Public Accountability Report Public Accountability Report

Department of Juvenile Justice
(Appropriated Spending in Thousands)
  FY 2024 FY 2023
Reporting Programs Expenditures Headcount Expenditures Headcount
Department of Juvenile Justice $ 120,910.3 715.0 $ 112,319.2 696.0
Totals $ 120,910.3 715.0 $ 112,319.2 696.0

Amounts may not sum to total due to rounding.

Agency Narrative

The Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice (IDJJ) works to provide treatment and services through a comprehensive continuum of individualized educational, vocational, social, emotional, and basic life skills that will enable youth to avoid delinquent futures and become productive, fulfilled citizens. The Department is working towards implementation of the 21st Century Illinois Transformation Model, which focuses on reducing the harm of incarceration by transitioning youth to small, regional residential centers, investing significantly in community wraparound support and intervention services for justice-involved youth, and increasing financial support for victim services in communities that are disproportionately impacted by violence. In 2025, DJJ will be opening a new facility in Lincoln, IL to serve youth in the central region of the state.

Improvements to Education

IDJJ will be focused on enhancing the quality of education for committed youth. School District 428 continues to work collaboratively with the State Board of Education to develop an enhanced educational curriculum and specialized programming and services for committed youth that ensures federal and state educational program compliance. IDJJ will continue to recruit educators and expand its vocational education opportunities for youth in custody. In 2024, DJJ transitioned one facility to the Phoenix Emerging Adults Career & Education Center (PEACE) to equip graduate young adults ages 17-20 with vocational, career, educational, and life skill development opportunities in a setting that is developmentally appropriate for young adults. DJJ is Addressing the needs of individuals in Illinois Department of Corrections custody who need high school educational services, including by hiring educators to teach within IDOC facilities and by transitioning IYC Harrisburg to serve emerging adults currently in IDOC custody who need high school educational services, consistent with Public Act 103-0875.

Improvements to Rehabilitative Services

IDJJ will enhance interventions that are proven to reduce recidivism and produce positive youth outcomes. Using the Youth Assessment and Screening Instrument (YASI) model, IDJJ has identified areas of the highest risk for our youth and evidence-based programs designed to address those risks. IDJJ is expanding its rehabilitative programming, including trauma-informed care and mental health services. In 2025, DJJ’s YASI screening instrument was updated to provide more accurate risk assessments for youth remanded to our care and expanding a mobile intake process.

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