Home » Troubled juvenile hall gets another lifeline on potential closure – Jobsmaa.com

Troubled juvenile hall gets another lifeline on potential closure – Jobsmaa.com

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For more than a month, the government has ordered the closure of the only children's hall of Los Angeles County due to meager staff, and a judge has again saved the complexity of the complexity.

High Court Judge Miguel Esbinosa decided whether to order the Los Buttonos Children's Hall or not to close, and instead it seems that there were no good alternatives to about 230 youths inside.

There are cases of killings and other violent crimes against all young people in Downey facility. The general guardian office recommended to convert the youth to County's “camps,” they are considered more standard than the besieged hall, but usually the cases are excluded for young people who are judged.

“You are asking the court to jump from the cliff for a test that is being carried out on these children,” Espinosa told a court hearing on Friday.

A State Supervisory Committee ordered the Hall Closed Dec. Within 12, the regulators found that there were insufficient staff, and the young men inside were subjected to unsafe conditions and placement in class, medical meetings and external functions. Employees of the Los Angeles County Department, which operates this facility, have said that they do not feel safe to work in order to make the dangerous conditions worse.

Most young people are aged 15 to 18, but some are younger. According to numbers issued by the County Superintendent of County, the County Superintendent of the Agency, nine -year -olds are currently being jailed.

The district administration made it clear that it had no intention of closing this facility, arguing that it would increase confusion and not solve the employee problems at the base of the problem. According to the legal documents, the government closed the other two halls of the County last year after similar problems in the neighboring districts and neighboring districts “uniformly refused” to stay in Los Padrinos.

The public guardian office presented the issue before a judge, arguing that the province was now detention of its customers in violation of state law.

“We are getting along with children. I don't care what they did. They are children.”

Frank Sandoro, with the La County District Attorney's Office, argued that the qualifying department is making the necessary improvements and that it is irresponsible to release the youth.

“No one should be released from the child's hall,” he told the judge. “They do what they can.”

Gilmero Vira Rosa did not come to trial. Kimberly EPPS, his second-in-comment, told the judge that they had recently improved to improve employees, including the payment of one-hour fee to qualifying authorities and the recruitment campaign covering spotify ads and billboards.

This is not enough, Rodricks argued with the Public Defense Office.

“I ask the court: call,” he said. “Do not kick the cane on the road.”

The trial continued until Feb. 14.

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