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Utah SAC Core Capacity Project: Juvenile Justice Operations and Recidivism Dashboard Tools

Award Information

Award #
2017-BJ-CX-K017
Location
Awardee County
Salt Lake
Congressional District
Status
Closed
Funding First Awarded
2017
Total funding (to date)
$60,000

Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2017, $60,000)

The State Justice Statistics (SJS) Program is designed to maintain and enhance each state's capacity to address criminal justice issues through collection and analysis of data. The SJS Program provides support to each state to coordinate and conduct statistical activities within the state, conduct research to estimate impacts of legislative and policy changes, and serve as a liaison in assisting BJS to gather data from respondent agencies within their states.

Utah’s Statistical Analysis Center (SAC) is located in the Utah Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice (CCJJ) and has been located in CCJJ since the inception of the SAC program in the state. The Research and Data section of the CCJJ is the functional area that houses the SAC. Currently, there are three members - a SAC director, research consultant, and data coordinator, who manage the day-to-day operations of the state SAC programs.

The Utah SAC proposes to conduct a project under the following Core Capacity area: Measuring criminal justice system performance. The Utah SAC proposes the creation of a series of web-based dashboard tools to assist with the tracking of recidivism and other performance measures within the juvenile justice system in Utah. This will be a continuation of Utah's 2015 SJS award, which has been focused on promoting data sharing, creating integration infrastructure, and developing recidivism and system performance dashboards within the adult system following the passage of Justice Reinvestment Initiative (JRI) reforms to the adult system by the Utah Legislature in March 2015 and implemented beginning in October 2015. In March 2017, the legislature passed similar major reforms to the juvenile justice system to be implemented over the next two years, and CCJJ and the SAC have again been charged with monitoring the implementation and tracking the impact of the reforms on the system as a whole. As with the adult JRI reforms, this charge and responsibilities are confronted with multiple data-related challenges, the most important being the highly sensitive nature of juvenile data and the reluctance of the agencies owning this data (Juvenile Court, Juvenile Justice Services) to share it with researchers outside those agencies. CCJJ and the Utah SAC thus propose using the core capacity building focus of this 2017 grant to develop dashboard tools that directly access the main juvenile justice data system (CARE) to achieve two main goals: 1) make it easier for the juvenile justice agencies to monitor and track their own data; and 2) allow CCJJ to more efficiently track the important performance measures from this data system with minimal impact on staff time within those agencies and data security. Proposed dashboards will track important juvenile justice operations that are in line with performance measures identified for tracking the implementation of the reforms over time, as well as important outcomes within the juvenile years in the CARE system. This will allow, for example, recidivism analyses for different types of juvenile placements, including diversion and up to secure care, and by type/severity of offense and history and risk backgrounds. The resulting product will involve a series of web-based tools that will either be placed directly within the Juvenile Court and/or JJS websites with direct access to CCJJ (and other approved) researchers, or alternatively hosted on an independent stand-alone website with links from CCJJ and Juvenile Court/JJS websites. More basic summary dashboards will also be created that provide system accountability to the public. (CA/NCF)

Note: This project contains a research and/or development component, as defined in applicable law.

Date Created: September 19, 2017