Plain English Breakdown
The exact amount of funding is not specified in the official source material.
Creating a Working Group to Help Youth in Child Welfare
This bill establishes a working group within the Judiciary to improve legal services for youth involved in child welfare, and funds it.
What This Bill Does
- Establishes a working group inside the Judiciary to look at ways to help youth get better legal support when they are part of the child welfare system.
- The group will review past recommendations from another working group called Malama Ohana and examine practices in other states for similar services.
- It includes members like judges, lawyers, and people with experience in the child welfare system as well as youth leaders.
- The group must write a report before 2026 that suggests ways to test new legal support models for young people.
- Funds are provided from state money to pay for this working group's activities.
Who It Names or Affects
- Youth involved in the child welfare system
- Judiciary and its staff who work on family court cases involving children
- Community members with experience in or knowledge of the child welfare system
Terms To Know
- Malama Ohana Working Group
- A previous group that made recommendations to improve Hawaii's child welfare system.
- Guardian ad litem
- A person appointed by the court to represent a minor or an adult who cannot make decisions for themselves in legal matters.
Limits and Unknowns
- The bill does not specify how many youth will be directly helped by this working group.
- It is unclear what specific changes might come from the report written by the working group.
- The exact amount of funding provided to the working group is not specified.