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HR142 • 2025

A Resolution directing the Joint State Government Commission to conduct a study and issue a report on the best practices and recommendations for the operation of juvenile detention centers within this Commonwealth.

A Resolution directing the Joint State Government Commission to conduct a study and issue a report on the best practices and recommendations for the operation of juvenile detention centers within this Commonwealth.

Children
Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
KAZEEM
Last action
2026-05-07
Official status
(Remarks see House Journal Page 1142-1143), June 30, 2025
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

A Resolution directing the Joint State Government Commission to conduct a study and issue a report on the best practices and recommendations for the operation of juvenile detention centers within this Commonwealth.

A Resolution directing the Joint State Government Commission to conduct a study and issue a report on the best practices and recommendations for the operation of juvenile detention centers within this Commonwealth.

What This Bill Does

  • A Resolution directing the Joint State Government Commission to conduct a study and issue a report on the best practices and recommendations for the operation of juvenile detention centers within this Commonwealth.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-05-07 H

    (Remarks see House Journal Page 1142-1143), June 30, 2025

  2. 2025-06-30 H

    Adopted, June 30, 2025 (109-94)

  3. 2025-06-17 CHILDREN AND YOUTH

    Reported as committed, June 17, 2025

  4. 2025-03-24 CHILDREN AND YOUTH

    Referred to CHILDREN AND YOUTH, March 24, 2025

Official Summary Text

A Resolution directing the Joint State Government Commission to conduct a study and issue a report on the best practices and recommendations for the operation of juvenile detention centers within this Commonwealth.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
PRINTER'S NO. 1109
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA
HOUSE RESOLUTION
No. 142
Session of
2025
INTRODUCED BY KAZEEM, SANCHEZ, HILL-EVANS, CEPEDA-FREYTIZ,
HANBIDGE, FLEMING, DALEY, CIRESI, OTTEN, GREEN AND CURRY,
MARCH 24, 2025
REFERRED TO COMMITTEE ON CHILDREN AND YOUTH, MARCH 24, 2025
A RESOLUTION
Directing the Joint State Government Commission to conduct a
study and issue a report on the best practices and
recommendations for the operation of juvenile detention
centers within this Commonwealth.
WHEREAS, A grand jury investigated abuse allegations at the
now closed Delaware County Juvenile Detention Center (DCJDC) and
found that the DCJDC "existed like a prison intent on
punishment, not reform, and allowed a dangerous, unprofessional
culture to pervade"; and
WHEREAS, The grand jury found that an extreme lack of
available activities led to residents spending "most of their
time in their rooms doing nothing"; and
WHEREAS, The grand jury found, based on witness testimony,
that although education should have been provided, "staff would
not always bring the juveniles to the classroom as required" and
"the school work was...frequently below the juveniles' actual
grade level"; and
WHEREAS, The grand jury found that the facility frequently
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cursed at and bullied residents; and
WHEREAS, The grand jury found that the facility failed to
intervene in fights between residents and to deescalate episodes
effectively; and
WHEREAS, The grand jury heard testimony of sexually
inappropriate conduct by male detention staff, including making
sexually inappropriate comments to female residents and making
sexually inappropriate advances toward female staff members; and
WHEREAS, The grand jury found that "there has been no
comprehensive examination of best practices for operating secure
juvenile detention facilities," but "so long as there is a need
for such facilities to operate, there is a need to establish
standards for how they should operate consistently with the goal
of rehabilitation"; and
WHEREAS, The grand jury recommended that the General Assembly
make use of the Joint State Government Commission's research
ability to develop policies and practices; therefore be it
RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives direct the Joint
State Government Commission to conduct a study and issue a
report on the best practices and recommendations for the
operation of juvenile detention centers within this
Commonwealth, including:
(1) The implementation of total video surveillance of
the facility, excluding bedrooms and bathrooms, by a video
surveillance system with the capacity to store footage for a
minimum of 90 days and a requirement that a supervisor review
and preserve video footage whenever a physical restraint is
used by staff on a juvenile and the procedures necessary to
ensure that the footage is used to ensure juvenile safety and
not to incriminate juveniles.
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(2) Expanding the list of required training categories
beyond the requirements of the 3800-series regulations,
including training on deescalation techniques, handling
children with trauma and mental health issues and respecting
the specific rights of children in detention as specified in
the 3800-series regulations.
(3) Requiring that such training be conducted in person
and allow detention staff to practice techniques prior to
supervising children.
(4) Creating additional minimum qualifications for
management and staff, which may include raising the minimum
age of detention staffers.
(5) Incentivizing employment for people with lived
experience whose backgrounds are reflective of the
demographics of the juveniles in the facility and for
juveniles in the facility with multidisciplinary backgrounds.
(6) Restricting the use of overtime, including limiting
the number of hours a detention officer or supervisor can
work either consecutively or in a 24-hour to 48-hour period,
with attention to how staffing levels will impact the use of
isolation and solitary confinement or other harmful
practices.
(7) Reviewing any options that may be available to
ensure a living wage that can attract and retain qualified
candidates.
(8) Adding programming requirements for juveniles,
including standards on how juveniles should be educated in
ways that support age-appropriate educational
activities, with consideration on how best to support
education and other programming outside of the facility.
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(9) Adopting policies to ensure the rights of juveniles
and staff to file incident reports and grievances without
retaliation, including policies to ensure that grievances are
accessible to English language learners and individuals with
disabilities, to internally track ChildLine reports,
facility-specific incident reports and grievances filed
against employees, whether by juveniles or other employees,
to collect and analyze data on the demographics of juveniles
who filed grievances against employees based on substantiated
reports and to assess the grievances on the basis of race,
abuse, orientation, gender bias or discrimination, sexual
violence and assault.
(10) Identifying juveniles who can be served in their
homes and communities and methods to support their release to
those settings.
(11) Identifying policies that contribute to
overcrowding in the facility, including the use of detention
for juveniles with electronic monitoring violations, the use
of detention for juveniles with technical probation
violations and reduced availability of post-disposition
placement as a result of juveniles not being credited for
time served in detention;
and be it further
RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives direct the Joint
State Government Commission to establish an advisory committee
of no less than 13 members to consult with the Joint State
Government Commission in conducting the study, including
representatives of the judiciary, district attorneys, law
enforcement officials, public organizations involved in juvenile
justice rehabilitation, representatives of county children and
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youth agencies and juvenile justice agencies and any other
similar organizations as determined by the Joint State
Government Commission.
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