"I'm not going to tell you everything's perfect here. But I can tell you we're doing our best," said Sam Albritton, executive director of the planning office in the Mississippi Department of Public Safety.
Officials with the South Carolina Department of Public Safety said a jail in Greenville is responsible for nearly all their violations for keeping juveniles in adult jail. They said a planned 50-bed juvenile facility would handle those youths and bring South Carolina into compliance.
In Washington state, a law allows runaways to be kept for up to five days in a facility called a "secure crisis residential center." The idea is to allow time for evaluation of drug, mental health and abuse problems, according to Mary Williams, Washington's juvenile justice coordinator.
But four of the state's crisis centers are inside juvenile jails, and those runaways are considered jailed under the federal act.
Previously compliant Wisconsin and Oregon ran into trouble in 2006. Wisconsin locked up too many youths for age-specific crimes. Oregon put too many juveniles in adult jails. Officials in both states blamed reporting errors by local jurisdictions.
Thompson with the Justice Department said keeping states compliant and bringing others back requires a year-in and year-out effort.
"It's frustrating for us sometimes that we can't fine the states or we can't get every state into compliance," he said. "But the reality is there are going to be changes within a state system from year to year that are going to result in some states falling out of compliance and some states coming back into compliance."
One reason Wyoming hasn't participated in the law for 15 years is rural police want to be able to put kids who get in trouble in jail if their parents can't be found, according to Byron Oedekoven, executive director of the Wyoming Association of Sheriffs and Chiefs of Police.
"What do you do with the juvenile that has committed the crime at 3 in the morning and you cannot locate the parents?" Oedekoven said, adding officers cannot afford to baby-sit kids and be distracted from more urgent issues. "We have a responsibility to keep everybody safe."
As it is, Wyoming locks up youth at a rate 2 1/2 times the national average and has the second-highest rate of jailing juveniles in the nation.
Oedekoven said more funding for alternatives — such as recruiting volunteers to watch kids who get picked up — would help.
Yet total federal funding for juvenile justice programs — including post-conviction alternatives to jail, such as mentoring and probation — declined from $565 million in 2002 to $384 million in 2008, according to the Congressional Research Service.
Ryan, the juvenile justice advocate, said states need more funding and should be required to have a full-time employee dedicated to compliance.
"You have to have someone whose name you can tell me, who works on this full-time, who's in and out of these facilities, who's looking at the data, who's reporting on the data, who's accountable," Ryan said.
The goal is to keep an eye out for more youths like Olivares, who said jail didn't scare her into shape but ruined her life.
After leaving jail, Olivares' meth use and friends landed her in trouble. She racked up a state drug possession charge and a federal counterfeiting charge.
She recently finished two years of probation, has kicked her meth habit and now mentors troubled youth through Casey Family Programs, a national nonprofit that works with troubled youth in foster care.
But her two felonies have made finding jobs difficult.
Had she not been exposed to the jail experiences, she doubts "I'd be as ruined as I am."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090208/...le_justice_law