95-13046. Formula Grants  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 104 (Wednesday, May 31, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 28440-28451]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-13046]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 28439]]
    
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    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Justice
    
    
    
    
    
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    Office of Justice Programs; Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency 
    Prevention
    
    
    
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    28 CFR Part 31
    
    
    
    Formula Grants; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 31, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations  
    [[Page 28440]] 
    
    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
    
    Office of Justice Programs
    Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
    
    28 CFR Part 31
    
    [OJP No. 1000F]
    RIN 1121-AA28
    
    
    Formula Grants
    
    May 22, 1995.
    AGENCY: Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and 
    Delinquency Prevention, Justice.
    
    ACTION: Republication.
    
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    SUMMARY: This document is published to consolidate the Formula Grants 
    Regulation for ease of use by grantees. This document reflects the 
    consolidation of the revisions to the Formula Grants Regulation 
    published in the Federal Register on March 10, 1995 and corrections 
    published on April 21, 1995.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: The final regulation became effective on March 10, 
    1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Roberta Dorn, Director, State 
    Relations and Assistance Division, Office of Juvenile Justice and 
    Delinquency Prevention, 633 Indiana Avenue, NW., Room 543, Washington, 
    DC 20531; (202) 307-5924.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This document contains the entire text of 
    the Formula Grants Regulation, 28 CFR Part 31, including recently made 
    changes and corrections. On March 10, 1995, the Office of Juvenile 
    Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) published in the Federal 
    Register the final Formula Grants Regulation revising 28 CFR part 31. 
    The regulation revisions provided clarification and guidance to States 
    in the formulation, submission and implementation of the State Formula 
    Grants Program under Part B of Title II of the Juvenile Justice and 
    Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, as amended by the Juvenile Justice 
    and Delinquency Prevention Amendments of 1992 (Pub. L. 102-586, 
    November 18, 1992). On April 21, 1995 (60 FR 19847), OJJDP published in 
    the Federal Register corrections to the final Regulation because the 
    Final Regulation, as published on March 10, 1995 (60 FR 13330), was an 
    earlier draft version that was materially different from the final 
    draft that was intended to be published.
        The major changes to the Final Regulation made in the March 10, 
    1995 revision and subsequent April 21, 1995 correction implemented the 
    1992 reauthorization statutory amendments that impact the Formula 
    Grants Program. These statutory changes include: a formula grant fund 
    allocation minimum base for participating States and territories; 
    elimination of the ``substantial compliance criteria'' with respect to 
    the deinstitutionalization of status offenders and jail and lockup 
    removal requirements because full compliance is required; a requirement 
    that there be separate juvenile and adult staff with respect to 
    management, security and direct care in juvenile detention facilities 
    that are collocated with an adult jail or lockup. The final Regulation 
    includes the requirement that collocated juvenile detention facilities 
    approved by the State and concurred with by OJJDP on or before June 30, 
    1995, be reviewed against the regulatory criteria and OJJDP policies in 
    effect at the time of the initial approval and concurrence. Facilities 
    approved after the effective date of the Regulation and prior to July 
    1, 1995, will be reviewed against the regulatory criteria in effect on 
    the day before the effective date of the Regulation. For collocated 
    juvenile detention facilities considered after June 30, 1995, OJJDP's 
    concurrence is limited to one year and, thereafter, will be reviewed on 
    an annual basis. The Regulation eliminated the requirement that in 
    order for a collocated juvenile detention facility to receive OJJDP's 
    initial and subsequent concurrences, the facility could only provide 
    secure custody for juvenile criminal-type offenders, status offenders 
    accused of violating a valid court order, and adjudicated delinquents 
    and valid court order violators who are awaiting disposition hearings 
    or transfer to a long term juvenile correctional facility.
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        This final regulation in not a ``significant regulatory action'' 
    for purposes of Executive Order 12866 because it does not result in: 
    (1) an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or 
    adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the 
    economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
    health or safety, or State, local or tribal governments or communities; 
    (2) create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with action 
    taken or planned by another agency; (3) materially alter the budgetary 
    impact of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or the 
    rights and obligations of recipients thereof; and (4) does not raise 
    novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the 
    President's priorities or the principles of Executive Order 12866.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        This final regulation, does not have a ``significant'' economic 
    impact on a substantial number of small ``entities'', as defined by the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96-354).
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        No collection of information requirements are contained in or 
    effected by this regulation (See the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 
    3504(h)).
    
    Intergovernmental Review of Federal Programs
    
        In accordance with Executive Order 12372 and the Department of 
    Justice's implementing regulation 28 CFR Part 31, States must submit 
    formula grant applications to the State ``Single Point of Contact,'' if 
    one exists. The State may take up to 60 days from the application date 
    to comment on the application.
    
    List of Subjects in 28 CFR Part 31
    
        Grant programs--law, Juvenile delinquency, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping r equirements.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, Title 28, Chapter I, Part 
    31 of the Code of Federal Regulations is republished for the 
    convenience of the reader as follows:
    
    PART 31-FORMULA GRANTS
    
    Subpart A--General Provisions
    
    Sec.
    31.1 General.
    31.2 Statutory authority.
    31.3 Formula Grant Plan and Applications.
    
    Subpart B--Eligible Applicants
    
    31.100 Eligibility.
    31.101 Designation of State Agency.
    31.102 State agency structure.
    31.103 Membership of supervisory board.
    
    Subpart C--General Requirements
    
    31.200 General.
    31.201 Audit.
    31.202 Civil rights.
    31.203 Open meetings and public access to records.
    
    Subpart D--Juvenile Justice Act Requirements
    
    31.300 General.
    31.301 Funding.
    31.302 Applicant State agency.
    31.303 Substantive requirements.
    31.304  Definitions.
    
    Subpart E--General Conditions and Assurances
    
    31.400  Compliance with statute.
    31.401  Compliance with other Federal laws, orders, circulars.
    31.402  Application on file.
    31.403  Civil rights requirements.
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 5601 et seq. [[Page 28441]] 
    
    Subpart A--General Provisions
    
    
    Sec. 31.1  General.
    
        This part defines eligibility and sets forth requirements for 
    application for and administration of formula grants to State 
    governments authorized by part B, subpart I, of the Juvenile Justice 
    and Delinquency Prevention Act.
    
    
    Sec. 31.2  Statutory authority.
    
        The Statute establishing the Office of Juvenile Justice and 
    Delinquency Prevention and giving authority to make grants for juvenile 
    justice and delinquency prevention improvement programs is the Juvenile 
    Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, as amended (42 U.S.C. 
    5601 et seq.).
    
    
    Sec. 31.3  Formula grant plan and applications
    
        Formula Grant Applications for each Fiscal Year should be submitted 
    to OJJDP by August 1st (60 days prior to the beginning of the fiscal 
    year) or within 60 days after the States are officially notified of the 
    fiscal year formula grant allocations. Beginning with FY 1995 and each 
    subsequent fiscal year, all Formula Grant Applications are due no later 
    than March 31 of the fiscal year for which the funds are allocated.
    
    Subpart B--Eligible Applicants
    
    
    Sec. 31.100  Eligibility.
    
        All States as defined by section 103(7) of the JJDP Act.
    
    
    Sec. 31.101  Designation of State agency.
    
        The Chief Executive of each State which chooses to apply for a 
    formula grant shall establish or designate a State agency as the sole 
    agency for supervising the preparation and administration of the plan. 
    The plan must demonstrate compliance with administrative and 
    supervisory board membership requirements established by the OJJDP 
    Administrator pursuant to Section 299 (c) of the JJDP Act. States must 
    have available for review a copy of the State law or executive order 
    establishing the State agency and its authority.
    
    
    Sec. 31.102  State agency structure.
    
        The State agency may be a discrete unit of State government or a 
    division or other component of an existing State crime commission, 
    planning agency or other appropriate unit of State government. Details 
    of organization and structure are matters of State discretion, provided 
    that the agency:
        (a) Is a definable entity in the executive branch with the 
    requisite authority to carry out the responsibilities imposed by the 
    JJDP Act;
        (b) Has a supervisory board (i.e., a board of directors, 
    commission, committee, council, or other policy board) which has 
    responsibility for supervising the preparation and administration of 
    the plan and its implementation; and
        (c) Has sufficient staff and staff capability to carry out the 
    board's policies and the agency's duties and responsibilities to 
    administer the program, develop the plan, process applications, 
    administer grants awarded under the plan, monitor and evaluate programs 
    and projects, provide administration/support services, and perform such 
    accountability functions as are necessary to the administration of 
    Federal funds, such as grant close-out and audit of subgrant and 
    contract funds. At a minimum, one full-time Juvenile Justice Specialist 
    must be assigned to the Formula Grants Program by the State agency. 
    Where the State does not currently provide or maintain a full-time 
    Juvenile Justice Specialist, the plan must clearly establish and 
    document that the program and administrative support staff resources 
    currently assigned to the program will temporarily meet the adequate 
    staff requirement, and provide an assurance that at least one full-time 
    Juvenile Justice Specialist will be assigned to the Formula Grants 
    Program by the end of FY 1995 (September 30, 1995).
    
    
    Sec. 31.103  Membership of supervisory board.
    
        The State advisory group appointed under section 223(a)(3) may 
    operate as the supervisory board for the State agency, at the 
    discretion of the Governor. Where, however, a State has continuously 
    maintained a broad-based law enforcement and criminal justice 
    supervisory board (council) meeting all the requirements of section 
    402(b)(2) of the Justice System Improvement Act of 1979, and wishes to 
    maintain such a board, such composition shall continue to be acceptable 
    provided that the board's membership includes the chairman and at least 
    two additional citizen members of the State advisory group. For 
    purposes of this requirement a citizen member is defined as any person 
    who is not a full-time government employee or elected official. Any 
    executive committee of such a board must include the same proportion of 
    juvenile justice advisory group members as are included in the total 
    board membership. Any other proposed supervisory board membership is 
    subject to case by case review and approval of the OJJDP Administrator 
    and will require, at a minimum, ``balanced representation'' of juvenile 
    justice interests.
    
    Subpart C--General Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 31.200  General.
    
        This subpart sets forth general requirements applicable to formula 
    grant recipients under the JJDP Act of 1974, as amended. Applicants 
    must assure compliance or submit necessary information on these 
    requirements.
    
    
    Sec. 31.201  Audit.
    
        The State must assure that it adheres to the audit requirements 
    enumerated in the ``Financial and Administrative Guide for Grants, 
    Guide Manual 7100.1 (current edition). Chapter 8 of the Manual contains 
    a comprehensive statement of audit policies and requirements relative 
    to grantees and subgrantees.
    
    
    Sec. 31.202  Civil rights.
    
        (a) To carry out the State's Federal civil rights responsibilities 
    the plan must:
        (1) Designate a civil rights contact person who has lead 
    responsibility in insuring that all applicable civil rights 
    requirements, assurances, and conditions are met and who shall act as 
    liaison in all civil rights matters with OJJDP and the OJP Office of 
    Civil Rights Compliance (OCRC); and
        (2) Provide the Council's Equal Employment Opportunity Program 
    (EEOP), if required to maintain one under 28 CFR 42.301, et seq., where 
    the application is for $500,000 or more.
        (b) The application must provide assurance that the State will:
        (1) Require that every applicant required to formulate an EEOP in 
    accordance with 28 CFR 42.201 et seq., submit a certification to the 
    State that it has a current EEOP on file, which meets the requirement 
    therein;
        (2) Require that every criminal or juvenile justice agency applying 
    for a grant of $500,000 or more submit a copy of its EEOP (if required 
    to maintain one under 28 CFR 42.301, et seq.) to OCRC at the time it 
    submits its application to the State;
        (3) Inform the public and subgrantees of affected persons' rights 
    to file a complaint of discrimination with OCRC for investigation;
        (4) Cooperate with OCRC during compliance reviews of recipients 
    located within the State; and
        (5) Comply, and that its subgrantees and contractors will comply 
    with the requirement that, in the event that a Federal or State court 
    or administrative agency makes a finding of 
    [[Page 28442]] discrimination of the basis of race, color, religion, 
    national origin, or sex (after a due process hearing) against a State 
    or a subgrantee or contractor, the affected recipient or contractor 
    will forward a copy of the finding to OCRC.
    
    
    Sec. 31.203  Open meetings and public access to records.
    
        The State must assure that the State agency, its supervisory board 
    established pursuant to section 299(c) and the State advisory group 
    established pursuant to section 223(a)(3) will follow applicable State 
    open meeting and public access laws and regulations in the conduct of 
    meetings and the maintenance of records relating to their functions.
    
    Subpart D--Juvenile Justice Act Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 31.300  General.
    
        This subpart sets forth specific JJDP Act requirements for 
    application and receipt of formula grants.
    Sec. 31.301  Funding.
    
        (a) Allocation to States. Funds shall be allocated annually among 
    the States on the basis of relative population of persons under age 
    eighteen. If the amount allocated for Title II (other than parts D and 
    E) of the JJDP Act is less than $75 million, the amount allocated to 
    each State will not be less than $325,000, nor more than $400,000, 
    provided that no State receives less than its allocation for FY 1992. 
    The territories will receive not less than $75,000 or more than 
    $100,000. If the amount appropriated for Title II (other than parts D 
    and E) is $75 million or more, the amount allocated for each State will 
    be not less than $400,000, nor more than $600,000, provided that parts 
    D and E have been funded in the full amounts authorized. For the 
    Territories, the amount is fixed at $100,000. For each of FY's 1994 and 
    1995, the minimum allocation is established at $600,000 for States and 
    $100,000 for Territories.
        (b) Funds for Local Use. At least two-thirds of the formula grant 
    application to the state (other than the section 222(d) State Advisory 
    Group set aside) must be used for programs by local government, local 
    private agencies, and eligible Indian tribes, unless the State applies 
    for and is granted a waiver by the OJJDP. The proportion of pass-
    through funds to be made available to eligible Indian tribes shall be 
    based upon that proportion of the state youth population under 18 years 
    of age who reside in geographical areas where the tribes perform law 
    enforcement functions. Pursuant to section 223(a)(5)(C) of the JJDP 
    Act, each of the standards set forth in paragraphs (b)(1)(i) through 
    (111) of this section must be met in order to establish the eligibility 
    of Indian tribes to receive pass through funds:
        (1) (i) The tribal entity must be recognized by the Secretary of 
    the Interior as an Indian tribe that performs law enforcement functions 
    as defined in paragraph (b) (2) of this section.
        (ii) The tribal entity must agree to attempt to comply with the 
    requirements of section 223(a)(12)(A), (13), and (14) of the JJDP Act; 
    and
        (iii) The tribal entity must identify the juvenile justice needs to 
    be served by these funds within the geographical area where the tribe 
    performs law enforcement functions.
        (2) ``Law enforcement functions'' are deemed to include those 
    activities pertaining to the custody of children, including, but not 
    limited to, police efforts to prevent, control, or reduce crime and 
    delinquency or to apprehend criminal and delinquent offenders, and/or 
    activities of adult and juvenile corrections, probation, or parole 
    authorities.
        (3) To carry out this requirement, OJJDP will annually provide each 
    state with the most recent Bureau of Census statistics on the number of 
    persons under age 18 living within the state, and the number of persons 
    under age 18 who reside in geographical areas where Indian tribes 
    perform law enforcement functions.
        (4) Pass-through funds available to tribal entities under section 
    223(a)(5)(C) shall be made available within states to Indian tribes, 
    combinations of Indian tribes, or to an organization or organizations 
    designated by such tribe(s), that meet the standards set forth in 
    paragraphs (b)(1)(i)-(iii) of this section. Where the relative number 
    of persons under age 18 within a geographic area where an Indian tribe 
    performs law enforcement functions is too small to warrant an 
    individual subgrant or subgrants, the state may, after consultation 
    with the eligible tribe(s), make pass-through funds available to a 
    combination of eligible tribes within the state, or to an organization 
    or organizations designated by and representing a group of qualifying 
    tribes, or target the funds on the larger tribal jurisdictions within 
    the state.
        (5) Consistent with section 223(a)(4) of the JJDP Act, the state 
    must provide for consultation with Indian tribes or a combination of 
    eligible tribes within the state, or an organization or organizations 
    designated by qualifying tribes, in the development of a state plan 
    which adequately takes into account the juvenile justice needs and 
    requests of those Indian tribes within the state.
        (c) Match. Formula grants under the JJDP Act shall be 100% of 
    approved costs, with the exception of planning and administration 
    funds, which require a 100 percent cash match (dollar for dollar), and 
    construction projects funded under section 299C(a)(2) which also 
    require a 100 percent cash match.
        (d) Funds for Administration. Not more than ten percent of the 
    total annual Formula Grant award may be utilized to develop the annual 
    juvenile justice plan and pay for administrative expenses, including 
    project monitoring. These funds are to be matched on a dollar for 
    dollar basis. The State shall make available needed funds for planning 
    and administration to units of local government on an equitable basis. 
    Each annual application must identify uses of such funds.
        (e) Nonparticipating States. Pursuant to section 223(d), the OJJDP 
    Administrator shall endeavor to make the fund allotment under section 
    222(a), of a State which chooses not to participate or loses its 
    eligibility to participate in the formula grant program, directly 
    available to local public and private nonprofit agencies within the 
    nonparticipating State. The funds may be used only for the purpose(s) 
    of achieving deinstitutionalization of status offenders and 
    nonoffenders, separation of juveniles from incarcerated adults, removal 
    of juveniles from adult jails and lockups, and reducing the 
    disproportionate confinement of minority youth in secure facilities. 
    Absent a request for extension which demonstrates compelling 
    circumstances justifying the reallocation of formula grant funds back 
    to the State to which the funds were initially allocated, or the 
    proceedings under section 223(d), formula grant funds allocated to a 
    State which has failed to submit an application, plan, or monitoring 
    data establishing its eligibility for the funds will, beginning with FY 
    1995 be reallocated to the nonparticipating State program on September 
    30 of the fiscal year for which the funds were appropriated. 
    Reallocated funds will be competitively awarded to eligible recipients 
    pursuant to program announcements published in the Federal Register.
    
    
    Sec. 31.302  Applicant State agency.
    
        (a) Pursuant to section 223(a)(1), section 223(a)(2) and section 
    299(c) of the JJDP Act, the State must assure that the State agency 
    approved under section 299(c) has been designated as the sole 
    [[Page 28443]] agency for supervising the preparation and 
    administration of the plan and has the authority to implement the plan.
        (b) Advisory Group. Pursuant to section 223(a)(3) of the JJDP Act, 
    the Chief Executive:
        (1) Shall establish an advisory group pursuant to section 223(a)(3) 
    of the JJDP Act. The State shall provide a list of all current advisory 
    group members, indicating their respective dates of appointment and how 
    each member meets the membership requirements specified in this section 
    of the Act.
        (2) Should consider, in meeting the statutory membership 
    requirements of section 223(A)(3) (A)-(E), appointing at least one 
    member who represents each of the following: A locally elected official 
    representing general purpose local government; a law enforcement 
    officer; representatives of juvenile justice agencies, including a 
    juvenile or family court judge, a probation officer, a prosecutor, and 
    a person who routinely provides legal representation to youth in 
    juvenile court; a public agency representative concerned with 
    delinquency prevention and treatment; a representative from a private, 
    non-profit organization, such as a parents group, concerned with 
    teenage drug and alcohol abuse; a high school principal; a recreation 
    director; a volunteer who works with delinquent or at risk youth; a 
    person with a special focus on the family; a youth worker experienced 
    with programs that offer alternatives to incarceration; persons with 
    special competence in addressing programs of school violence and 
    vandalism and alternatives to expulsion and suspension; and persons 
    with knowledge concerning learning disabilities, child abuse, neglect, 
    and youth violence.
        (c) The State shall assure that it complies with the Advisory Group 
    financial support requirement of section 222(d) and the composition and 
    function requirements of section 223(a)(3) of the JJDP Act.
    
    
    Sec. 31.303  Substantive requirements.
    
        (a) Assurances. The State must certify through the provision of 
    assurances that it has complied and will comply (as appropriate) with 
    sections 223(a)(1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), 
    (16), (17), (18), (19), (20), (21), (22), and (25), and sections 229 
    and 261(d), in formulating and implementing the State plan. The Formula 
    Grant Application kit provides a form and guidance for the provision of 
    assurances. OJJDP interprets the section 223(a)(16) assurance as 
    satisfied by an affirmation that State law and/or policy clearly 
    require equitable treatment on the required bases; or by providing in 
    the State plan that the State agency will require an assurance of 
    equitable treatment by all Formula Grant subgrant and contract 
    recipients, and establish as a program goal, in conjunction with the 
    State Advisory Group, the adoption and implementation of a statewide 
    juvenile justice policy that all youth in the juvenile justice system 
    will be treated equitably without regard to gender, race, family 
    income, and mentally, emotionally, or physically handicapping 
    conditions. OJJDP interprets the section 223(a)(25) assurance as 
    satisfied by a provision in the State plan for the State agency and the 
    State Advisory Group to promulgate policies and budget priorities that 
    require the funding of programs that are part of a comprehensive and 
    coordinated community system of services as set forth in section 
    103(19) of the JJDP Act. This requirement is applicable when a State's 
    formula grant for any fiscal year exceeds 105 percent of the State's 
    formula grant for FY 1992.
        (b) Serious Juvenile Offender Emphasis. Pursuant to sections 
    101(a)(10) and 223(a)(10) of the JJDP Act, OJJDP encourages States that 
    have identified serious and violent juvenile offenders as a priority 
    problem to allocate formula grant funds to programs designed for 
    serious and violent juvenile offenders at a level consistent with the 
    extent of the problem as identified through the State planning process. 
    Particular attention should be given to improving prosecution, 
    sentencing procedures, providing resources necessary for effective 
    rehabilitation, and facilitating the coordination of services between 
    the juvenile justice and criminal justice systems.
        (c) Deinstitutionalization of Status Offenders and Non-Offenders. 
    Pursuant to section 223(a)(12)(A) of the JJDP Act, the State shall:
        (1) Describe its plan, procedure, and timetable covering the three-
    year planning cycle, for assuring that the requirements of this section 
    are met. Refer to Sec. 31.303(f)(3) for the rules related to the valid 
    court order exception to this Act requirement.
        (2) Describe the barriers the State faces in achieving full 
    compliance with the provisions of this requirement.
        (3) Federal Wards. Apply this requirement to alien juveniles under 
    Federal jurisdiction who are held in State or local facilities.
        (4) DSO compliance. Those States which, based upon the most 
    recently submitted monitoring report, have been found to be in full 
    compliance with section 223(a)(12)(A) may, in lieu of addressing 
    paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section, provide an assurance that 
    adequate plans and resources are available to maintain full compliance.
        (5) Submit the report required under section 223(a)(12)(B) of the 
    Act as part of the annual monitoring report required by section 
    223(a)(15) of the Act.
        (d) Contact with incarcerated adults.
        (1) Pursuant to section 223(a)(13) of the JJDP Act the State shall:
        (i) Separation. Describe its plan and procedure, covering the 
    three-year planning cycle, for assuring that the requirements of this 
    section are met. The term ``contact'' is defined to include any sight 
    and sound contact between juveniles in a secure custody status and 
    incarcerated adults, including inmate trustees. Sound contact is 
    further defined to mean any oral communication between incarcerated 
    adults and juveniles. Separation must be accomplished in all secure 
    areas of the facility which include, but are not limited to: sallyports 
    within the secure perimeter of the facility, other entry areas, all 
    passageways (hallways), admissions, sleeping, toilet and shower, 
    dining, recreational, educational, vocational, health care, and other 
    areas as appropriate.
        (ii) In those instances where accused juvenile criminal-type 
    offenders are authorized to be temporarily detained in facilities where 
    adults are confined, the State must set forth the procedures for 
    assuring no sight or sound contact between such juveniles and confined 
    adults.
        (iii) Describe the barriers which may hinder the separation of 
    alleged or adjudicated criminal type offenders, status offenders and 
    non-offenders from incarcerated adults in any particular jail, lockup, 
    detention or correctional facility.
        (iv) Those States which, based upon the most recently submitted 
    monitoring report, have been found to be in compliance with section 
    223(a)(13) may, in lieu of addressing paragraphs (d)(1)(i), (ii), and 
    (iii) of this section, provide an assurance that adequate plans and 
    resources are available to maintain compliance.
        (v) Assure that adjudicated offenders are not reclassified 
    administratively and transferred to an adult (criminal) correctional 
    authority to avoid the intent of segregating adults and juveniles in 
    correctional facilities. This does not prohibit or restrict waiver of 
    juveniles to criminal court for prosecution, according to State law. It 
    does, however, preclude a State from administratively transferring a 
    juvenile offender to an adult correctional authority or a transfer 
    within a mixed [[Page 28444]] juvenile and adult facility for placement 
    with adult criminals either before or after a juvenile reaches the 
    statutory age of majority. It also precludes a State from transferring 
    adult offenders to juvenile correctional authority for placement.
        (2) Implementation. The requirement of this provision is to be 
    planned and implemented immediately by each State.
        (e) Removal of Juveniles From Adult Jails and Lockups. Pursuant to 
    section 223(a)(14)of the JJDP Act, the State shall:
        (1) Describe its plan, procedure, and timetable for assuring that 
    requirements of this section will be met beginning after December 8, 
    1985. Refer to Sec. 31.303(f)(4) to determine the regulatory exception 
    to this requirement.
        (2) Describe the barriers which the State faces in removing all 
    juveniles from adult jails and lockups. This requirement excepts only 
    those juveniles formally waived or transferred to criminal court and 
    against whom criminal felony charges have been filed, or juveniles over 
    whom a criminal court has original or concurrent jurisdiction and such 
    court's jurisdiction has been invoked through the filing of criminal 
    felony charges.
        (3) Collocated facilities.
        (i) Determine whether or not a facility in which juveniles are 
    detained or confined is an adult jail or lockup. The JJDP Act prohibits 
    the secure custody of juveniles in adult jails and lockups, except as 
    otherwise provided under the Act and implementing OJJDP regulations. 
    Juvenile facilities collocated with adult facilities are considered 
    adult jails or lockups unless the paragraph (e)(3)(i)(D)(1)-(4) 
    criteria established in this section are complied with and the 
    determinations and concurrences set forth in paragraph (e)(3)(ii), 
    (iii), and (iv) of this section have been made.
        (A) A collocated facility is a juvenile facility located in the 
    same building as an adult jail or lockup, or is part of a related 
    complex of buildings located on the same grounds as an adult jail or 
    lockup. A complex of buildings is considered ``related'' when it shares 
    physical features such as walls and fences, or services beyond 
    mechanical services (heating, air conditioning, water and sewer), or 
    the specialized services that are allowable under paragraph 
    (e)(3)(i)(D)(3) of this section.
        (B) The State, with OJJDP concurrence, must determine whether a 
    collocated facility qualifies as a separate juvenile detention facility 
    under the four criteria set forth in Paragraph (e)(3)(i)(D)(1)-(4) of 
    this section for the purpose of monitoring compliance with section 
    223(a)12(A), (13) and (14) of the JJDP Act.
        (C) A needs based analysis must precede a jurisdiction's request 
    for State approval and be included with the request for OJJDP 
    concurrence that a collocated facility qualifies as a juvenile 
    detention facility. The needs based analysis should include, but is not 
    limited to, consideration of such factors as excessive travel time to 
    an existing juvenile detention center, crowding in an existing facility 
    (despite the use of objective detention criteria), obsolescence of an 
    existing facility, and, in areas where there are no juvenile detention 
    facilities, a measurable increase in the need for juvenile detention 
    beds. OJJDP's technical assistance provider to the States should be 
    involved in the needs based analysis (without cost to the State or 
    local jurisdiction). The needs based analysis must take into 
    consideration and be coordinated with the State's plans and programs 
    designed to establish a continuum of detention care and to assist 
    detention facilities to provide a full range of services for juvenile 
    offenders.
        (D) Each of the following four criteria must be met in order to 
    ensure the requisite separateness of a juvenile detention facility that 
    is collocated with an adult jail or lockup:
        (1) Total separation between juvenile and adult facility spatial 
    areas such that there could be no sight or sound contact between 
    juveniles and incarcerated adults in the facility. Total separation of 
    spatial areas can be achieved architecturally, and must provide for no 
    common use areas (time-phasing is not permissible).
        (2) Total separation in all juvenile and adult program areas, 
    including recreation, education, counseling, dining, sleeping, and 
    general living activities. There must be an independent and 
    comprehensive operational plan for the juvenile detention center which 
    provides for a full range of separate program services. No program 
    activities may be shared by juveniles and incarcerated adults. However, 
    equipment and other resources may be used by both populations subject 
    to security concerns and the criterion in paragraph (e)(3)(i)(D)(1) of 
    this section.
        (3) Separate staff for the juvenile and adult populations, 
    including management, security, and direct care staff. Staff providing 
    specialized services (food service, laundry, maintenance and 
    engineering, etc.) who are not normally in contact with detainees, or 
    whose infrequent contacts occur under conditions of separation of 
    juveniles and adults, can serve both populations (subject to State 
    standards or licensing requirements). The day to day management, 
    security and direct care functions of the juvenile detention center 
    must be vested in a totally separate staff, dedicated solely to the 
    juvenile population within the collocated facilities; and
        (4) In States that have established standards or licensing 
    requirements for juvenile detention facilities, the juvenile facility 
    must meet the standards (on the same basis as a free-standing juvenile 
    detention center) and be licensed as appropriate. If there are no State 
    standards or licensing requirements, then the jurisdiction must 
    cooperate in a preapproval review of its physical plant, staffing 
    patterns, and programs by an organization selected and compensated by 
    OJJDP. This review will be based on prevailing national juvenile 
    detention standards, and will inform the State's approval process and 
    concurrence by OJJDP.
        (ii) The State must initially determine that the four criteria are 
    fully met. Upon such determination, the State must submit to OJJDP a 
    request for concurrence with the State's finding that a separate 
    juvenile detention facility exists. To enable OJJDP to assess the 
    separateness of the two facilities, sufficient documentation must 
    accompany the request to demonstrate that each criterion has been met. 
    It is incumbent upon the State to make the initial determination 
    through an on-site facility (or full construction and operations plan) 
    review and, through the exercise of its oversight responsibility, to 
    ensure that the separate character of the juvenile detention facility 
    is maintained by continuing to fully meet the four criteria set forth 
    above in paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(D)(1)-(4) of this section.
        (iii) Collocated juvenile detention facilities approved by the 
    State and concurred with by OJJDP on or before June 30, 1995 are to be 
    reviewed against the regulatory criteria and OJJDP policies in effect 
    at the time of the initial approval and concurrence, except that 
    facilities approved after the effective date of this regulation, but 
    prior to July 1, 1995, shall be reviewed against the regulatory 
    criteria in effect on the day before the effective date of this 
    regulation, and except that all collocated facilities are subject to 
    the separate staff requirement established by the 1992 Amendments to 
    the JJDP Act, and set forth in paragraph (e)(3)(i)(D)(3) of this 
    section. Unless otherwise indicated, review of previously approved 
    collocated [[Page 28445]] facilities is expected to occur as part of 
    the State's regularly scheduled monitoring activities.
        (iv) OJJDP's concurrence for facilities considered after June 30, 
    1995 is limited to one year and thereafter, will be reviewed on an 
    annual basis. An annual on-site review of the facility must be 
    conducted by the compliance monitoring staff person(s) representing or 
    employed by the State agency administering the JJDP Act Formula Grants 
    Program. OJJDP's concurrence is required annually, and may involve on-
    site review by OJJDP staff. The purpose of the annual review is to 
    determine if compliance with the criteria set forth in paragraphs 
    (e)(3)(i)(D)(1)-(4) of this section is being maintained, and to assess 
    the continuing need for the collocated facility and the jurisdiction's 
    long term plan to move to a free-standing facility (single jurisdiction 
    or regional) or other detention alternative, unless the juvenile 
    detention center is part of a justice center, in which case the annual 
    review will look solely at the four regulatory criteria. An example of 
    a justice center is a building or a set of buildings in which various 
    agencies are housed, such as law enforcement, courts, State's 
    attorneys, public defenders, and probation, in addition to an adult 
    jail or lockup, and a juvenile detention facility.
        (4) Those States which, based upon the most recently submitted 
    monitoring report, have been found to be in full compliance with 
    section 223(a)(14) may, in lieu of addressing paragraphs (e) (1) and 
    (2) of this section, provide an assurance that adequate plans and 
    resources are available to maintain full compliance.
        (f) Monitoring of Jails, Detention Facilities and Correctional 
    Facilities.
        (1) Pursuant to section 223(a)(15) of the JJDP Act, and except as 
    provided by paragraph (f)(7) of this section, the State shall:
        (i) Describe its plan, procedure, and timetable for annually 
    monitoring jails, lockups, detention facilities, correctional 
    facilities and non-secure facilities. The plan must at a minimum 
    describe in detail each of the following tasks including the 
    identification of the specific agency(s) responsible for each task.
        (A) Identification of monitoring universe: This refers to the 
    identification of all residential facilities which might hold juveniles 
    pursuant to public authority and thus must be classified to determine 
    if it should be included in the monitoring effort. This includes those 
    facilities owned or operated by public and private agencies.
        (B) Classification of the monitoring universe: This is the 
    classification of all facilities to determine which ones should be 
    considered as a secure detention or correctional facility, adult 
    correctional institution, jail, lockup, or other type of secure or 
    nonsecure facility.
        (C) Inspection of facilities: Inspection of facilities is necessary 
    to ensure an accurate assessment of each facility's classification and 
    record keeping. The inspection must include:
        (1) A review of the physical accommodations to determine whether it 
    is a secure or non-secure facility or whether adequate sight and sound 
    separation between juvenile and adult offenders exists and
        (2) a review of the record keeping system to determine whether 
    sufficient data are maintained to determine compliance with section 
    223(a) (12), (13) and/or (14).
        (D) Data collection and data verification: This is the actual 
    collection and reporting of data to determine whether the facility is 
    in compliance with the applicable requirement(s) of section 223(a) 
    (12), (13) and/or (14). The length of the reporting period should be 12 
    months of data, but in no case less than 6 months. If the data is self-
    reported by the facility or is collected and reported by an agency 
    other than the State agency designated pursuant to section 223(a)(1) of 
    the JJDP Act, the plan must describe a statistically valid procedure 
    used to verify the reported data.
        (ii) Provide a description of the barriers which the State faces in 
    implementing and maintaining a monitoring system to report the level of 
    compliance with section 223(a) (12), (13), and (14) and how it plans to 
    overcome such barriers.
        (iii) Describe procedures established for receiving, investigating, 
    and reporting complaints of violation of section 223(a) (12), (13), and 
    (14). This should include both legislative and administrative 
    procedures and sanctions.
        (2) For the purpose of monitoring for compliance with section 
    223(a)(12)(A) of the Act a secure detention or correctional facility is 
    any secure public or private facility used for the lawful custody of 
    accused or adjudicated juvenile offenders or non-offenders, or used for 
    the lawful custody of accused or convicted adult criminal offenders.
        (3) Valid Court Order. For the purpose of determining whether a 
    valid court order exists and a juvenile has been found to be in 
    violation of that valid order all of the following conditions must be 
    present prior to secure incarceration:
        (i) The juvenile must have been brought into a court of competent 
    jurisdiction and made subject to an order issued pursuant to proper 
    authority. The order must be one which regulates future conduct of the 
    juvenile. Prior to issuance of the order, the juvenile must have 
    received the full due process rights guaranteed by the Constitution of 
    the United States.
        (ii) The court must have entered a judgment and/or remedy in accord 
    with established legal principles based on the facts after a hearing 
    which observes proper procedures.
        (iii) The juvenile in question must have received adequate and fair 
    warning of the consequences of violation of the order at the time it 
    was issued and such warning must be provided to the juvenile and to the 
    juvenile's attorney and/or legal guardian in writing and be reflected 
    In the court record and proceedings.
        (iv) All judicial proceedings related to an alleged violation of a 
    valid court order must be held before a court of competent 
    jurisdiction. A juvenile accused of violating a valid court order may 
    be held in secure detention beyond the 24-hour grace period permitted 
    for a noncriminal juvenile offender under OJJDP monitoring policy, for 
    protective purposes as prescribed by State law, or to assure the 
    juvenile's appearance at the violation hearing, as provided by State 
    law, if there has been a judicial determination based on a hearing 
    during the 24-hour grace period that there is probable cause to believe 
    the juvenile violated the court order. In such case the juveniles may 
    be held pending a violation hearing for such period of time as is 
    provided by State law, but in no event should detention prior to a 
    violation hearing exceed 72 hours exclusive of nonjudicial days. A 
    juvenile alleged or found in a violation hearing to have violated a 
    Valid Court Order may be held only in a secure juvenile detention or 
    correctional facility, and not in an adult jail or lockup.
        (v) Prior to and during the violation hearing the following full 
    due process rights must be provided:
        (A) The right to have the charges against the juvenile in writing 
    served upon him a reasonable time before the hearing;
        (B) The right to a hearing before a court;
        (C) The right to an explanation of the nature and consequences of 
    the proceeding; [[Page 28446]] 
        (D) The right to legal counsel, and the right to have such counsel 
    appointed by the court if indigent;
        (E) The right to confront witnesses;
        (F) The right to present witnesses;
        (G) The right to have a transcript or record of the proceedings; 
    and
        (H) The right of appeal to an appropriate court.
        (vi) In entering any order that directs or authorizes disposition 
    of placement in a secure facility, the judge presiding over an initial 
    probable cause hearing or violation hearing must determine that all the 
    elements of a valid court order (paragraphs (f)(3) (i), (ii) and (iii) 
    of this section) and the applicable due process rights (paragraph 
    (f)(3)(v) of this section) were afforded the juvenile and, in the case 
    of a violation hearing, the judge must determine that there is no less 
    restrictive alternative appropriate to the needs of the juvenile and 
    the community. This determination must be preceded by a written report 
    to the judge that: reviews the behavior of the juvenile and the 
    circumstances under which the juvenile was brought before the court and 
    made subject to such order; determines the reasons for the juvenile's 
    behavior; and determines whether all dispositions other than secure 
    confinement have been exhausted or are clearly inappropriate. This 
    report must be prepared and submitted by an appropriate public agency 
    (other than a court or law enforcement agency). A multidisciplinary 
    review team that operates independently of courts or law enforcement 
    agencies would satisfy this requirement even if some individual members 
    of the team represent court or law enforcement agencies.
        (vii) A non-offender such as a dependent or neglected child cannot 
    be placed in secure detention or correctional facilities for violating 
    a valid court order.
        (4) Removal exception (section 223(a)(14)). The following 
    conditions must be met in order for an accused juvenile criminal-type 
    offender, awaiting an initial court appearance, to be detained up to 24 
    hours (excluding weekends and holidays) in an adult jail or lockup:
        (i) The State must have an enforceable State law requiring an 
    initial court appearance within 24 hours after being taken into custody 
    (excluding weekends and holidays);
        (ii) The geographic area having jurisdiction over the juvenile is 
    outside a metropolitan statistical area pursuant to the Bureau of 
    Census' current designation;
        (iii) A determination must be made that there is no existing 
    acceptable alternative placement for the juvenile pursuant to criteria 
    developed by the State and approved by OJJDP;
        (iv) The adult jail or lockup must have been certified by the State 
    to provide for the sight and sound separation of juveniles and 
    incarcerated adults; and
        (v) The State must provide documentation that the conditions in 
    paragraphs(f)(4)(i) through (iv) of this section have been met and 
    received prior approval from OJJDP. OJJDP strongly recommends that 
    jails and lockups that incarcerate juveniles be required to provide 
    youth specific admissions screening and continuous visual supervision 
    of juveniles incarcerated pursuant to this exception.
        (vi) Pursuant to section 223(a)(14) of the JJDP Act, the non-MSA 
    (low population density) exception to the jail and lockup removal 
    requirements as described in paragraphs (f)(4)(i) through (v) of this 
    section shall remain in effect through 1997, and shall allow for secure 
    custody beyond the twenty four hours period described in paragraph 
    (f)(4)(i) of this section when the facility is located where conditions 
    of distance to be traveled or the lack of highway, road, or other 
    ground transportation do not allow for court appearances within twenty 
    four hours, so that a brief (not to exceed an additional forty eight 
    hours) delay is excusable; or the facility is located where conditions 
    of safety exist (such as severely adverse, life-threatening weather 
    conditions that do not allow for reasonably safe travel), in which case 
    the time for an appearance may be delayed until twenty four hours after 
    the time that such conditions allow for reasonably safe travel. States 
    may use these additional statutory allowances only where the precedent 
    requirements set forth in paragraphs (f)(4)(i) through (v) of this 
    section have been complied with. This may necessitate statutory or 
    judicial (court rule or opinion) relief within the State from the 
    twenty four hours initial court appearance standard required by 
    paragraph (f)(4)(i) of this section. States must document and describe 
    in their annual monitoring report to OJJDP, the specific circumstances 
    surrounding each individual use of the distance/ground transportation, 
    and weather allowances.
        (5) Reporting requirement. The State shall report annually to the 
    Administrator of OJJDP on the results of monitoring for section 
    223(a)(12),(13), and (14) of the JJDP Act. The reporting period should 
    provide 12 months of data, but shall not be less than six months. The 
    report shall be submitted to the Administrator of OJJDP by December 31 
    of each year.
        (i) To demonstrate the extent of compliance with section 
    223(a)(12)(A) of the JJDP Act, the report must include, at a minimum, 
    the following information for the current reporting period:
        (A) Dates covered by the current reporting period;
        (B) Total number of public and private secure detention and 
    correctional facilities, the total number reporting, and the number 
    inspected on-site;
        (C) The total number of accused status offenders and nonoffenders, 
    including out-of-State runaways and Federal wards, held in any secure 
    detention or correctional facility for longer than twenty four hours 
    (not including weekends or holidays), excluding those held pursuant to 
    the valid court order provision as set forth in paragraph (f)(3) of 
    this section or pursuant to section 922(x) of title 18, United States 
    Code, or a similar State law;
        (D) The total number of accused status offenders (including valid 
    court order violators, out of state runaways, and Federal wards, but 
    excluding Title 18 922(x) violators) and nonoffenders securely detained 
    in any adult jail, lockup, or nonapproved collocated facility for any 
    length of time;
        (E) The total number of adjudicated status offenders and 
    nonoffenders, including out-of-state runaways and Federal wards, held 
    for any length of time in a secure detention or correctional facility, 
    excluding those held pursuant to the valid court order provision or 
    pursuant to title 18 U.S.C. section 922(x);
        (F) The total number of status offenders held in any secure 
    detention or correctional facility pursuant to the valid court order 
    provision set forth in paragraph (f)(3) of this section; and
        (G) The total number of juvenile offenders held pursuant to title 
    18 U.S.C. section 922(x).
        (ii) To demonstrate the extent to which the provisions of section 
    223(a)(12)(B) of the JJDP Act are being met, the report must include 
    the total number of accused and adjudicated status offenders and 
    nonoffenders placed in facilities that are:
        (A) Not near their home community;
        (B) Not the least restrictive appropriate alternative; and
        (C) Not community-based.
        (iii) To demonstrate the extent of compliance with section 
    223(a)(13) of the JJDP Act, the report must include, at a minimum, the 
    following information for the current reporting period:
        (A) Dates covered by the current reporting period; [[Page 28447]] 
        (B) The total number of facilities used to detain or confine both 
    juvenile offenders and adult criminal offenders during the past 12 
    months and the number inspected on-site;
        (C) The total number of facilities used for secure detention and 
    confinement of both juvenile offenders and adult criminal offenders 
    which did not provide sight and sound separation;
        (D) The total number of juvenile offenders and nonoffenders not 
    separated from adult criminal offenders in facilities used for the 
    secure detention and confinement of both juveniles and adults;
        (E) The total number of juvenile detention centers located within 
    the same building or on the same grounds as an adult jail or lockup 
    that have been concurred with by OJJDP, including a list of such 
    facilities;
        (F) The total number of juveniles detained in collocated facilities 
    concurred with by OJJDP that were not separated from the management, 
    security or direct care staff of the adult jail or lockup;
        (G) The total number of juvenile detention centers located within 
    the same building or on the same grounds as an adult jail or lockup 
    that have not been concurred with by OJJDP, including a list of such 
    facilities; and
        (H) The total number of juveniles detained in collocated facilities 
    not approved by the State and concurred with by OJJDP, that were not 
    sight and sound separated from adult criminal offenders.
        (iv) To demonstrate the extent of compliance with section 
    223(a)(14) of the JJDP Act, the report must include, at a minimum, the 
    following information for the current reporting period:
        (A) Dates covered by the current reporting period;
        (B) The total number of adult jails in the State AND the number 
    inspected on-site;
        (C) The total number of adult lockups in the State AND the number 
    inspected on-site;
        (D) The total number of adult jails holding juveniles during the 
    past twelve months;
        (E) The total number of adult lockups holding juveniles during the 
    past twelve months;
        (F) The total number of accused juvenile criminal-type offenders 
    held securely in adult jails, lockups, and collocated facilities not 
    concurred with by OJJDP, in excess of six hours (including those held 
    pursuant to the ``removal exception'' as set forth in paragraph (f)(4) 
    of this section);
        (G) The total number of accused juvenile criminal-type offenders 
    held securely in adult jails, lockups and collocated facilities not 
    concurred with by OJJDP for less than six hours for purposes other than 
    identification, investigation, processing, release to parent(s), 
    transfer to court, or transfer to a juvenile facility following initial 
    custody;
        (H) The total number of adjudicated juvenile criminal-type 
    offenders held securely in adult jails or lockups and collocated 
    facilities not concurred with by OJJDP for any length of time;
        (I) The total number of accused and adjudicated status offenders 
    (including valid court order violators) and nonoffenders held securely 
    in adult jails, lockups and collocated facilities not concurred with by 
    OJJDP, for any length of time;
        (J) The total number of adult jails, lockups, and collocated 
    facilities not concurred with by OJJDP, in areas meeting the ``removal 
    exception'' as noted in paragraph (f)(4) of this section, including a 
    list of such facilities and the county or jurisdiction in which each is 
    located;
        (K) The total number of juveniles accused of a criminal-type 
    offense who were held in excess of six hours but less than 24 hours in 
    adult jails, lockups and collocated facilities not concurred with by 
    OJJDP pursuant to the ``removal exception'' as set forth in paragraph 
    (f)(4) of this section;
        (L) The total number of juveniles accused of a criminal-type 
    offense who were held in excess of 24 hours but not more than an 
    additional 48 hours in adult jails, lockups and collocated facilities 
    not concurred with by OJJDP pursuant to the ``removal exception'' as 
    noted in paragraph (f)(4) of this section, due to conditions of 
    distance or lack of ground transportation; and
        (M) The total number of juveniles accused of a criminal-type 
    offense who were held in excess of 24 hours, but not more than an 
    additional 24 hours after the time such conditions as adverse weather 
    allow for reasonably safe travel, in adult jails, lockups and 
    collocated facilities not concurred with by OJJDP, in areas meeting the 
    ``removal exception'' as noted in paragraph (f)(4) of this section.
        (6) Compliance. The State must demonstrate the extent to which the 
    requirements of sections 223(a)(12)(A), (13), (14), and (23) of the Act 
    are met. If the State fails to demonstrate full compliance with 
    sections 223(a)(12)(A) and (14), and compliance with sections 
    223(a)(13) and (23) by the end of the fiscal year for any fiscal year 
    beginning with fiscal year 1994, the State's allotment under Section 
    222 will be reduced by twenty five percent for each such failure, 
    provided that the State will lose its eligibility for any allotment 
    unless: the State agrees to expend all remaining funds (except planning 
    and administration, State advisory group set-aside funds and Indian 
    tribe pass-through funds) for the purpose of achieving compliance with 
    the mandate(s) for which the State is in noncompliance; or the 
    Administrator makes discretionary determination that the State has 
    substantially complied with the mandate(s) for which there is 
    noncompliance and that the State has made through appropriate executive 
    or legislative action, an unequivocal commitment to achieving full 
    compliance within a reasonable time. In order for a determination to be 
    made that a State has substantially complied with the mandate(s), the 
    State must demonstrate that it has: Diligently carried out the plan 
    approved by OJJDP; demonstrated significant progress toward full 
    compliance; submitted a plan based on an assessment of current barriers 
    to DMC; and provided an assurance that added resources will be 
    expended, be it formula grants or other funds, to achieve compliance. 
    Where a State's allocation is reduced, the amount available for 
    planning and administration and the required pass-through allocation, 
    other than State advisory group set-aside, will be reduced because they 
    are based on the reduced allocation.
        (i) Substantial compliance with section 223(a)(12)(A) can be used 
    to demonstrate eligibility for FY 1993 and prior year formula grant 
    allocations if, within three years of initial plan submission, the 
    State has achieved a seventy five percent reduction in the aggregate 
    number of status offenders and nonoffenders held in secure detention or 
    correctional facilities, or removal of 100 percent of such juveniles 
    from secure correctional facilities only. In addition, the State must 
    make an unequivocal commitment, through appropriate executive or 
    legislative action, to achieving full compliance by FY 1994. Full 
    compliance is achieved when a State has removed 100 percent of such 
    juveniles from secure detention and correctional facilities or can 
    demonstrate full compliance with de minimis exceptions pursuant to the 
    policy criteria contained in the Federal Register of January 9, 1981 
    (46 FR 2566-2569).
        (ii) Compliance with section 223(a)(13) has been achieved when a 
    State can demonstrate that:
        (A) The last submitted monitoring report, covering a full 12 months 
    of data, demonstrates that no juveniles were incarcerated in 
    circumstances that [[Page 28448]] were in violation of section 
    223(a)(13); or
        (B) (1) State law, regulation, court rule, or other established 
    executive or judicial policy clearly prohibits the incarceration of all 
    juvenile offenders in circumstances that would be in violation of 
    section 223(a)(13);
        (2) All instances of noncompliance reported in the last submitted 
    monitoring report were in violation of, or departures from, the State 
    law, rule, or policy referred to in paragraph (f)(6)(ii)(B)(1) of this 
    section;
        (3) The instances of noncompliance do not indicate a pattern or 
    practice but rather constitute isolated instances; and
        (4) Existing mechanisms for the enforcement of the State law, rule, 
    or policy referred to in paragraph (f)(6)(ii)(B)(1) of this section are 
    such that the instances of noncompliance are unlikely to recur in the 
    future.
        (iii) (A) Full compliance is achieved when a state demonstrates 
    that the last submitted monitoring report, covering 12 months of actual 
    data, demonstrates that no juveniles were held in adult jails or 
    lockups in circumstances that were in violation of section 223(a)(14).
        (B) Full compliance with de minimis exceptions is achieved when a 
    State demonstrates that it has met the standard set forth in either of 
    paragraphs (f)(6)(iii)(B) (1) or (2) of this section:
        (1) Substantive De Minimis Standard. To comply with this standard 
    the State must demonstrate that each of the following requirements have 
    been met:
        (i) State law, court rule, or other statewide executive or judicial 
    policy clearly prohibits the detention or confinement of all juveniles 
    in circumstances that would be in violation of section 223(a)(14);
        (ii) All instances of noncompliance reported in the last submitted 
    monitoring reported were in violation of or departures from, the State 
    law, rule, or policy referred to In paragraph (f)(6)(iii)(B)(1)(i) of 
    this section;
        (iii) The instances of noncompliance do not indicate a pattern or 
    practice but rather constitute isolated instances;
        (iv) Existing mechanisms for the enforcement of the State law, rule 
    or policy referred to in paragraph (f)(6)(iii)(B)(1)(i) of this section 
    are such that the instances of noncompliance are unlikely to recur in 
    the future; and
        (v) An acceptable plan has been developed to eliminate the 
    noncompliant incidents and to monitor the existing mechanism referred 
    to in paragraph (f)(6)(iii)(B)(1)(iv) of this section.
        (2) Numerical De Minimis Standard. To comply with this standard the 
    State must demonstrate that each of the following requirements under 
    paragraphs (f)(6)(iii)(B)(2) (i) and (ii) of this section have been 
    met:
        (i) The incidents of noncompliance reported in the State's last 
    submitted monitoring report do not exceed an annual rate of 9 per 
    100,000 juvenile population of the State; and
        (ii) An acceptable plan has been developed to eliminate the 
    noncompliant incidents through the enactment or enforcement of State 
    law, rule, or statewide executive or judicial policy, education, the 
    provision of alternatives, or other effective means.
        (iii) Exception. When the annual rate for a State exceeds 9 
    incidents of noncompliance per 100,000 juvenile population, the State 
    will be considered ineligible for a finding of full compliance with de 
    minimis exceptions under the numerical de minimis standard unless the 
    State has recently enacted changes in State law which have gone into 
    effect and which the State demonstrates can reasonably be expected to 
    have a substantial, significant and positive impact on the state's 
    achieving full (100%) compliance or full compliance with de minimis 
    exceptions by the end of the monitoring period immediately following 
    the monitoring period under consideration.
        (iv) Progress. Beginning with the monitoring report due by December 
    31, 1990, any State whose prior full compliance status is based on 
    having met the numerical de minimis standard set forth in paragraph 
    (f)(6)(iii)(B)(2)(i) of this Sec. 31.303, must annually demonstrate, in 
    its request for a finding of full compliance with de minimis 
    exceptions, continued and meaningful progress toward achieving full 
    (100%) compliance in order to maintain eligibility for a continued 
    finding of full compliance with de minimis exceptions.
        (v) Request Submission. Determinations of full compliance and full 
    compliance with de minimis exceptions are made annually by OJJDP 
    following submission of the monitoring report due by December 31 of 
    each calendar year. Any State reporting less than full (100%) 
    compliance in any annual monitoring report may request a finding of 
    full compliance with de minimis exceptions under paragraph 
    (f)(6)(iii)(B) (1) or (2) of this section. The request may be submitted 
    in conjunction with the monitoring report, as soon thereafter as all 
    information required for a determination is available, or be included 
    in the annual State plan and application for the State's formula grant 
    award.
        (C) Waiver. Failure to achieve full compliance as defined in this 
    section shall terminate any State's eligibility for FY 1993 and prior 
    year formula grant funds unless the Administrator of OJJDP waives 
    termination of the State's eligibility. ln order to be eligible for 
    this waiver of termination, a State must request a waiver and 
    demonstrate that it meets the standards set forth in paragraphs 
    (f)(6)(iii)(C) (1)-(7) of this section:
        (1) Agrees to expend all of its formula grant award except planning 
    and administration, advisory group set-aside, and Indian tribe pass-
    through funds, to achieve compliance with section 223(a)(14); and
        (2) Removed all status and nonoffender juveniles from adult jails 
    and lockups. Compliance with this standard requires that the last 
    submitted monitoring report demonstrate that no status offender 
    (including those accused of or adjudicated for violating a valid court 
    order) or nonoffender juveniles were securely detained in adult jails 
    or lock-ups for any length of time; or that all status offenders and 
    nonoffenders securely detained in adult jails and lock-ups for any 
    length of time were held in violation of an enforceable State law and 
    did not constitute a pattern or practice within the State; and
        (3) Made meaningful progress in removing juvenile criminal-type 
    offenders from adult jails and lockups. Compliance with this standard 
    requires the State to document a significant reduction in the number of 
    jurisdictions securely detaining juvenile criminal-type offenders in 
    violation of section 223 (a)(14) of the JJDP Act; or a significant 
    reduction in the number of facilities securely detaining such 
    juveniles; or a significant reduction in the average length of time 
    each juvenile criminal-type offender is securely detained in an adult 
    jail or lock-up; or State legislation has recently been enacted and 
    taken effect and which the State demonstrates will significantly impact 
    the secure detention of juvenile criminal-type offenders in adult jails 
    and lock-ups; and
        (4) Diligently carried out the State's jail and lockup removal plan 
    approved by OJJDP. Compliance with this standard requires that actions 
    have been undertaken to achieve the State's jail and lock-up removal 
    goals and objectives within approved time lines, and that the State 
    Advisory Group, required by section 223 (a)(3) of the JJDP Act, has 
    maintained an appropriate involvement in developing and/or implementing 
    the State's plan; and
        (5) Submitted an acceptable plan, based on a assessment of current 
    jail [[Page 28449]] and lockup removal barriers within the State, to 
    eliminate noncompliant incidents; and
        (6) Achieved compliance with section 223(a)(15) of the JJDP Act; 
    and
        (7) Demonstrates an unequivocal commitment, through appropriate 
    executive or legislative action, to achieving full compliance.
        (D) Waiver Maximum. A State may receive a waiver of termination of 
    eligibility from the Administrator under paragraph (f)(6)(iii)(C) of 
    this section for a combined maximum of four Formula Grant Awards 
    through Fiscal Year 1993. No additional waivers will be granted.
        (7) Monitoring report exemption. States which have been determined 
    by the OJJDP Administrator to have achieved full compliance with 
    sections 223(a)(12)(A), (a)(14), and compliance with section 223(a)(13) 
    of the JJDP and wish to be exempted from the annual monitoring report 
    requirements must submit a written request to the OJJDP Administrator 
    which demonstrates that:
        (i) The State provides for an adequate system of monitoring jails, 
    law enforcement lockup, detention facilities, to enable an annual 
    determination of State compliance with sections 223(a)(12)(A), (13), 
    and (14) of the JJDP Act;
        (ii) State legislation has been enacted which conforms to the 
    requirements of Sections 223(a)(12)(A), (13), and (14) of the JJDP Act; 
    and
        (iii) The enforcement of the legislation is statutorily or 
    administratively prescribed, specifically providing that:
        (A) Authority for enforcement of the statute is assigned;
        (B) Time frames for monitoring compliance with the statute are 
    specified; and
        (C) Adequate procedures are set forth for enforcement of the 
    statute and the imposition of sanctions for violations.
        (g) Juvenile crime analysis. Pursuant to section 223(a)(8), the 
    State must conduct an analysis of juvenile crime problems, including 
    juvenile gangs that commit crimes, and juvenile justice and delinquency 
    prevention needs within the State, including those geographical areas 
    in which an Indian tribe performs law enforcement functions. The 
    analysis and needs assessment must include educational needs, gender 
    specific services, delinquency prevention and treatment services in 
    rural areas, and mental health services available to juveniles in the 
    juvenile justice system. The analysis should discuss barriers to 
    accessing services and provide a plan to provide such services where 
    needed.
        (1) Analysis. The analysis must be provided in the multiyear 
    application. A suggested format for the analysis is provided in the 
    Formula Grant Application Kit.
        (2) Product. The product of the analysis is a series of brief 
    written problem statements set forth in the application that define and 
    describe the priority problems.
        (3) Programs. Applications are to include descriptions of programs 
    to be supported with JJDP Act formula grant funds. A suggested format 
    for these programs is included in the application kit.
        (4) Performance Indicators. A list of performance indicators must 
    be developed and set forth for each program. These indicators show what 
    data will be collected at the program level to measure whether 
    objectives and performance goals have been achieved and should relate 
    to the measures used in the problem statement and statement of program 
    objectives.
        (h) Annual Performance Report. Pursuant to section 223(a) and 
    section 223(a)(22) the State plan shall provide for submission of an 
    annual performance report. The State shall report on its progress in 
    the implementation of the approved programs, described in the three-
    year plan. The performance indicators will serve as the objective 
    criteria for a meaningful assessment of progress toward achievement of 
    measurable goals. The annual performance report shall describe progress 
    made in addressing the problem of serious juvenile crime, as documented 
    in the juvenile crime analysis pursuant to section 223(a)(8)(A). The 
    annual performance report must be submitted to OJJDP no later than June 
    30 and address all formula grant activities carried out during the 
    previous complete calendar year, federal fiscal year, or State fiscal 
    year for which information is available, regardless of which year's 
    formula grant funds were used to support the activities being reported 
    on, e.g., during a reporting period, activities may have been funded 
    from two or more formula grant awards.
        (i) Technical Assistance. States shall include, within their plan, 
    a description of technical assistance needs. Specific direction 
    regarding the development and inclusion of all technical assistance 
    needs and priorities will be provided in the ``Application Kit for 
    Formula Grants under the JJDPA.''
        (j) Minority Detention and Confinement. Pursuant to section 
    223(a)(23) of the JJDP Act, States must demonstrate specific efforts to 
    reduce the proportion of juveniles detained or confined in secure 
    detention facilities, secure correctional facilities, jails and lockups 
    who are members of minority groups if such proportion exceeds the 
    proportion such groups represent in the general population, viz., in 
    most States, youth between ages ten-seventeen are subject to secure 
    custody. It is essential that States approach this statutory mandate in 
    a comprehensive manner. Compliance with this provision is achieved when 
    a State meets the requirements set forth in paragraphs (j)(1) through 
    (3) of this section:
        (1) Identification. Provide quantifiable documentation (State, 
    county and local level) in the State's FY 1994 Formula Grant Plan (and 
    all subsequent Multi-Year Plans) Juvenile Crime Analysis and Needs 
    Assessment to determine whether minority juveniles are 
    disproportionately detained or confined in secure detention and 
    correctional facilities, jails and lockups in relation to their 
    proportion of the State juvenile population. Guidelines are provided in 
    the OJJDP Disproportionate Minority Confinement Technical Assistance 
    Manual (see Phase I Matrix). Where quantifiable documentation is not 
    available to determine if disproportionate minority confinement exists 
    in secure detention and correctional facilities, jails and lockups, the 
    State must provide a time-limited plan of action, not to exceed six 
    months, for developing and implementing a system for the ongoing 
    collection, analysis and dissemination of information regarding 
    minorities for those facilities where documentation does not exist.
        (2) Assessment. Each State's FY 1994 Formula Grant Plan must 
    provide a completed assessment of disproportionate minority 
    confinement. Assessments must, at minimum, identify and explain 
    differences in arrest, diversion and adjudication rates, court 
    dispositions other than incarceration, the rates and periods of 
    prehearing detention in and dispositional commitments to secure 
    facilities of minority youth in the juvenile justice system, and 
    transfers to adult court (see Phase II Matrix). If a completed 
    assessment is not available, the State must submit a time-limited plan 
    (not to exceed twelve months from submission of the Formula Grant 
    Application) for completing the assessment.
        (3) Intervention. Each State's FY 1995 Formula Grant Plan must, 
    where disproportionate confinement has been demonstrated, provide a 
    time-limited plan of action for reducing the disproportionate 
    confinement of minority juveniles in secure facilities. The 
    intervention plan shall be based on the results of the assessment, and 
    must [[Page 28450]] include, but not be limited to the following:
        (i) Diversion. Increasing the availability and improving the 
    quality of diversion programs for minorities who come in contact with 
    the juvenile justice system, such as police diversion programs;
        (ii) Prevention. Providing developmental, operational, and 
    assessment assistance (financial and/or technical) for prevention 
    programs in communities with a high percentage of minority residents 
    with emphasis upon support for community-based organizations (including 
    non-traditional organizations) that serve minority youth;
        (iii) Reintegration. Providing developmental, operational, and 
    assessment assistance (financial and/or technical) for programs 
    designed to reduce recidivism by facilitating the reintegration of 
    minority youth in the community following release from dispositional 
    commitments to reduce recidivism;
        (iv) Policies and procedures. Providing financial and/or technical 
    assistance that addresses necessary changes in statewide and local, 
    executive, judicial, and legal representation policies and procedures; 
    and
        (v) Staffing and training. Providing financial and/or technical 
    assistance that addresses staffing and training needs that will 
    positively impact the disproportionate confinement of minority youth in 
    secure facilities.
        (4) The time-limited plans of action set forth in paragraphs (j) 
    (1), (2) and (3) of this section must include a clear indication of 
    current and future barriers; which agencies, organizations, or 
    individual(s) will be responsible for taking what specific actions; 
    when; and what the anticipated outcomes are. The interim and final 
    outcomes from implementation of the time-limited plan of action must be 
    reported in each State's Multi-Year Plans and Annual Plan Updates. 
    Final outcomes for individual project awards are to be included with 
    each State's annual performance report (See Paragraph (h) of this 
    Section).
        (5) Technical assistance is available through the OJJDP Technical 
    Assistance Contract to help guide States with the data collection and 
    analysis, and with programmatic elements of this requirement. 
    Information from the OJJDP Special Emphasis Initiative on 
    Disproportionate Minority Confinement pilot sites will be disseminated 
    as it becomes available.
        (6) For purposes of this statutory mandate, minority populations 
    are defined as: African-Americans, American Indians, Asians, Pacific 
    Islanders, and Hispanics.
        (k) Pursuant to section 223(a)(24) of the JJDP Act, states shall 
    agree to other terms and conditions as the Administrator may reasonably 
    prescribe to assure the effectiveness of programs assisted under the 
    Formula Grant.
    
    
    Sec. 31.304  Definitions.
    
        (a) Private agency. A private non-profit agency, organization or 
    institution is:
        (1) Any corporation, foundation, trust, association, cooperative, 
    or accredited institution of higher education not under public 
    supervision or control; and
        (2) Any other agency, organization or institution which operates 
    primarily for scientific, education, service, charitable, or similar 
    public purposes, but which is not under public supervision or control, 
    and no part of the net earnings of which inures or may lawfully inure 
    to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual, and which has 
    been held by IRS to be tax-exempt under the provisions of section 
    501(c)(3) of the 1954 Internal Revenue Code.
        (b) Secure. As used to define a detention or correctional facility 
    this term includes residential facilities which include construction 
    features designed to physically restrict the movements and activities 
    of persons in custody such as locked rooms and buildings, fences, or 
    other physical structures. It does not include facilities where 
    physical restriction of movement or activity is provided solely through 
    facility staff.
        (c) Facility. A place, an institution, a building or part thereof, 
    set of buildings or an area whether or not enclosing a building or set 
    of buildings which is used for the lawful custody and treatment of 
    juveniles and may be owned and/or operated by public and private 
    agencies.
        (d) Juvenile who is accused of having committed an offense. A 
    juvenile with respect to whom a petition has been filed In the juvenile 
    court or other action has occurred alleging that such juvenile is a 
    juvenile offender, i.e., a criminal-type offender or a status offender, 
    and no final adjudication has been made by the juvenile court.
        (e) Juvenile who has been adjudicated as having committed an 
    offense. A juvenile with respect to whom the juvenile court has 
    determined that such juvenile is a juvenile offender, i.e., a criminal-
    type offender or a status offender.
        (f) Juvenile offender. An individual subject to the exercise of 
    juvenile court jurisdiction for purposes of adjudication and treatment 
    based on age and offense limitations by defined as State law, i.e., a 
    criminal-type offender or a status offender.
        (g) Criminal-type offender. A juvenile offender who has been 
    charged with or adjudicated for conduct which would, under the law of 
    the jurisdiction in which the offense was committed, be a crime if 
    committed by an adult.
        (h) Status offender. A juvenile offender who has been charged with 
    or adjudicated for conduct which would not, under the law of the 
    jurisdiction in which the offense was committed, be a crime if 
    committed by an adult.
        (i) Non-offender. A juvenile who is subject to the jurisdiction of 
    the juvenile court, usually under abuse, dependency, or neglect 
    statutes for reasons other than legally prohibited conduct of the 
    juvenile.
        (j) Lawful custody. The exercise of care, supervision and control 
    over a juvenile offender or non-offender pursuant to the provisions of 
    the law or of a judicial order or decree.
        (k) Other individual accused of having committed a criminal 
    offense. An individual, adult or juvenile, who has been charged with 
    committing a criminal offense in a court exercising criminal 
    jurisdiction.
        (l) Other individual convicted of a criminal offense. An 
    individual, adult or juvenile, who has been convicted of a criminal 
    offense in court exercising criminal jurisdiction.
        (m) Adult jail. A locked facility, administered by State, county or 
    local law enforcement and correctional agencies, the purpose of which 
    is to detain adults charged with violating criminal law, pending trial. 
    Also considered as adult jails are those facilities used to hold 
    convicted adult criminal offenders sentenced for less than one year.
        (n) Adult lockup. Similar to an adult jail except that an adult 
    lockup is generally a municipal or police facility of a temporary 
    nature which does not hold persons after they have been formally 
    charged.
        (o) Valid court order. The term means a court order given by a 
    juvenile court judge to a juvenile who has been brought before the 
    court and made subject to a court order. The use of the word ``valid'' 
    permits the incarceration of juveniles for violation of a valid court 
    order only if they received their full due process rights as guaranteed 
    by the Constitution of the United States.
        (p) Local private agency. For the purposes of the pass-through 
    requirement of section 223(a)(5), a local private agency is defined as 
    a private non-profit agency or organization that 
    [[Page 28451]] provides program services within an identifiable unit or 
    a combination of units of general local government.
    
    Subpart E--General Conditions and Assurances
    
    
    Sec. 31.400  Compliance with statute.
    
        The applicant State must assure and certify that the State and its 
    subgrantees and contractors will comply with applicable provisions of 
    the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, Pub. L. 90-351, 
    as amended, and with the provisions of the Juvenile Justice and 
    Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, Pub. L. 93-415, as amended, and the 
    provisions of the current edition of OJP Financial and Administrative 
    Guide for Grants, M7100.1.
    
    
    Sec. 31.401  Compliance with other Federal laws, orders, circulars.
    
        The applicant State must further assure and certify that the State 
    and its subgrantees and contractors will adhere to other applicable 
    Federal laws, orders and OMB circulars. These general Federal laws and 
    regulations are described in greater detail in the Financial and 
    Administrative Guide for Grants, M7100.1, and the Formula Grant 
    Application Kit.
    
    
    Sec. 31.402  Application on file.
        Any Federal funds awarded pursuant to an application must be 
    distributed and expended pursuant to and in accordance with the 
    programs contained in the applicant State's current approved 
    application. Any departures therefrom, other than to the extent 
    permitted by current program and fiscal regulations and guidelines, 
    must be submitted for advance approval by the Administrator of OJJDP.
    
    
    Sec. 31.403  Civil rights requirements.
    
        The State assures that it will comply, and that subgrantees and 
    contractors will comply, with all applicable Federal non-discrimination 
    requirements, including:
        (a) Section 809(c) of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets 
    Act as 1968, as amended, and made applicable by section 299(A) of the 
    Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, as amended;
        (b) Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended;
        (c) Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended;
        (d) Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972;
        (e) The Age Discrimination Act of 1975;
        (f) The Department of Justice NonDiscrimination regulations, 28 CFR 
    part 42, subparts C, D, E, and G;
        (g) The Department of Justice regulations on disability 
    discrimination, 28 CFR parts 35 and 39; and
        (h) Subtitle A, title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act 
    (ADA) of 1990.
    Shay Bilchik,
    Administrator, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.
    [FR Doc. 95-13046 Filed 5-30-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4410-18-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
3/10/1995
Published:
05/31/1995
Department:
Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Office
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Republication.
Document Number:
95-13046
Dates:
The final regulation became effective on March 10, 1995.
Pages:
28440-28451 (12 pages)
Docket Numbers:
OJP No. 1000F
RINs:
1121-AA28
PDF File:
95-13046.pdf
CFR: (20)
28 CFR 31.1
28 CFR 31.2
28 CFR 31.3
28 CFR 31.100
28 CFR 31.101
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