confinement Technical Assistance Manual Prevention, 2000), which has been widely distributed throughout the nation. The is user-friendly and provides information about lessons learned in the field and exemplary state and local efforts. It contains the Compliance Determ\ ination Other goals reached in recent years include development of a DMC page on\ OJJDP’s W eb site, use of the compliance determination process to guide and enhanc\ e state for historical records of DMC efforts in each state. OJJDP has kept the \ DMC Web To expand the DMC research consultant pool for the use of states and locali\ ties, OJJDP, research consult ants was developed. In August 2002, OJJDP also sponsored a DMC researchers’ focus group to help the Office develop a DMC research agenda.

OJJDP Assistance to States and Localities Through Contractors/Grantees supported by OJJDP appear below.

National Efforts To Address DMC Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update National DMC Training, Technical Assistance, and Information Dissemination Initiative Recognizing the need to foster the development, documentation, and natio\ nwide dis­ semination of effective strategies to reduce DMC, OJJDP launched a long-\ term national training and technical assistance initiative through a cooperative agree\ ment with a private provider, Research and Evaluation Associates (REA), in 1997. The goal of the initiative is to give states and localities broad-based knowledge about \ DMC and to develop practical and targeted tools to address the factors in their jur\ isdictions that contribute to it.

The initiative began with an extensive review of DMC literature in acade\ mic journals and edited books from the 10 years preceding 1997, resulting in the publ\ ication of an OJJDP Bulletin (Pope, Lovell, and Hsia, 2002). REA then developed and \ field-tested training curriculums to increase awareness of DMC issues among juvenile \ justice per­ sonnel and key decisionmakers. Since October 2000, REA has coordinated a\ nd moni­ tored intensive technical assistance to five states—Delaware, Kentuck\ y, Massachusetts, New Mexico, and South Carolina. In October 2001, three more states—Alaska, Cali­ fornia, and Tennessee—were added. REA has also established DMC listservs to facili­ tate the sharing of information and skills and has identified and traine\ d approximately 50 potential consultants to aid in the delivery of technical assistance \ on DMC-related issues. Recent activities include:

■ Continued identification of experts who may respond to technical assista\ nce requests from the states. ■ A DMC training of trainers. ■ A full DMC progress review of all states to identify state needs and for\ mulate a training and technical assistance plan to address them. ■ A planning meeting to restructure and refine the DMC intensive technical\ assistance process. Juvenile Justice Evaluation Center As a DMC technical assistance provider, the Juvenile Justice Evaluation Center (JJEC) assists OJJDP in building evaluation capacity in the states, especially \ as those efforts relate to projects and initiatives funded by the Title II, Part B, State Formula Grants Program. Through a survey and personal contact with state agency staff, \ JJEC has been assessing the level of need among states and localities for assistance i\ n developing their evaluation capacity. The following activities are particularly important in the effort to reduce DMC: 6 National Efforts To Address DMC Publication development. JJEC is developing a publication entitled How To Use Data To Make More Informed Decisions About Dealing With DMC to help states explore why minority overrepresentation exists at various decision points in the juv\ enile justice system and select appropriate intervention(s) to reduce it.

Short-term, state-specific consultation. JJEC helps states enhance their capacity to assess their DMC-related juvenile justice programs and initiatives and t\ o incorporate evaluation into the program development and planning processes. For exam\ ple, in response to a request for assistance from Idaho in 2002, JJEC provided state-level re­ ports of DMC assessment and program implementation from several other states. The outcome was the development of a partnership between the Idaho Departmen\ t of Juvenile Corrections and a university to conduct ongoing research and an\ alysis re­ garding minorities in the Idaho juvenile justice system.

Grants to develop evaluation partnerships. Through existing partnerships with state Statistical Analysis Centers (SACs), JJEC awarded grants to the Colora\ do, Illinois, and Iowa SACs in 2001. These grants enabled state and local juvenile justice\ agencies to form partnerships to assess their states’ initiatives to reduce DMC. \ Colorado studied selected juvenile diversion programs to better understand the extent to \ which minori­ ty overrepresentation exists. The study included a comparison of referra\ l rates to suc­ cessful termination rates for minority and nonminority youth. The work i\ n Illinois focused on the development of a database to support annual county-level \ monitoring of DMC rates at multiple stages of the juvenile justice system. Iowa wor\ ked with a number of key juvenile justice system stakeholders to develop and mainta\ in standard­ ized reports that included racial categories for planning, evaluation, a\ nd monitoring purposes. Iowa also worked with state and local officials to increase th\ eir ability to use Iowa court information in their decisionmaking.

Building Blocks for Youth Initiative The Building Blocks for Youth initiative (Building Blocks) is a partnership of organiza­ tions in the fields of law, justice, communications, and public policy. The partners in the initiative are the Youth Law Center (this grantee is the lead partner), the American Bar Association Juvenile Justice Center, the Justice Policy Institute, the Juvenile Law Center, Minorities in Law Enforcement, the National Council on Crime and Delin\ ­ quency, and the Pretrial Services Resource Center. The primary goals of the Building Blocks initiative are to protect minority youth in the justice system an\ d promote equi­ table and effective juvenile justice system policies. Building Blocks ha\ s obtained finan­ cial support from seven foundations, the Bureau of Justice Assistance, a\ nd OJJDP. 7 8 The Building Blocks initiative promotes an integrated five-pronged strat\ egy to address DMC. The five strategies, each of which builds on the others, are as fol\ lows:

■ Conducting new research. ■ Analyzing decisionmaking in the system. ■ Advocating for minority youth. ■ Building constituencies for change. ■ Developing communications strategies.

Recent and planned activities for the four strategies supported by OJJDP\ are 1 Conducting new research. Building Blocks has conducted a number of research proj­ ects and literature reviews on DMC and has published a number of documen\ ts on its findings.

Analyzing decisionmaking in the system. This strategy focuses on decisionmaking at 2 cur­ initiative also conducts site-based work to reduce overincarceration in \ Maryland and Louisiana, to reduce unnecessary transfers of youth to criminal court in\ Florida, and to Building constituencies for change. This strategy involves broad-based collaboration with national, state, and local organizations, policymakers, and other l\ eaders con­ cerned with civil rights, community development, and child welfare; the \ identifica­ constituents.

Developing communications strategies. The goal of this strategy is to develop and provide up-to-date, accurate, and useful information to constituent orga\ nizations, policymakers, and the public about issues related to DMC. Effective medi\ a outreach activities are based on the results of focus groups; relevant publicatio\ ns, policies, and legislation; national polls surveying public attitudes toward youth, cri\ me, and race; and case histories of individual offenders. 1OJJDP does not support providing direct advocacy for minority youth.

2 overrepresentation in the juvenile justice system.

Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update outlined below.

various points of contact within the juvenile justice system, such as initial police con­ tacts, detention, adjudication, and sentencing. The W. Haywood Burns Institute rently carries out projects in Phoenix, AZ, Seattle, W A, and other locations. The reduce unnecessary and racially disparate school suspensions in Kentucky\ .

tion of community leaders nationwide who can be spokespersons on DMC iss\ ues; and the dissemination of information about juvenile justice system refor\ m to these The W. Haywood Burns Institute, located in San Francisco, CA, works with local jurisd\ ictions to reduce minority 9 whether DMC is an issue in the state. When states determine that DMC exi\ sts, they are required to conduct an indepth examination of the treatment of both \ minority and nonminority youth at various decision points in the juvenile justice sys\ tem and, where appropriate, to implement intervention strategies designed to reduce DMC\ . See “Sum­ on the compliance status among the jurisdictions participating in the Fo\ rmula Grants review of FY 2002 state plan updates.

A significant number of jurisdictions (23 states and the District of Co\ lumbia) have completed the identification and assessment phases, are implementing the\ intervention phase, and have submitted updated DMC data, demonstrating ongoing monito\ ring efforts. In addition to these activities, three of these jurisdictions c\ ontinue to update their assessment studies and conduct evaluations of their intervention e\ fforts. The other jurisdictions have engaged in various levels of DMC activities.

The focus of state assessments is to determine why DMC exists in order t\ o address it of public forums, interviews, mail surveys of juvenile justice and other\ related person­ nel, and interviews of minority juveniles and their families. Responses 3 to an OJJDP survey of all states conducted in November 2000 yielded a national pictu\ re of the fac­ specific contributing factors and the extent of their influence varied w\ ithin and across states, the most frequently identified factors were found in the followi\ ng interrelated spheres: the juvenile justice system, the educational system, the socioe\ conomic condi­ 3Information was obtained from 44 states: responses were received from 29\ state Juvenile Justice Specialists, and OJJDP ing in the Formula Grants Program, and information was not available for\ four states. Puerto Rico is exempt from the DMC core requirement, and the other four territories are exempted from f\ urther DMC studies because they have determined that DMC does not exist in their facilities of confinement.

Update on State Compliance With the DMC Core Requirement To participate in the JJDP Act Formula Grants Program, a state must first i\ dentify mary of State Compliance With the DMC Core Requirement” (page 10) for a report Program (48 states, 5 territories, and the District of Columbia), base\ d on OJJDP’s Findings of States’ DMC Assessment Studies successfully. Assessments to gather information on contributing factors include quan\ tita­ tive research (analysis and tracking of case files) and qualitative researc\ h in the form tors contributing to DMC, as identified by the states’ assessment research, and of the activities and programs the states had designed to address those factors. Although the tions, and the family.

Efforts by States To Address DMC State Representatives provided information on 15 states. Two states (South Dakota and Wyoming) are not participat­ 10 * * Mississippi Missouri † ‡ * ‡ Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update Summary of State Compliance With the DMC Core Requirement The following summary of state compliance with the DMC core requirement, pursuant to Section 31.303(j) of the JJDP Formula Grants Regulation (28 C.F.R. Part 31), is based on FY 2002 Formula Grant applications as of December 2002. In addition to completing the identification and assessment phases in earlier years, three states continue to monitor their DMC trends each year, update their assessment studies, implement intervention strategies to address identified factors that contribute to DMC, and conduct evaluations of their DMC efforts:

Colorado Pennsylvania W ashington The District of Columbia and 20 states have completed the identification and assess­ ment phases, are implementing the intervention phase, and also have submitted updated DMC data, demonstrating ongoing monitoring efforts:

Alaska Idaho New York Arkansas Minnesota North Dakota California Oklahoma Connecticut Oregon Delaware Montana South Carolina District of Columbia Nevada Tennessee Georgia New Jersey Virginia Four states have completed the identification and assessment phases, are implement­ ing the intervention phase, and plan to update DMC identification data and/or assess­ ment studies:

Indiana Kansas Michigan New Mexico One state has completed the identification phase, is implementing the intervention phase, and is conducting a formal assessment study.

Alabama Four states have completed the identification phase, are implementing the inter­ vention phase, and plan to conduct formal assessments:

Louisiana N orth Carolina Ohio W est Virginia 11 ‡ ‡ * † ‡ Efforts by States To Address DMC Eleven states have completed the identification and assessment phases and are implementing the intervention phase:

Arizona Iowa Texas Florida Maryland Utah H awaii Massachusetts Wisconsin Illinois Nebraska One state became a participating state in the Formula Grants Program in 1999.

It has completed the identification phase and is co nducting an assessment study:

Kentucky T wo states in which the minority juvenile population recently exceeded 1 percent of the total juvenile population, which requires them now to comply with the DMC r equirement, have partially completed the identification phase:

M aine V ermont Four territories have completed the identification phase, which revealed that minority juveniles were not being disproportionately detained:

American Samoa Guam N orthern Marianas Virgin Islands One territory has been exempted by the U.S. Census Bureau from reporting racial statistics and, therefore, is exempt from complying with the DMC requirement:

Puerto Rico T wo states are under a drawdown restriction of 25 percent of the FY 2002 Formula Grant allocation pending submission of required information:

N ew Hampshire Rhode Island T wo states did not participate in the FY 2002 Formula Grants Program:

South Dakota Wyoming Began to receive intensive DMC technical assistance in January 2002 to further enhance DMC efforts.

Received intensive DMC technical assistance from November 2000 to July 2001 to further enhance DMC efforts.

Received intensive DMC technical assistance since November 2000 to further enhance their DMC efforts. Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update Juvenile Justice System Several factors within the juvenile justice system contribute to DMC:

■ Racial stereotyping and cultural insensitivity: Eighteen states identified racial stereotyping and cultural insensitivity—both intentional and unintent\ ional—on the part of the police and others in the juvenile justice system (e.g.,\ juvenile court workers and judges) as important factors contributing to higher arrest \ rates, higher charging rates, and higher rates of detention and confinement of minorit\ y youth.

The demeanor and attitude of minority youth can contribute to negative t\ reatment and more severe disposition relative to their offenses. The belief that \ minority youth cannot benefit from treatment programs also leads to less frequent\ use of such options. ■ Lack of alternatives to detention and incarceration: Eight states identified the lack of alternatives to detention and incarceration as a cause of the frequen\ t use of con­ finement. In some states, detention centers are located in the state’\ s largest cities, where most minority populations reside. With a lack of alternatives to detention, nearby detention centers become “convenient” placements for urban \ minority youth. ■ Misuse of discretionary authority in implementing laws and policies: Five states observed that laws and policies that increase juvenile justice professio\ nals’ discre­ tionary authority over youth contribute to harsher treatment of minority\ youth. One state notes that “bootstrapping” (the practice of stacking offens\ es on a single inci­ dent) is often practiced by police, probation officers, and school syst\ em personnel. ■ Lack of culturally and linguistically appropriate services: Five states identified the lack of bicultural and bilingual staff and the use of English-only i\ nformational materials for the non-English-speaking population as contributing to min\ orities’ misunderstanding of services and court processes and their inability to \ navigate the system successfully. Educational System T en states identified the lack of educational resources in schools in min\ ority neighbor­ hoods, the failure of schools to engage minority students and their familie\ s, the inabil­ ity to prevent early and high rates of school dropout among minority stu\ dents, and the concomitant failure of minority students and their families to participa\ te fully in the educational system as factors contributing to early academic failure and\ early involve­ ment in delinquency. 12 Efforts by States To Address DMC Socioeconomic Conditions Thirteen states identified poverty, substance abuse, few job opportunities, and high crime rates in predominantly minority neighborhoods as placing minority youth at higher risk for delinquent behaviors. Moreover, concerted law enforcement targeting of high-crime areas yields higher numbers of arrests and formal processi\ ng of minority youth. At the same time, these communities have fewer positive role models and fewer service programs that function as alternatives to confinement and/\ or support positive youth development.

Three states identified the commission of more crime—and more serious\ crime—by minority youth as an important factor contributing to DMC. An assessment\ study in one of these states determined that between one-fourth and one-half of t\ he racial disparity in confinement was due to racial differences in seriousness of\ the offenses and frequency of arrests.

Family Eleven states found that a disproportionate number of youth in confineme\ nt came from low-income, single-parent households (female-headed households, in part\ icular) and households headed by adults with multiple low-paying jobs or unsteady em\ ployment.

Family disintegration, diminished traditional family values, parental su\ bstance abuse, and insufficient supervision contribute to delinquency development. Pove\ rty reduces minority youths’ ability to access existing alternatives to detention\ and incarceration as well as competent legal counsel. One state found that minority youth \ were diverted from criminal prosecution at lower rates than nonminority youth and were\ less likely to appear at diversion hearings, to comply with diversion requirements, and\ to be diverted for subsequent offenses than nonminority youth in similar situations. An\ other state noted that, although preadjudication options were offered equally to min\ ority youth and nonminority youth, the rate at which these options were revoked for \ technical violations was higher for minority youth. Given the multiple stressors a\ nd limitations experienced by many minority families, their relative inability to compl\ y with the requirements of diversion programming is not surprising.

State Actions To Reduce DMC The states that responded to OJJDP’s November 2000 survey have instituted a variety of activities and programs to address the contributing factors to DMC id\ entified by their research. The most frequently adopted strategies were community-ba\ sed preven­ tion, intervention, and diversion programs (30 states) and cultural se\ nsitivity training (20 states). These and other actions to reduce DMC are summarized belo\ w. 13 14 Thirty states have funded prevention and intervention programs in commun\ ities with quent behaviors and place them at a disadvantage in navigating the juven\ ile justice system. Examples of the kinds of programs created are minority family ad\ vocate, pro­ bation advocate, parenting projects for Spanish-speaking parents, Hispan\ ic case man­ for American Indian families, and many afterschool and evening programs.\ In addition to creating prevention and intervention programs, several st\ ates increased their alternatives to detention and incarceration by instituting home de\ tention, inten­ sive supervision, electronic monitoring, emergency shelters, expedited p\ rograms to reduce inappropriate and unnecessary confinement, transition and afterca\ re services for African American males leaving secure correctional institutions, and\ many other similar programs.

forcement, educational, juvenile justice, and human services systems. So\ me states have youth, four states have sought to increase the cultural diversity of the\ ir staff through recruitment and promotion practices. One of these states established min\ ority intern­ ship programs. Five states have made efforts to improve their juvenile j\ ustice systems by developing informational materials in languages other than English, a\ dding juvenile court probation staff in tribal juvenile courts, recruiting members of m\ inority groups to serve on community accountability boards, providing better information t\ o parents, and DMC. 4 Three states established local committees to monitor and track DMC at th\ e local level and advocate for programs to reduce DMC. Six states have worked to enhan\ ce relation­ minority groups in planning and implementing programs for minority youth\ . In one 4In addition to these state conferences, the Coalition for Juvenile Justi\ ce holds a national DMC conference annually with OJJDP funding support.

Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update Community-Based Prevention, Intervention, and Diversion Programs large minority concentrations. These most frequently used strategies add\ ress the factors in the families and communities of minority youth that predispose the youth to delin­ agers in elementary schools to increase school attendance, an Elder-Mentor Program Efforts To Increase Cultural Sensitivity, Cultural Competency, and Public Aw areness of DMC Issues Twenty states have instituted cultural sensitivity training for personnel\ in the law en­ developed curriculums on cultural sensitivity and some have held confere\ nces. To fur­ ther assure cultural competency in the juvenile justice system’s response to minority reducing barriers to advocacy. Three states have held annual statewide conferences on Community Empowerment ships between the juvenile justice system and minority communities and have en\ gaged Efforts by States To Address DMC state, for example, American Indian villages have initiated disposition \ of various mis­ demeanor offenses committed by local youth.

Standardized Screening Instruments To counter subtle racial stereotyping and bias, seven states have adopted s\ tandardized screening instruments to achieve more objective decisionmaking. This inc\ ludes using standardized risk and needs assessment classification systems, developin\ g model intake screening guidelines, mandating prosecutorial standards, and employing s\ tandardized diagnostic tools.

Strengthened State Leadership T wenty-one states have established DMC subcommittees as part of their Sta\ te Advisory Groups. Several of these subcommittees are strong advocates for priority\ funding to reduce DMC. They strive to enhance public awareness of and focus on DMC \ issues, develop plans to reduce DMC, and monitor the implementation of these pla\ ns. To assure focused efforts, state agencies increasingly recognize the import\ ance of estab­ lishing state DMC coordinator positions. As of 2002, 20 states have desi\ gnated state DMC coordinators, an increase from 10 states in 2000. These coordinators\ , working in partnership with DMC subcommittees, can champion DMC issues; become a\ repos­ itory of DMC information, resources, and technical assistance; and facil\ itate sustained DMC efforts statewide.

Continued Collection and Monitoring of DMC Data Eight states plan to collect and monitor DMC data on an ongoing basis. A\ t least two of them have done so consistently over the past years. Others will impro\ ve, complete, or unify their juvenile justice information systems. One state plans to \ merge its data collection efforts with those of other related agencies.

Systems Change Through Legislation Oregon and Washington have institutionalized systems improvement through legisla­ tive efforts. Oregon passed a law mandating cultural competency in all s\ tate agencies.

To achieve this, the state first developed youth advocacy services, cultura\ l competency program criteria, and a minority internship program in each of the three\ counties with the highest numbers of minority youth and then replicated these elements\ in other counties. Oregon also developed transition services for African American\ and 15 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update American Indian males and minority females leaving state secure correcti\ onal institu­ tions; alternative education services for high-risk, court-involved Hisp\ anic youth; and the Oregon Leadership Institute Project to reduce school dropouts among \ Hispanic youth.

In Washington State, four pieces of legislation emerged from DMC assessment \ studies.

The legislation led to the adoption of prosecutorial standards, the deve\ lopment of experimental programs implementing prosecutor guidelines to reduce racia\ l inequality in the prosecution of juveniles, a requirement for state agencies superv\ ising youth adjudicated delinquent or convicted in criminal court to report annually\ on minority representation, and the establishment of local juvenile justice advisory\ committees to monitor and report annually on proportionality and to review and report on citizen complaints regarding bias or disparity within local juvenile justice systems. Washing- ton’s comprehensive systems change efforts to reduce DMC over the past 10 ye\ ars are featured later in this Summary.

Remaining Challenges Many states and localities have made great strides in understanding the \ factors that contribute to DMC and have designed and implemented strategies to addres\ s those factors. Some states and localities have even attempted to evaluate thei\ r efforts and monitor their DMC trends. However, important challenges remain, and they must be overcome before a significant reduction in DMC is achieved. These challe\ nges include:

■ Factors contributing to DMC have still not been identified in a number o\ f states.

Although a majority of states have implemented strategies to address DMC\ , at least 18 states have yet to identify the factors contributing to DMC in their \ communities.

This is primarily because they have been unable to complete quality asse\ ssment research, a task that requires not only high levels of data collection a\ nd analysis skills but also an indepth conceptual understanding of complex DMC issue\ s. ■ Incomplete and inconsistent data systems hinder DMC efforts. Incomplete and inconsistent data systems constitute another important barrier to DMC as\ sessment and monitoring in many states. Some states have recognized a need to enh\ ance juvenile justice information systems but have improved little to date. ■ Evaluation of DMC efforts and monitoring of DMC trends should be ongoing\ .

Ongoing and comprehensive data collection to monitor DMC rates provides \ valu­ able feedback on the effectiveness of a state’s overall strategy to reduce DMC over time. Evaluation of intervention activities yields information about whe\ ther a spe­ cific intervention is working. The state can then examine which elements\ of the 16 Efforts by States To Address DMC strategy made a difference. On the other hand, where DMC rates persist o\ r increase further, careful study can lead to appropriate modifications or new intervention strategies. Although many states recognize the need to conduct an ongoin\ g evalua­ tion of DMC efforts to monitor trends, many states have not done so, in \ part be­ cause of the data problems described above. Four states have attempted t\ o gather and compare DMC data annually. One of these states has established what can be considered a model monitoring system that tracks DMC trends in a consistent and timely manner. This state also reports encouraging signs of downward DMC rates. ■ Reducing DMC requires systems change as well as programmatic components.\ Although the majority of states commonly recognize that multiple factors at differ­ ent decision points contribute to DMC, they have primarily invested in delinquen­ cy prevention and intervention programs that focus on minority youth, th\ eir families, and communities. Systems change—efforts to address the fact\ ors within the juvenile justice system that contribute to DMC—is also necessary. As part of efforts to institute a cultural competency model, cultural sensitivity training for personnel involved in the juvenile justice system and increasing cultura\ l diversity among staff should be systematically provided, enhanced, and monitored. \ Similarly, systematic training in the use of standardized screening instruments is necessary to achieve maximum objectivity in decisionmaking. Two states have instituted leg­ islative reforms to assure that policy and procedural changes are broad \ based and long lasting. Two other states have expanded their programmatic DMC efforts to include a systems change component. ■ Mechanisms to assess and respond to DMC issues need to be institutionali\ zed.

DMC is a pervasive and deeply entrenched social phenomenon that requires\ multi­ faceted, comprehensive efforts over a long period of time. Factors such as frequent staff turnover, competing priorities, and the complex nature of the issues affecting DMC can impede these efforts. To achieve focus and consistency in reducing DMC, states should establish and institutionalize mechanisms that examine and\ respond to the factors that contribute to it. At a minimum, state infrastructure sh\ ould include a state-level DMC coordinator and an effective DMC subcommittee working \ in partnership to address DMC issues. 17 19 proach to DMC that incorporates both systems change and programmatic eff\ orts. Over reduce DMC:

■ Conducting research studies. ■ Enacting legislation to ensure policy and procedure changes. ■ Developing and sustaining programmatic and administrative initiatives at\ the state and county levels.

sentation in its juvenile justice system. Research studies have identifi\ ed the factors and location of DMC in the main stages of case processing in the juvenil\ e justice sys­ decisionmaking at certain stages of the juvenile justice process and als\ o have required state agencies to monitor and report annually on how county juvenile cou\ rts handle tor county courts, with senior staff members of the agencies also servin\ g as advocates Juvenile Justice Advisory Committee (GJJAC), which is the State Adviso\ ry Group, has taken a leadership role in assessing the representation of minority \ youth in the juvenile justice system and has allocated funds to conduct research, pro\ vide technical assistance, and support prevention and intervention projects that addres\ s DMC.

the first of a series of studies and projects to examine the specific pr\ oblems faced by overrepresentation of minority youth. Where disproportionality was found\ , GJJAC developed policies and strategies to remedy the problem. Racial Disproportionality in the Juvenile Justice System (Bridges et al., 1993), cases processed in five counties with high rates of violent crime and ch\ ronic juvenile offending, high levels of minority concentration within the population, \ and a high degree of urbanization. The researchers conducted approximately 170 inte\ rviews with justice officials and spent 65 hours on police ridealongs. The analyses \ of this informa­ tion revealed racial and ethnic disparities at all stages of the juvenil\ e justice process. W ashington State provides a good example of a comprehensive, research-based ap­ the past decade, Washington has implemented three basic strategies in its efforts to Each strategy has contributed to the state’s overall effort to reduce minority overrepre­ contributing to DMC in Washington, offering empirical evidence about the degree tem. Laws enacted by the Washington State Legislature have established standards for minority youth. State agencies in Washington have maintained programs that moni­ for statewide and local DMC programs and initiatives. In particular, the Governor’s Conducting Research Studies Since 1988, GJJAC has produced annual reports on the characteristics of youth who come in contact with Washington’s juvenile justice system. In 1992, GJJAC initiated minority youth in the state’s juvenile justice system. The studies assessed the degree of The first study, which was conducted by the University of Washington, collected empirical data on Wa shington State’s Experience Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update Minority youth were more likely than whites to be referred, detained, pr\ osecuted, adju­ dicated, and confined in juvenile correctional facilities, and at rates \ higher than would be expected given their numbers in the population. By comparing differen\ ces among counties in Washington to identify those with the highest levels of DMC, the study concluded that the high levels of DMC in these counties could not be exp\ lained sole­ ly by a higher number of minority youth committing offenses, getting arr\ ested or cited and referred to the juvenile court, and then being prosecuted and adjudi\ cated for their offenses.

The study also showed that the influence of race and ethnicity varied at\ different points within the juvenile justice system. At the detention decision point, min\ ority youth were more likely to be detained than white youth, even after diffe\ rences between the offenses and backgrounds of the youth were taken into account. This finding is extremely important because the mere fact of being detained prior to adj\ udication seemed to affect subsequent stages of case processing. Although minority\ youth were, on average, prosecuted at substantially higher rates than whites, this o\ ccurred primari­ ly because prosecution was significantly more likely for minority youth \ who had a record of juvenile court referral and for any youth detained prior to ad\ judication.

At adjudication, minority youth—particularly those with records—we\ re more likely than white youth with similar offense records to be adjudicated delinque\ nt. As with prosecution, youth who were detained prior to adjudication were also muc\ h more like­ ly to be adjudicated delinquent than other youth. These factors combine \ to cause pro­ nounced disparities at adjudication because white youth and youth who ha\ d not been detained prior to adjudication were significantly more likely than minor\ ity youth to have the charges filed against them dismissed by the court.

Finally, racial and ethnic disparities at sentencing correlated to racial diffe\ rences in the likelihood of detention prior to adjudication. In statistical analyses, detention\ had a direct and independent influence on sentencing outcomes, above and beyon\ d the ef­ fects of other factors. Youth who were detained preadjudication were more likely to receive sentences to correctional confinement than youth with similar of\ fenses and offense histories who were not detained. This last finding was particula\ rly problematic because, at the time, the state actually had prescriptive sentencing gui\ delines for juve­ niles based solely on the youth’s age, criminal history, and severity of offense.

In response to the study’s findings and recommendations, the Washington Legislature in 1993 directed the Department of Social and Health Services to begin m\ onitoring levels of DMC in county courts and state correctional facilities. (See \ “Engrossed Sub­ stitute House Bill 1966,” page 22.) As part of this monitoring requi\ rement, the Uni­ versity of Washington completed a series of subsequent studies between 1995 and 2000\ to evaluate the county programs, assess the causes of DMC, and document \ any 20 Washington State’s Experience changes in levels of disproportionality over time (Bridges et al., 1995\ and 2000; Bridges, Steen, and Bates, 1997; Bridges and Steen, 1998; and Bridges, Anderson- Bond, and Desmond, 1999). Although all of these studies reveal how statewide changes in levels of DMC influence county programs and caseloads, the fi\ ndings of the 1998 study led to new strategies for reducing racial and ethnic disp\ arities in juve­ nile justice decisionmaking. That study examined case files, predisposit\ ion reports, and probation officers’ assessments of youth for a sample of cases ad\ judicated in the early 1990s. The study asked whether officials’ perceptions of the cr\ imes of minority and white offenders were different, whether differences in perceptions of white and minority youth and their crimes resulted in differences in assessments of the risk of reoffending, and whether any such differences in assessments of risk resulted in differ­ ences in sentencing recommendations.

The 1998 study found that probation officers consistently portrayed blac\ k youth differ­ ently than white youth in written court reports, more frequently attribu\ ting blacks’ de­ linquency to negative attitudinal and personality traits. In contrast, d\ epictions of white youth more frequently stressed the influence of the individual’s surrounding social envi­ ronment, including factors such as negative peer influences and dysfunct\ ional families.

The study also found that probation officers assessed the criminal acts \ and life situations of minority youth and white youth quite differently, even when the youths’ offenses and backgrounds were similar. In assessing the likelihood of recidivism of minority offenders, probation officers relied more heavily on negative internal attributions\ (i.e., person­ ality traits) than on the severity of youths’ crimes or on their cri\ minal histories. For example, probation officers attributed black crime to negative personali\ ty or attitudinal t raits of black offenders, judged black youth to be more dangerous than w\ hite youth, and frequently recommended more severe sentences for black youth than wh\ ite youth.

Therefore, perceptions and attributions about youth and their crimes wer\ e a mecha­ nism by which an offender’s race influenced judgments of dangerousness and sentenc­ ing recommendations.

Based on these findings, the study recommended that court personnel be t\ rained to base their assessment of a youth’s risk of reoffending and amenability to treatment on criteria applied equally to minority youth and white youth. Further, the study recom­ mended that the courts and state agencies should provide additional trai\ ning to court workers to specifically remedy unwarranted racial disparities in assessm\ ents of youth.

Enacting Legislation To Ensure Policy and Procedure Changes Publication of the 1993 study triggered extensive debate about DMC in Washington State, including a firestorm of publicity about racial disparities in th\ e juvenile courts.

As noted earlier, the study documented DMC in Washington’s largest counties, reveal­ ing disparities at many points within the juvenile justice system. The s\ tudy also made 21 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update significant recommendations for policy initiatives to improve the admini\ stration of juvenile justice in Washington State and thereby reduce DMC. The following are the study’s major findings:

■ Procedures for the collection and analysis of information on youth refer\ red to and prosecuted, adjudicated, and sentenced in juvenile courts need improveme\ nt. ■ Routine and extensive diversity training for law enforcement and juvenil\ e justice officials needs to be initiated. ■ Procedures for disseminating information about the administration of juv\ enile justice, such as specifying that rules and procedures be translated into\ foreign languages to assist new immigrants, need to be improved. ■ The section of the Washington Criminal Code that specifies criteria for use in detention decisions needs to be revised. ■ The section of the Washington Criminal Code that specifies conditions on state funds granted to county juvenile courts needs to be revised. ■ Uniform principles and practices in the prosecution and adjudication of \ juvenile offenses need to be developed. ■ Sentencing standards to redress any adverse effects of preadjudication d\ etention need to be reviewed and revised. ■ Alternatives to detention and confinement for juvenile offenders need to\ be developed. In response to these recommendations, the research findings, and the pub\ lic debate, the Washington Legislature enacted four major laws designed to reduce dispari\ ties in Washington’s juvenile justice system. These laws are discussed below.

Engrossed Substitute House Bill 1966 Engrossed Substitute House Bill (ESHB) 1966, enacted in 1993, required\ that counties using state funds above and beyond county program funds were required to\ address minority overrepresentation in detention and other juvenile facilities. \ The bill also mandated that a group of justice officials in the Office of the Administ\ rator of the Courts (the Juvenile Justice Racial Disproportionality Work Group) develop standards for the prosecution of juvenile offenders, review disproportionality in \ diversion, and review the use of detention in an effort to reduce disproportionality. Prosecutorial standards were subsequently adopted in 1995. 22 Washington State’s Experience House Bill 2319 Enacted in 1994, House Bill 2319 mandated statewide annual monitoring of\ racial dis­ proportionality in the juvenile courts at the county level. The law also\ provided funds in the 1993–95 biennial budget to “evaluate racial and ethnic disp\ arity within county programs,” including annual reporting on the effectiveness of county-\ based measures for reducing disproportionality within the state. Further, the law established local juve­ nile justice advisory committees at the county level to monitor and repo\ rt annually on proportionality and the effectiveness and cultural relevance of local an\ d state rehabili­ tative services for juveniles. The committees were also charged with rev\ iewing and re­ porting on citizen complaints regarding bias or disproportionality withi\ n local juvenile justice systems. (A number of the local advisory committees funded by G\ JJAC are also designated to serve as these committees.) The committees are required t\ o submit reports annually to the Washington State Sentencing Guidelines Commission, the agency that oversees all aspects of juvenile and criminal sentencing in \ the state and that reports biennially to the state legislature.

House Bill 2392 In response to concerns about racial disparities in juvenile prosecution\ s in Washington, House Bill 2392, passed in 1996, established an experimental program in \ two counties to implement and evaluate prosecutor guidelines to reduce racial inequal\ ity in the pros­ ecution of juveniles. An offender-based tracking system was developed and implemented in two participating prosecutors’ offices to track the application of\ prosecutorial stand­ ards in cases brought to juvenile court. The system showed whether the d\ ecision to prosecute or not prosecute was influenced by the race, gender, religion, or creed of the suspect or victim. As part of the experiment, researchers collected and \ analyzed data on the role of race in prosecutorial decisions, adjusting for the charac\ teristics of the offense, the suspects, and the victims involved in these cases.

The analysis found that, despite the guidelines, cases involving minorit\ y defendants were more likely to be waived to adult court than cases involving white \ defendants and that cases involving male defendants were more likely to be waived t\ o adult courts than cases involving female defendants. Cases involving white and female\ defendants had a higher likelihood of being diverted, whereas cases involving minority and male defendants had a higher likelihood of having charges filed. Although some racial dif­ ferences persisted despite the guidelines, no definitive conclusions cou\ ld be drawn about whether prosecutorial discretion contributed to DMC. The study fur\ ther found no clear pattern to explain the differences and recommended additional r\ esearch to include analysis of police reports. 23 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update Engrossed Substitute House Bill 3900 ESHB 3900, the Community Juvenile Accountability Act of 1997, required a\ variety of agencies to establish guidelines for the implementation of community-bas\ ed juvenile programs. In response to the law, juvenile court administrators developed criteria for evaluating the likelihood that a juvenile will commit subsequent crimes. The criteria have been formulated as an assessment instrument for evaluating youth, t\ he “Washing­ ton Association of Juvenile Court Administrators—Risk Assessment.”\ The criteria represent a significant step in the direction of a structured assessment\ of youth by court probation staff to reduce any discretionary biases in making recom\ mendations to the court prior to adjudication about risk of reoffense and postdispo\ sition need for services.

Developing and Sustaining Programmatic Initiatives at the State and County Levels As required by the laws described above, juvenile courts in Washington developed a range of new programs and policies directly aimed at reducing DMC in the\ following areas:

■ Enhancing cultural competency. ■ Monitoring, assessing, and formulating intervention strategies at the lo\ cal level. ■ Using standardized risk assessments at multiple points in the juvenile j\ ustice system. ■ Sustaining state support for local DMC efforts. The new programs and policies implemented in each of these areas are sum\ marized in the sections below.

Enhancing Cultural Competency All courts in the State of Washington completed cultural awareness or diversity train­ ing for juvenile court staff. In many courts, the training has become a \ routine part of staff orientation. In some courts, training focused on how cultural sens\ itivity to others can be applied to concrete decisionmaking situations involving youth. Ne\ arly all courts developed and made available to the public materials in different langua\ ges that make the court more accessible to youth and their families, particularly thos\ e whose primary language is not English. Interpreters were provided to enable non-Englis\ h-speaking youth and families to participate in juvenile court proceedings. A few c\ ourts success­ fully integrated minorities from their communities into the work of the \ court. When successfully implemented, these types of programs are expected to change\ the culture of the court by fostering more diverse perspectives on juvenile justice \ and on the treatment of juvenile offenders. 24 Washington State’s Experience The Yakima County Juvenile Court has implemented these changes. Yakima County is a large, primarily rural county that relies heavily on agriculture an\ d particularly the production of fruit and row crops as its primary source of revenue and empl\ oyment.

Hispanics are the largest minority group in Yakima, and 35 percent of all youth in the 1990 population were of Hispanic or Latin origin. Many of the Hispanics \ in Yakima are relatively recent immigrants, part of the large population of farm worke\ rs who support the agricultural industry. In 1993, DMC in Yakima reached a peak, with Hispanics constituting 51 percent of all youth referred to juvenile court, 63 perc\ ent of all youth detained, 56 percent of all youth prosecuted, and 57 percent of all yout\ h sentenced to juvenile correctional facilities. A change of leadership in the Yakima juvenile court in 1995 resulted in the implementation of many new programs. Among the most\ signifi­ cant of these was the development of volunteer-staffed community accountability boards for pretrial diversion. These boards oversee diversion placements in dif\ ferent commu­ nities within the county and serve as liaisons among the court, the comm\ unity, and juvenile offenders. In developing the boards, the court successfully rec\ ruited volunteers from Hispanic communities across the county. As a result, the court now has a work­ force of volunteers that includes numerous Hispanics, and a large majori\ ty of the di­ version boards are Spanish speaking. Creation of the boards and the recruitment of volunteers from Hispanic communities across Yakima has had the effect of creating a culture within the court that is more aware and responsive to the unique\ challenges and problems of Hispanic youth.

Monitoring, Assessing, and Formulating Intervention Strategies at the Local Level Some courts undertook the difficult process of examining the unique caus\ es of dispro­ portionality in their own jurisdictions. These courts now routinely moni\ tor the problem and examine measures of minority overrepresentation at each stage of cou\ rt operation.

The Benton-Franklin Juvenile Court, which has concurrent jurisdiction ov\ er juvenile justice in two adjacent communities, exemplifies this practice. These co\ unties make up the area surrounding the Hanford nuclear reservation in eastern Washington. Although the counties are primarily rural, they have concentrated populations in \ small urban centers. Further, the minority population in the two counties consists primarily of His­\ panics and African Americans. Whereas the African American community has\ exist­ ed in the area since the 1940s, the Hispanic population has grown in rec\ ent years as migrant workers and their families passing through eastern Washington permanently settled in the counties.

In response to concerns about DMC, the Benton-Franklin Juvenile Court in\ itiated a local DMC study and established procedures for routinely collecting and \ analyzing in­ formation on minority youth referred to the court. The court now produces an annual report on DMC, thoroughly documenting the concentration of minority yout\ h at each 25 26 stage of the juvenile justice process. The court has also sponsored an a\ ll-staff training session on DMC, focusing on the problems of minority youth in the area. \ The reports court administrators have examined and changed rules of procedure for de\ tention and diversion in order to guard against racial bias in court proceedings. Th\ e Benton-Franklin risk assessments in detention and diversion decisions in response to DMC\ concerns.

State. Individual courts use the assessment instrument differently: some\ administrators some use the instrument to structure decisionmaking at many stages of th\ e juvenile justice process, while others use it simply to record attributes of offe\ nders and to track them through disposition. Counties that rely on the risk assessment inst\ rument in decisionmaking typically use it for one or more of the following purpose\ s:

■ For detention screening after a youth has been determined to meet the ad\ mis­ ■ As part of pre- or postdisposition diagnostic evaluations. ■ For all cases involving a motion for deferred disposition and all postad\ judication probation cases. ■ In the cases of all adjudicated sex offenders.

All probation counselors use one part of the risk assessment instrument \ for preliminary evaluation of youth when they are placed on probation. Probation counsel\ ors complete liminary evaluation.

Although not developed primarily for the purpose of reducing DMC, the ri\ sk assess­ ment instrument structures decisionmaking by court officials, imposing a\ uniform procedure to evaluate youth. Using standardized risk assessments has the\ potential to reduce the number of racially biased assessments and recommendations for\ juveniles convicted of crimes. 5 5Analyses of risk assessment data from cases processed since 1998 reveal \ that racial differences in criminal risk levels diminished when differences in defendants’ criminal histories and soc\ ial risk scores were taken into account. In other words, the risk assessment procedures yield assessments of offenders in \ which race has no statistically significant influence. More thorough analyses are needed to determine whether race i\ nfluences sentencing and treatment recommendations.

Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update and training have heightened the awareness of court personnel to DMC iss\ ues. Further, court was among the first in Washington State to discuss and implement standardized U sing Standardized Risk Assessments at Multiple Points in the Juvenile Justice System A standard risk assessment is now in use in all of the juvenile courts i\ n Washington use it at only one stage in the court process, while others use it throu\ ghout. Further, sion criteria.

the full risk assessment for all youth identified as moderate and high risk by the pre­ Washington State’s Experience Sustaining State Support for Local DMC Efforts DMC studies of individual county courts have addressed the degree of dis\ proportional­ ity at each stage of system processing and the factors associated with t\ hat disproportion­ ality. Presently, GJJAC continues to allocate funds for technical assistance to counties\ to further analyze data on racial disproportionality and, based on data,\ to develop local plans and measures for reducing disproportionality. GJJAC currently supports the efforts of 17 local Juvenile Justice Advisory Committees. These committees coord\ inate and collaborate on efforts to reduce disproportionality through the developm\ ent of delin­ quency prevention and intervention services, community-based alternative\ s to secure detention and confinement, aftercare services, and staff training.

GJJAC also considers DMC reduction a priority issue and spent more than \ $500,000 on supporting it between 1997 and 2000. The following programs are examp\ les of those implemented at the county level and statewide to reduce DMC:

■ Diversion case trackers to assist youth in successfully completing a div\ ersion agreement.

■ Alternative school programs for youth accused of crimes who might not su\ cceed in other public schools. ■ Community programs that supplement parental supervision and mentoring of\ minority youth accused of crimes to help prevent those youth from commit\ ting new crimes. ■ Programs that perform a rapid needs assessment of each minority youth he\ ld in detention and develop individualized service plans to reduce recidivism.\ ■ Projects that work with Hispanic youth and their families to assist with\ problem identification and facilitate referral and access to needed services. ■ Afterschool and evening activities for American Indian youth to restore \ cultural pride, self-esteem, and commitment to community. ■ Gang awareness and prevention programs, alcohol and substance abuse educ\ ation, and domestic violence and sexual assault awareness programs. Summary of the Evolution of Washington State’s DMC Reforms Empirical research on the degree and the causes of DMC has played an int\ egral role in W ashington’s efforts to address DMC. The research has thus far produced a series of widely distributed reports on the problems of minority youth in juvenile\ courts. These reports, repeatedly presented and discussed at local conferences, workshops, and leg­ islative hearings, drew attention to DMC across the state. The research also inspired legislators and judicial officials to enact four major laws between 1993 and 1997 to 27 28 the courts, that state agencies monitor and report on the effects of the\ se programs, and that courts implement new measures for assessing and evaluating youth ad\ judicated for personnel across the state to the problems of minority youth and the nee\ d to reduce DMC. This heightened sensitivity to racial and ethnic disparities repres\ ents an impor­ issues have reduced disproportionality at most stages of the juvenile ju\ stice system.

an increase of approximately 264,780 children from 1,267,609 in 1990 to \ 1,532,386 in 1999. 6 In 1990, minority youth constituted 18 percent of the total youth popula\ tion, percent African American, and 2 percent American Indian. By 1999, the po\ pulations ed 22 percent of a total youth population that was 78 percent white, 9 p\ ercent Hispanic, Indian.

7 for the 1990s and the DMC index values for each decision point in 1990 a\ nd 1999.

of minority juveniles represented at each point in the juvenile justice \ system by the 6The data reported in this section are taken from Experience (Bridges et al., 2000).

7 due to the effects of rounding.

Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update address disparities in the administration of juvenile justice. The laws required that counties develop programs and policies to redress the problems of minority youth in crimes. In enacting these laws, the legislature and the senior staff in state agencies who advocated for the reforms significantly changed the rules and procedures of juvenile justice in Washington’s counties. Equally important, they sensitized judges and court tant cultural shift within the state’s courts. Concurrently, GJJAC has continued to provide financial and technical assistance to support prevention, intervention, and aftercare services for minority youth and to monitor DMC trends in the state.

DMC Trends in Washington State, 1990–99 As noted earlier in this Summary, Washington is one of only three states that have attempted to gather and compare DMC data annually. The data collected in Washing­ ton for the period 1990–99 show that the state’s comprehensive efforts to address DMC These data and the trends they represent are summarized in the sections \ that follow.

Overview Between 1990 and 1999, the youth population in Washington State grew 21 percent, which was 82 percent white, 6 percent Hispanic, 5 percent Asian/Pacific \ Islander, 4 of Hispanic and Asian youth had increased substantially, and minority youth constitut­ 6 percent Asian/Pacific Islander, 4 percent African American, and 2 percent American During the same period, the crime rate in Washington State decreased signifi­ cantly. Consistent with national trends, Washington’s violent crime rate dropped from 496 per 100,000 in 1990 to 371 per 100,000 in 1999. Table 2 shows the proportions of minority youth processed at several stages of Washington State’s juvenile court system The DMC index value for each decision point is calculated by dividing the pe\ rcentage Racial Disproportionality in County Juvenile Facilities: 10 Years Data on the racial composition of the population in 1990 and 1999 do not\ sum to 18 and 22 percent, respectively, Race N† * 1990 45,555 41,321 27.9 1.55 1991 49,242 44,936 27.9 1992 53,633 50,426 28.8 1993 53,455 50,938 29.8 1994 58,674 56,101 29.6 1995 59,391 57,876 28.6 1996 60,592 58,620 29.6 1997 57,568 55,820 29.8 1998 57,461 55,316 29.7 1999 52,397 49,720 29.5 1.34 1990 21,772 19,650 22.6 1.26 1991 23,468 21,264 22.7 1992 24,773 22,965 23.0 1993 24,414 22,991 24.4 1994 26,011 24,624 24.5 1995 25,394 23,978 25.0 1996 25,530 24,516 25.3 1997 24,202 23,316 26.2 1998 23,881 22,748 25.6 1999 22,259 20,867 25.7 1.17 ‡ 1990 2,489 2,437 48.5 2.70 1991 4,470 4,344 40.9 1992 4,544 4,438 44.0 1993 4,607 4,533 45.6 1994 5,493 5,409 44.2 1995 5,743 5,652 41.6 1996 6,565 6,479 44.6 1997 6,610 6,541 42.4 1998 6,725 6,645 40.8 1999 6,698 6,549 38.6 1.75 29 than 1.0 indicates that minorities are disproportionately represented. T\ he greater the continued on page 30 Table 2: Proportion of Minority Youth Processed Through the Juvenile Court System in Washington State, 1990–99, Including Changes in DMC Index Values Stage of Process Percent DMC Index and Year Known Minority YouthValue T otal referred to court Diverted from court/prosecution Detained for more than 24 hours before adjudication W ashington State’s Experience percentage of minority juveniles in the state’s total juvenile population. A value greater index number, the greater the amount of disproportionate representation. Therefore, \ 30 Race N† * § 1990 17,969 17,181 35.8 1.99 1991 20,040 19,108 34.8 1992 22,293 21,379 35.3 1993 21,051 20,480 36.9 1994 24,006 23,388 35.8 1995 25,284 24,679 34.2 1996 26,916 26,386 34.5 1997 26,388 25,905 34.1 1998 26,893 26,224 34.2 1999 23,563 22,817 33.6 1.53 || 1990 11,003 10,530 32.1 1.78 1991 12,527 11,957 31.7 1992 14,387 13,818 33.1 1993 13,866 13,487 34.8 1994 15,604 15,217 33.5 1995 16,135 15,804 32.4 1996 17,093 16,793 33.9 1997 16,507 16,254 33.5 1998 17,098 16,760 33.2 1999 15,188 14,714 31.7 1.44 Sentenced to county detention ¶ 1990 5,190 4,995 30.6 1.70 1991 5,733 5,476 31.1 1992 6,568 6,326 32.6 1993 6,334 6,197 35.5 1994 7,160 7,013 34.1 1995 7,726 7,609 34.1 1996 8,217 8,101 35.0 1997 8,069 7,967 35.4 1998 8,752 8,610 34.3 1999 6,845 6,696 33.2 1.51 continued on page 31 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update Stage of Process Percent DMC Index and Year Known Minority YouthValue Prosecuted (charges filed) A djudicated delinquent 31 Race N† * # 1990 1,263 1,229 39.9 2.22 1991 1,465 1,426 36.5 1992 1,559 1,521 39.7 1993 1,557 1,527 40.3 1994 1,893 1,854 41.4 1995 1,878 1,846 37.6 1996 1,805 1,787 40.5 1997 1,932 1,917 40.6 1998 1,644 1,624 41.9 1999 1,195 1,180 43.1 1.96 † * ‡ § || ¶ # DMC, and a consistent reduction in the extent of disproportionate minori\ ty represen­ index values).

Between 1990 and 1999, the proportion of minority youth referred to the \ juvenile court increased from 28 percent to 30 percent, a slightly smaller increase tha\ n occurred in the total youth population. The increase was attributable almost entirely to\ an increase in referrals of Hispanic youth. Washington State’s Experience Stage of Process Percent DMC Index and Year Known Minority YouthValue Sentenced to state correctional supervision Y ear counts refer to the year in which the originating referral for new criminal co nduct occurred. Only referrals for felonies and misdemeanors that originated and were handled within a single jurisdiction have been included.

T otal number of identifiable referrals was 547,968.

Includes African American, American Indian, Asian and Pacific Islander, Hispanic, and unspecified racial groups.

“Detained before adjudication” refers to at least one period of more than 24 hours spent in detention before the adjudication date. The 1990 counts underestimate the extent of preadjudication detention due to insufficient information to link the detention files to the referral files.

Refers to any charges filed within a single referral. Guilty (finding or pleas) on at least one count (within a single referral).

Incarceration in a county juvenile facility for at least one count (within a single referral).

Incarceration in a state juvenile correctional facility for at least one count (within a single referral).

Source: Washington State and King County databases.

this decade was marked by an increased concentration of minority youth i\ n the popula­ tion (from 18 percent to 22 percent), a decrease in the amount and ser\ iousness of juve­ nile crime, significant changes in the laws and policies of Washington in relation to tation in Washington’s juvenile justice system (as reflected in decreases in the DMC Y outh Referred to the Juvenile Court Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update During the same period, the severity of crimes attributed to minority youth declined.

In 1990, nearly 9 percent of all referrals involving minority youth were\ for serious offenses, compared with 4 percent of referrals for white youth. By 1999,\ only 6 percent of minority referrals were for serious felonies (the proportion for whi\ te youth remained at 4 percent). The racial composition of referrals (petitions to juvenile court, usual\ ly following arrests) for serious and violent crimes also changed.

A similar shift occurred in the history of criminal involvement of minor\ ity youth referred to court. Although minority youth were more likely than white y\ outh to be referred for more than one offense in any given year, the number of multiple referrals declined between 1990 and 1999. Whereas 32 percent of minority youth wer\ e referred for more than one offense in 1990 (compared with 22 percent of white yo\ uth), in 1999, only 28 percent of minority youth had more than one referral (the propo\ rtion for white youth remained at 22 percent).

Youth Diverted From Court/Prosecution Between 1990 and 1999, the total number of youth diverted from prosecuti\ on increased slightly. In 1990, 21,772 youth were diverted. By 1999, the total number diverte\ d increased slightly to 22,259, having reached a peak in 1994 of 26,011. B\ etween 1990 and 1999, the proportion of minority youth among those diverted fro\ m court increased, paralleling the increase that occurred in minority referrals. Whereas youth of color constituted 23 percent of the total population of youth diverted in 1990, t\ hey represented 26 percent of all youth diverted in 1999. This increase was \ primarily attributable to an increase in the proportion of Hispanic youth diverted\ , which rose from 5 percent in 1990 to 9 percent in 1999.

Y outh Detained Before Adjudication Despite increases in minority youth in the general population and in juv\ enile court re­ ferrals, the concentration of minority youth detained before adjudicatio\ n in Washing­ ton dropped sharply over the 10-year period. Prior to 1994, the proportion of minority youth detained statewide averaged nearly 45 percent—well above the co\ ncentration of minority youth referred to juvenile court. By 1999, this proportion h\ ad dropped to approximately 39 percent. The decline was primarily attributable to decr\ eases in detention of African American youth.

Prosecuted Youth Between 1990 and 1999, the concentration of minority youth prosecuted fo\ r crimes re­ mained relatively stable across the state. By 1999, minority youth const\ ituted 34 per­ cent of the total population of youth prosecuted. Rates of minority prosecution were 32 Washington State’s Experience fairly uniform across most counties. Only a few counties experienced inc\ reases in the percentage of prosecutions of minority youth, while some large counties \ experienced reductions in those percentages.

Youth Adjudicated Delinquent Only slight changes occurred in the concentration of minority youth adju\ dicated delin­ quent between 1990 and 1999. In 1990, minority youth constituted 32 perc\ ent of the total population of youth adjudicated delinquent. The concentration of m\ inority youth adjudicated delinquent peaked in 1993, reaching 35 percent of all adjudi\ cated youth.

By 1999, however, the proportion had returned to 32 percent.

Youth Committed to Local Detention Between 1990 and 1993, the proportion of juveniles sentenced to local de\ tention increased from 31 to 36 percent, closely following increases in minority\ youth being adjudicated delinquent. Starting in 1994, however, minority concentration in com­ mitments to detention declined, reaching 33 percent in 1999. This decline was primar­ ily associated with lower levels of detention for African American youth\ . During the same period, slight increases occurred in the percentages of Hispanic and American\ Indian youth committed to local detention.

Y outh Sentenced to Correctional Supervision Between 1990 and 1997, the proportion of minority youth sentenced to cor\ rectional supervision remained relatively stable at about 40 percent, dipping to 3\ 8 percent in 1995. In the last years of the decade, the proportion increased, from 41\ percent in 1997 to 43 percent in 1999. The percentage of juveniles committed to correcti\ onal supervi­ sion varied significantly across counties and different racial and ethni\ c groups during the last years of the decade. Although the percentage decreased among Af\ rican Ameri­ cans, it increased among American Indians, Asians/Pacific Islanders, and\ Hispanics.

Analysis of DMC Trends in Washington State At many stages of the juvenile justice system after referral, disproport\ ionate minority representation declined between 1990 and 1999, with the largest decline \ in detention before adjudication. The numbers of minority youth who were prosecuted, \ adjudicat­ ed, and sentenced were relatively stable. Overall, the proportion of min\ ority youth at each stage of the system either declined from peak values occurring in t\ he early 1990s or remained stable. T ypically, disparities began diminishing in 1994, shortly after the release of the first statewide study and the Washington State Legislature’s enactment 33 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update of the state’s first laws to redress DMC. A notable exception was the increase in the percentage of minority youth sentenced to correctional supervision between 1997 and 1999. Although many factors may have contributed to the increase, laws t\ hat took effect in 1998 appear to have increased judicial discretion over aspects\ of sentencing to local detention facilities. In 1998, juvenile court judges were afforded discretion to sentence some youth to terms as long as 1 year in local detention facili\ ties (in lieu of sentencing them to more secure correctional facilities). To the extent that judges sen­ tenced a disproportionate number of white youth to local detention and m\ inority youth to correctional supervision, the percentage of minorities among yo\ uth sen­ tenced to correctional facilities increased.

After the development of statewide risk assessment procedures in late 19\ 97, juvenile courts began collecting information on assessments of youth and sentenci\ ng recommen­ dations in 1998. When adjustments are made for differences in defendants\ ’ criminal his­ tories and social risk scores, these data show that racial differences i\ n risk assessments diminished significantly. That is, the risk assessment procedures yielded evaluations of offenders in which race had no statistically significant independent inf\ luence. There­ fore, the use of risk assessment procedures has significantly reduced ra\ cial disparities in evaluations of offenders.

Any rigorous analysis of DMC must also examine change at the local level\ . County differences in Washington between 1990 and 1999 were significant. Many courts that aggressively implemented measures to reduce levels of disproportionality\ witnessed significant reductions in the percentage of minority youth at many stage\ s of the juve­ nile justice process. In these courts, judges, administrators, and staff\ developed policies and programs that are consistent with national models for reducing disproportionality.

A striking example was rural Yakima County in eastern Washington. The proportion of minority youth in Yakima’s total youth population increased from 43 percent in 1990 to 60 percent in 1999, but the proportion of the county’s minority youth referred to court increased at a lesser rate—from 54 percent in 1990 to 62 per\ cent in 1999.

The proportion of minority youth diverted from the legal process in Yakima County increased from 43 percent in 1990 to 62 percent in 1999, a level nearly \ equal to the minority representation in the county’s youth population. Similarly, the proportion of minority youth detained before adjudication decreased from a peak of 71 \ percent in 1993 to 63 percent in 1999, the proportion sentenced to county detention decreased from a peak of 70 percent in 1993 to 60 percent in 1999, and the proportion sentenced to state correctional facilities decreased from 68 percent in 1990 to 62\ percent in 1999. For each of these stages, the proportion reached in 1999 approxima\ ted the proportion of minority youth in the county’s youth population. 34 Washington State’s Experience Some counties that implemented measures to reduce disproportionality did\ not expe­ rience steady or significant reductions. Indeed, several reported increa\ sed levels of dis­ proportionality. In King County (Seattle and the surrounding area), for example, the \ percentage of minority youth sentenced to correctional supervision incre\ ased dramat­ ically between 1998 and 1999, even though it had dropped steadily betwee\ n 1990 and 1998. The precise causes of these changes in levels are unclear. The city of Seattle currently is examining racial disparity in the juvenile justice \ system through the Building Blocks for Youth initiative, discussed earlier (see page 7).

Lessons Learned in Washington State W ashington’s experience shows that four elements are key to a state’s success in reducing DMC:

■ Leadership at the state level that is committed to addressing all DMC is\ sues. ■ Consistent local implementation of intervention strategies to reduce DMC\ . ■ Multilevel partnerships among researchers, legislators, and juvenile jus\ tice administrators and practitioners.

■ Adequate resources to support new requirements. Commitment and Leadership at the State Level All of the measures taken to reduce DMC in Washington State were strongly supported by leaders in the legislature and senior staff of the state agencies inv\ olved—primarily GJJAC and the Juvenile Rehabilitation Administration. Over the decade in\ which W ashington initiated its DMC reforms, these individuals remained fully committed to addressing DMC issues and to ensuring that county courts developed progr\ ams to reduce DMC. The legislature enacted laws that encouraged courts to reduc\ e DMC.

Further, staff stability during the decade ensured continuity in the monitoring\ of pro­ grams developed at the county level. The decrease in DMC across most sta\ ges of the juvenile justice system in Washington shows that a strong, stable state leadership that is committed to addressing all DMC issues is critical to the success of \ a state’s efforts to reduce DMC.

A ggressive Local Implementation of Strategies In some of Washington’s large courts, the implementation of programs yielded signifi­ cant reductions in levels of disproportionality. In other large courts, however, the same 35 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update programs were much less successful in reducing DMC. The courts that saw \ reductions in DMC typically were those whose administrators or senior staff aggress\ ively imple­ mented the state’s new programs and policies. Where senior administrators accorded low priority to reducing DMC, the reductions were minimal.

Further, because the causes of disproportionality in local courts vary from one\ commu­ nity to another, statewide policies and programs alone will not eliminate unwarranted racial disproportionality. Local court officials must continue to examine disproportion­ ality within each community, and each court must undertake the following steps— which closely mirror state-level efforts—to address its causes:

■ Implement local data collection on a routine basis and track case flow f\ or minority youth and white youth from referral to disposition. ■ Identify the stages within the local juvenile justice process where mino\ rity over- representation is highest. ■ Assess risk and protective factors specific to local communities and dev\ elop community-specific delinquency prevention strategies. ■ Identify the factors contributing to overrepresentation at each of these\ stages. ■ Train staff about the specific causes of overrepresentation, if appropria\ te. ■ Where overrepresentation appears to be related to actions of individual \ decision- makers, create a review system to ensure that decisions are made fairly. ■ Develop and use decisionmaking criteria and risk assessment procedures t\ hat are explicit and as race-neutral as possible. Use structured risk assessment\ s at any stage where minority overrepresentation is high, despite the added workload re\ quired to implement them. Ongoing Partnerships Systems change occurs through ongoing partnerships among researchers, le\ gislators, and juvenile justice administrators and practitioners. As researchers st\ udy trends in the administration of juvenile justice, they must collaborate with legislato\ rs and practi­ tioners in developing policy initiatives grounded in the research result\ s. Forging col­ laborative relationships with officials who shape and implement policy is essential to integrating research into an agenda of systems and institutional change. Officials who contribute to the design and implementation of the research—at least to the framing of research questions—are more inclined to embrace the research resul\ ts, using them to inform administrative operations of juvenile justice agencies. 36 Washington State’s Experience The juvenile courts in Washington State have changed significantly since publication of the 1993 study and the enactment of ESHB 1966. Diversity training is \ now a part of juvenile and criminal justice training curriculums and orientation pr\ ograms for most court services staff. Further, the focusing on cultural competency in the work­ place has led to an increased emphasis on diversity training that is job\ specific. Court staff members have also become increasingly diverse: the number of minor\ ity staff members has grown dramatically from 1995 to 1999.

The collection and analysis of information on race and the legal process\ are now part of the routine administration of local courts. Moreover, the implementation of statewide, standardized risk assessment procedures in 1997–98 may significantly r\ educe racial differences in officials’ assessments of juvenile offenders. Prelimin\ ary analyses of data on youth who were evaluated according to the risk assessment procedures \ yielded no significant racial differences in risk assessments.

Resources To Meet New Requirements Additional resources have not always accompanied the requirements that r\ esulted from W ashington State’s DMC-related legislation. For example, local courts were expected to provide diversity training for all staff, but no new state or local f\ unds were set aside for these activities. These new requirements have been particularly diff\ icult for smaller courts to implement, given the high costs.

W ashington’s racial and ethnic minority populations are heavily concentrated in urb\ an centers across the state. With the exception of the Yakima and Benton-Franklin county courts, disproportionate representation of minority youth in the juvenil\ e justice system occurred primarily in those counties with the largest urban populations \ (Seattle, Tacoma, and Spokane). DMC measures were thoroughly implemented in areas with la\ rge mi­ nority populations and significant court resources that could be dedicat\ ed to this prob­ lem. For example, the standardized risk assessment implemented in 1997 h\ as added substantial work for the staff of many smaller courts. Although most cou\ rt administra­ tors recognize and accept the value of the risk assessment procedure, ma\ ny of them voiced strong objection to the added workload.

Conclusions Despite the difficulties some Washington courts have experienced in implementing changes designed to reduce DMC, the state’s juvenile justice system overall has changed for the better. The increased diversity in most courts’ staff, routine collection o\ f data 37 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update and monitoring of DMC trends, and the increased use of risk assessment p\ rocedures in juvenile justice decisionmaking represent critical steps toward a system\ that is more sensitive to cultural differences and that makes decisions about youth a\ nd their crimes in a more consistent manner. These systems change efforts, combined with Washington’s priority investment in the prevention of and early intervention in juv\ e­ nile crime in neighborhoods with the greatest needs, are the hallmark of the state’s comprehensive approach to reducing DMC. Recognizing that eliminating DMC\ will require sustained efforts over many years, Washington and its localities continue to evaluate their DMC strategies and monitor their DMC trends through conti\ nuing part­ nerships among researchers, juvenile justice and other youth-serving pra\ ctitioners, and citizens. 38 39 requirement of the Act as follows: “In order to receive formula grant\ s under this part (Part B), a state shall submit a plan for carrying out its purposes ap\ plicable to a 3-year such plan shall . . . [address] juvenile delinquency prevention efforts \ and system improvement efforts designed to reduce, without establishing or requirin\ g numerical standards or quotas, the disproportionate number of juvenile members of \ minority groups who come into contact with the juvenile justice system.” This \ change essen­ tially broadens the DMC initiative from disproportionate minority “co\ nfinement” to disproportionate minority “contact” by requiring an examination of\ possible dispro­ portionate representation of minority youth at all decision points along\ the juvenile justice system continuum. It further requires multipronged intervention \ strategies including not only juvenile delinquency prevention efforts, but also sys\ tem improve­ ment efforts to assure equal treatment of all youth.

Effectively addressing DMC will require long-term coordinated efforts at\ the federal, state, and local levels. OJJDP will continue to support research and tar\ geted training and technical assistance to states and local communities to help them me\ et the iden­ In sum, DMC is the result of a large number of complex decisions and eve\ nts. OJJDP is committed to ensuring equal treatment for every youth involved in the\ juvenile justice system and to assisting states to adopt a comprehensive, balance\ d, and multidisciplinary approach to reduce DMC.

Future Directions The JJDP Act of 2002, signed into law on November 2, 2002, modified the DMC period . . . . In accordance with regulations which the Administrator shall p\ rescribe, tified challenges. OJJDP’s action steps are set forth in the sidebar on page 40. 40 Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update OJJDP’s Action Steps To Reduce Disproportionate Minority Contact Complete a full DMC progress review and publish a status report that describes state progress in addressing DMC, identifies state needs, and provides a training and technical assistance plan to address these needs.

Enhance, through training and technical assistance delivery, the risk- and protection- focused prevention model; emphasize the selection of promising or effective pre­ vention programs; and provide proactive assistance to communities in accessing additional funding sources to implement their comprehensive delinquency prevention plans.

Provide systematic guidance to states, regarding both grant fund utilization and intensive technical assistance, as the impetus for change in improving state juvenile justice data systems.

Develop Web-based data entry to allow monitoring of progress in DMC reduction efforts within and across states and local jurisdictions over time.

Emphasize, through the delivery of training and technical assistance, the importance of instituting and sustaining systems change.

Encourage states to develop and institutionalize the infrastructures and mechanisms n ecessary to assess and respond effectively to DMC issues in a focused and sustained m anner.

Implement a DMC national evaluation initiative under OJJDP’s State Evaluation Support Program to enhance state evaluation of DMC programming and systems change efforts.

Invest in the evaluation and replication of identified promising strategies to reduce DMC. Assume the leadership in expanding the number of proven DMC intervention strategies and in disseminating effective practices and lessons learned to the field.

A ssume leadership in improving data collection and analysis from the states.

Wo rk with the states to develop data that will better inform their policy and program d evelopment. 41 Racial Dispropor­ Racial Disproportionality in County Juvenile Justice Facilities.

Social and Health Services.

Racial Disproportionality in the Juvenile Justice System: Final Report.

Racial Disproportionality in County Juvenile Justice Facilities: Final Report.

Department of Social and Health Services.

Bridges, G.S., and Steen, S. 1998. Racial Disproportionality in County Juvenile Justice Facilities: Neglected Causes.

and Health Services.

Bridges, G.S., Steen, S., and Bates, K. 1997. Racial Disproportionality in County Juvenile Justice Facilities: Final Report.

and Health Services.

DeJong, C., and Jackson, K.C. 1998. Putting race into context: Race, juv\ enile justice processing, and urbanization. Justice Quarterly 15(3):487–504.

2000–2002 Colorado Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Plan. \ Division of Juvenile Services, North Dakota Department of Corrections. 2\ 000.

2000–2002 North Dakota Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Pl\ an. Bismarck, ND: North Dakota Department of Corrections, Division of Juvenile Service\ s.

Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics. 2001.

Printing Office, p. iii.

The Color of Justice: An Analysis of Juvenile Adult Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. 2000. Disproportionate Minority of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and D\ elinquency Prevention. References Bridges, G.S., Anderson-Bond, T., Bond, C., and Desmond, S. 2000.

tionality in County Juvenile Justice Facilities: 10 Years Experience. Olympia, WA:

W ashington State Department of Social and Health Services.

Bridges, G.S., Anderson-Bond, T., and Desmond, S. 1999. Olympia, WA: Washington State Department of Bridges, G.S., Conley, D., Engen, R.L., and Beretta, G. 1993. Olympia, WA: Washington State Depart­ ment of Social and Health Services and the Washington State Legislature.

Bridges, G.S., Conley, D., Engen, R.L., and Beretta, G. 1995. Olympia, WA: Washington State Olympia, WA: Washington State Department of Social Olympia, WA: Washington State Department of Social Division of Criminal Justice, Colorado Department of Public Safety. 2000. Years Denver, CO:

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Years America’s Children:

Key National Indicators of Well Being, 2001. W ashington, DC: U.S. Government Males, M., and Macallair, D. 2000.

Court Transfers in California. W ashington, DC: Building Blocks for Youth.

Confinement Technical Assistance Manual (2d ed.). Washington, DC: U.S. Department Disproportionate Minority Confinement: 2002 Update OMNI Research and Training, Inc. 1998. An Identification and Assessment Study of Disproportionate Minority Confinement in Colorado. Denver, CO: OMNI Research and Training.

Poe-Yamagata, E., and Jones, M. 2000. And Justice for Some: Differential Treatment of Minority Youth in the Juvenile Justice System. W ashington, DC: Building Blocks for Youth.

Pope, C.E., Lovell, R., and Hsia, H.M. 2002 (online prepublication avai\ lable at ojjdp.ncjrs.org/dmc/pdf/dmc89_01.pdf). Disproportionate Minority Confinement: A Review of the Research Literature From 1989 Through 2001. Washington, DC: U.S.

Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Ju\ stice and Delinquency Prevention.

Sickmund, M., Snyder, H.N., and Poe-Yamagata, E. 1997. Juvenile Offenders and Victims:

1997 Update on Violence. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.\ Snyder, H.N., and Sickmund, M. 1999. Minorities in the Juvenile Justice System.

W ashington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. 42 iety of materi- i and the i ials materi ● ments from OJJDP and the field about ● a bimonthly topics as JUVJUST—plus recent OJJDP Glance Corrections and Detention 2004, NCJ 202713 2004, NCJ 202885 2002, NCJ 187078 2004, NCJ 202019 le l Delinquency 2003, NCJ 193410 School. Gangs 2001, 2002, NCJ 191524 2004, Access to Counsel l l (Causes and Correlates Issue), 2003, 2003, 2003, Missing and Exploited Children i 2002, 2002, NCJ 190448 l NCJ 199832.

2001, NCJ 190105 2002, NCJ 194639 National Estimates of Missing Children:

2002, NCJ 196467 2000, 2002, NCJ 196469 l 2004, NCJ 203934 2001, 2001, l 2001, 2001, Victimization.

ization.

2004, cent Victimization. 2002, NCJ 191052 2004, 2002, NCJ 195737 OJJDP produces a wide var als, including Bulletins, Newsletters, Fact Sheets, Reports, Summar es, videotapes, Juvenile Justice journal—all avail­ able from the Juvenile Justice Clearinghouse via the Internet. View and down­ load mater als at OJJDP’s Web site (www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ojjdp). Order mater at puborder.ncjrs.org. Ask questions about als at askjj.ncjrs.org. Publications may also be ordered by phone (800–851–3420).

To receive notification of new publications— and current information on developments in the field and at OJJDP—subscribe to OJJDP’s free electronic services:

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OJJDP News @ a Glance, newsletter, covers many of the same activities—in greater depth.

Subscribe to JUVJUST and News @ a online at www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ojjdp.

Assessing the Mental Health Status of Youth in Juvenile Justice Settings.

(8 pp.).

Juvenile Residential Facility Census, 2000:

Selected Findings. 2002, NCJ 196595 (4 pp.).

Juveniles in Corrections.

(24 pp.).

Courts Juvenile Drug Court Programs. 2001, NCJ 184744 (16 pp.).

Juvenile Gun Courts: Promoting Accountability and Providing Treatment.

(12 pp.).

Juveniles in Court. 2003, NCJ 195420 (32 pp.).

Delinquency Prevention 2002 Report to Congress: Title V Community Prevention Grants Program.

(48 pp.).

Blueprints for Violence Prevention (availab online only). 2004, NCJ 204274 (180 pp.).

Child Delinquency: Ear y Intervention and Prevention. 2003, NCJ 186162 (20 pp.).

Prevalence and Development of Child . 2003, NCJ 193411 (8 pp.).

Risk and Protective Factors of Child Delinquency. 2003, NCJ 193409 (16 pp.).

Successful Program Implementation: Lessons From Blueprints. 2004, NCJ 204273 (12 pp.). Treatment, Services, and Intervention Programs for Child Delinquents.

(16 pp.).

Truancy Reduction: Keeping Students in 2001, NCJ 188947 (16 pp.).

Hybrid and Other Modern Gangs.

NCJ 189916 (8 pp.).

Modern-Day Youth Gangs.

(12 pp.).

Youth Gangs in Indian Country.

NCJ 202714 (16 pp.). General Juvenile Justice (availab e online only). 2004, NCJ 204063 (34 pp.).

Aftercare Services (availab e online only). 2003, NCJ 201800 (31 pp.).

Best Practices in Juvenile Accountability:

Overview. 2003, NCJ 184745 (12 pp.).

Changes to OJJDP’s Juvenile Accountability Program. 2003, NCJ 200220 (6 pp.).

Juvenile Justice Volume IX, Number 1. 2004, NCJ 203555 (40 pp.).

Latest Resources From OJJDP.

BC 000115 (56 pp.).

OJJDP’s Tribal Youth Initiatives.

NCJ 193763 (8 pp.).

Race as a Factor in Juvenile Arrests.

NCJ 189180 (8 pp.).

Children Abducted by Family Members:

Nat onal Estimates and Characteristics.

NCJ 196466 (12 pp.).

Explanations for the Decline in Child Sexual Abuse Cases. 2004, NCJ 199298 (12 pp.).

A Family Resource Guide on International Parental Kidnapping.

(139 pp.). Also availab e in Spanish. 2002, Issues in Resolving Cases of International Child Abduction by Parents.

(20 pp.).

A Law Enforcement Guide on International Parental Kidnapping.

(116 pp.).

An Overview. 2002, NCJ 196465 (12 pp.).

Nonfamily Abducted Children: National Esti­ mates and Characteristics.

(16 pp.). Overview of the Portable Guides to Investi­ gating Child Abuse: Update 2000.

NCJ 178893 (12 pp.).

Prostitution of Juveniles: Patterns From NIBRS.

2004, NCJ 203946 (12 pp.).

Runaway/Thrownaway Children: National Esti­ mates and Characteristics.

(12 pp.).

When Your Child Is Missing: A Family Survival Guide.

2004 Update, NCJ 204958 (108 pp.).

Also availab e in Spanish. 2002, NCJ 178902. Substance Abuse Detection and Prevalence of Substance Use Among Juvenile Detainees.

(16 pp.).

Violence and Victimization Addressing Youth Victimization.

NCJ 186667 (20 pp.).

Animal Abuse and Youth Violence.

NCJ 188677 (16 pp.).

Community Correlates of Rura Youth Violence.

2003, NCJ 193591 (12 pp.).

Crimes Against Children by Babysitters.

NCJ 189102 (8 pp.).

Gun Use by Male Juveniles: Research and Prevention. 2001, NCJ 188992 (12 pp.).

Homicides of Children and Youth.

NCJ 187239 (12 pp.).

How Families and Communities Influence Youth 2003, NCJ 201629 (12 pp.).

Juvenile Delinquency and Serious Injury Victim­ 2001, NCJ 188676 (8 pp.).

Juvenile Justice (School Violence Issue), Volume VIII, Number 1. 2001, NCJ 188158 (40 pp.).

Juvenile Suicides, 1981–1998.

NCJ 196978 (8 pp.).

Offenders Incarcerated for Crimes Against Juveniles. 2001, NCJ 191028 (12 pp.).

Protecting Children in Cyberspace: The ICAC Task Force Program. 2002, NCJ 191213 (8 pp.).

Short- and Long-Term Consequences of Adoles­ 2002, NCJ 191210 (16 pp.).

Trends in Juvenile Violent Offending: An Analysis of Victim Survey Data.

(20 pp.).

Victims of Violent Juvenile Crime.

NCJ 201628 (8 pp.).

Violent Victimization as a Risk Factor for Violent Offending Among Juveniles.

(12 pp.). Publications From OJJDP Revised 08/09/2004 DOJ/OJJDP 20531 *NCJ~201240* PRESORTED STANDARD POSTAGE & FEES PAID PERMIT NO. G–91 U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Washington, DC Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300