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Day of action focuses on CT undocumented's healthcare needs; 7 jurors seated in first Trump criminal trial; ND looks to ease 'upskill' obstacles for former college students; Black Maternal Health Week ends, health disparities persist.

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Seven jury members were seated in Trump's hush money case. House Speaker Johnson could lose his job over Ukraine aid. And the SCOTUS heard oral arguments in a case that could undo charges for January 6th rioters.

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Rural Wyoming needs more vocational teachers to sustain its workforce pipeline, Ohio environmental advocates fear harm from a proposal to open 40-thousand forest acres to fracking and rural communities build bike trail systems to promote nature, boost the economy.

Expert: Budget “Surprise” Not Good For Young People in WI

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Wednesday, June 12, 2013   

MADISON, Wis. - With no advance notice, the Joint Finance Committee slipped a big change into the proposed state budget that would double the length of time judges are authorized to place young people in local juvenile detention facilities - from 180 days to 365.

Jim Moeser, deputy director of the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families and one of the state's foremost experts on juvenile justice policy, said the state may not be ready for such a change.

"Some facilities have been working on these prior 180-day programs, and in some cases trying to do a pretty good job putting them together," Moeser said. "There are other facilities that I'd be very concerned about and I don't think would be ready both from a facilities standpoint and probably from a staffing and program standpoint."

Many state facilities are staffed and designed only for short-term secure placement, Moeser said, adding that they don't have the appropriate programs or services to deal with long-term incarceration.

He said such a proposal deserves much more public notice and discussion.

"If it's good policy, we ought to take the time to evaluate it, talk about it and think it through in a much more logical way; come up with in the end a better statute, so maybe in the end a statute of 365 days is OK," Moeser said, "but with some parameters and some regulations applied to it."

Supporters of the change say it may save some counties some money, but Moeser said there has been no consideration for simple steps that could be taken to help ensure the needs of young people and their communities are being met.

"If you can develop more local programs to deal with some of these kids close by, where you can work with the family, have them more integrated with the community and the services you're working with, there's a lot of logic to that and some states have been doing that kind of thing with pretty good results," he said.

Moeser suggested that the Legislature and governor take a step back and evaluate whether this proposal is consistent with what we already know works best with youthful offenders.


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