C.R.S. Section 13-5-145
Truancy detention reduction policy

  • legislative declaration

(1)

The general assembly finds that:

(a)

Imposing a sentence of detention on a juvenile who violates a court order to attend school does not improve the likelihood that the juvenile will attend school and does not address the underlying causes of the juvenile’s truancy;

(b)

The best methods to address truancy and its underlying causes and the resources needed to implement those methods are different in each community;

(c)

Since 2014, the juvenile courts in many judicial districts around the state have successfully reduced the use of detention for juveniles who are truant by implementing pilot projects through which the juvenile court imposes reasonable sanctions and, where possible, provides incentives to attend school, reserving detention as a sanction of last resort; and

(d)

These pilot projects need additional time to produce meaningful data regarding the effectiveness of the alternate sanctions and incentives and to determine whether they result in improved outcomes for juveniles and their families.

(2)

The chief judge in each judicial district, or his or her designee, shall convene a meeting of community stakeholders to create a policy for addressing truancy cases that seeks alternatives to the use of detention as a sanction for truancy. Community stakeholders may include, but need not be limited to:

(a)

Parents;

(b)

Representatives from school districts;

(c)

Representatives from county departments of human or social services;

(d)

Guardians ad litem;

(e)

Court-appointed special advocates;

(f)

Juvenile court judges;

(g)

Respondent counsel;

(h)

Representatives from law enforcement agencies;

(i)

Mental health-care providers;

(j)

Substance use disorder treatment providers;

(k)

Representatives from the division of criminal justice in the department of public safety;

(l)

Representatives from the state department of human services; and

(m)

Representatives from the department of education.

(3)

The chief judge in each judicial district shall adopt a policy for addressing truancy cases no later than March 15, 2016. In developing the policy for addressing truancy cases, the chief judge and the community stakeholders shall consider, at a minimum:

(a)

Best practices for addressing truancy that are used in other judicial districts and in other states;

(b)

Evidence-based practices to address and reduce truancy;

(c)

Using a wide array of reasonable sanctions and reasonable incentives to address and reduce truancy;

(d)

Using detention only as a last resort after exhausting all other reasonable sanctions and, when imposing detention, appropriately reducing the number of days served; and

(e)

Research regarding the effect of detention on juveniles.

(4)

The state court administrator’s office shall report to the judiciary committees of the house of representatives and the senate, or any successor committees, no later than April 15, 2016, regarding the policy for addressing truancy cases adopted by each judicial district.

Source: Section 13-5-145 — Truancy detention reduction policy - legislative declaration, https://leg.­colorado.­gov/sites/default/files/images/olls/crs2023-title-13.­pdf (accessed Oct. 20, 2023).

13‑5‑101
Judicial districts and terms
13‑5‑102
First district
13‑5‑103
Second district
13‑5‑104
Third district
13‑5‑105
Fourth district
13‑5‑106
Fifth district
13‑5‑107
Sixth district
13‑5‑108
Seventh district
13‑5‑109
Eighth district
13‑5‑110
Ninth district
13‑5‑111
Tenth district
13‑5‑112
Eleventh district
13‑5‑113
Twelfth district
13‑5‑114
Thirteenth district
13‑5‑115
Fourteenth district
13‑5‑116
Fifteenth district
13‑5‑117
Sixteenth district
13‑5‑118
Seventeenth district
13‑5‑119
Eighteenth district
13‑5‑120
Nineteenth district
13‑5‑121
Twentieth district
13‑5‑122
Twenty-first district
13‑5‑123
Twenty-second district
13‑5‑123.1
Twenty-third district
13‑5‑123.2
Twenty-third judicial district - elections in 2024 - reports - repeal
13‑5‑124
Appointment of clerk and employees
13‑5‑125
Clerks to keep records
13‑5‑126
Duties of bailiff
13‑5‑127
Duties of reporters
13‑5‑128
Compensation of reporter
13‑5‑131
Multiple-judge districts
13‑5‑132
Powers of judges sitting separately
13‑5‑133
Judges may sit en banc - purpose - rules
13‑5‑134
Juries
13‑5‑135
Time limit on judgment
13‑5‑136
Forfeit of salary
13‑5‑138
Appeals to district court
13‑5‑139
Transfer of information from orders for child support and maintenance to child support enforcement agency - payment of support and maintenance
13‑5‑140
Transfer of certain registry functions - cooperation between departments
13‑5‑141
Compilation - sentences received upon conviction of felony
13‑5‑142
National instant criminal background check system - reporting
13‑5‑142.5
National instant criminal background check system - judicial process for awarding relief from federal prohibitions - legislative declaration
13‑5‑142.8
Notice by professional persons
13‑5‑143
Judge as party to a case - recusal of judge upon motion
13‑5‑144
Chief judge - veterans treatment court authority
13‑5‑145
Truancy detention reduction policy - legislative declaration
13‑5‑201
District court magistrates
Green check means up to date. Up to date

Current through Fall 2024

§ 13-5-145’s source at colorado​.gov