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SB 64Juveniles; commitment to DJJ, petition to extend duration of indeterminate commitment.

VA 20261 session

Department of Juvenile Justice; commitment of juveniles to Department; petition to extend duration of indeterminate commitment. Creates a process by which the Department of Juvenile Justice, upon determining that a juvenile currently committed to the Department should continue such commitment beyond the high end of the length of stay guidelines established by the State Board of Juvenile Justice, may petition the court that ordered a juvenile's indeterminate commitment to the Department to extend such juvenile's commitment. The bill requires the Department to file such petition at least 60 days prior to the expiration of the high end of the length of stay range, along with a report on the juvenile's progress. If the Department determines fewer than 60 days before expiration that an extension is necessary, it shall file a petition for review that includes a statement explaining the specific circumstances causing the late filing. The bill provides that the court shall schedule a hearing on the petition at which the court shall consider such progress report and may consider additional evidence as described in the bill. The bill provides that, at the conclusion of the hearing, the court shall order either that the juvenile be released or that the juvenile's period of commitment be extended for a period not to exceed six months, provided that such extension does not exceed the limitations for an indeterminate commitment provided by current law. As introduced, this bill was a recommendation of the Virginia Commission on Youth.

Latest action: Acts of Assembly Chapter

Sponsors (4)
Action timeline (38)
  1. · senate · S4020
  2. · senate · S0901
  3. · senate · S8500
  4. · senate · S8122
  5. · senate · S8122
  6. · senate · S0907
  7. · senate · S4140
  8. · senate · S4160
  9. · senate · S4140
  10. · senate · S4110
  11. · senate · S4160
  12. · senate · S4160
  13. · senate · S4120
  14. · senate · S4212
  15. · senate · S4602
  16. · senate · S4602
  17. · senate · S5000
  18. · senate · S8500
  19. · house · H5220
  20. · house · H4110
  21. · house · H2401
  22. · house · H2414
  23. · house · H1512
  24. · house · H1516
  25. · house · H1505
  26. · house · H4120
  27. · house · H4130
  28. · house · H5100
  29. · senate · S5610
  30. · senate · S5601
  31. · house · H5620
  32. · senate · S5620
  33. · senate · S8500
  34. · senate · S7010
  35. · G7010
  36. · G7050
  37. · G9998
  38. · G9998
Text versions (0)

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Bill text (extracted)
Amendments
Congressional Research Service briefs (0)

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Who matters on this bill

Who matters

Members ranked by combined influence on this bill: role (sponsor 5 / cosponsor 1), capped speech count from the Congressional Record, and recorded-vote engagement.

#MemberRoleSpeechesVotedScore
1Barbara A. Favola (D, state_upper VA)sponsor05
2David R. Suetterlein (R, state_upper VA)cosponsor01
3Holly M. Seibold (D, state_lower VA)cosponsor01
4Irene Shin (D, state_lower VA)cosponsor01
Stance (positions taken)

Predicted vote

Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.

0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)

By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no

Timeline
News clips about this bill
Mentioned in /ask threads

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