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2005 California Welfare and Institutions Code Sections 18220-18221 CHAPTER 3.2. JUVENILE PROBATION FUNDING
WELFARE AND INSTITUTIONS CODESECTION 18220-18221
18220. (a) (1) The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, commencing July 1, 2005, shall administer funds appropriated for the purposes of this chapter and allocated pursuant to this section. (2) For purposes of this chapter, "department" means the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. (b) (1) The department shall administer this chapter, including the establishment of agreements with all county probation departments that receive funding under this chapter. (2) (A) Subject to the availability of funds in the annual Budget Act, the department shall be responsible for allocating funds to counties. (B) Commencing with the 2005-06 fiscal year, the department shall allocate one hundred sixty-eight million seven hundred thirteen thousand dollars ($168,713,000) among counties based on the allocation schedule specified in this subparagraph. In any year in which the total amount appropriated by the Legislature for the purposes of this section differs from the total amount provided in the 2004-05 fiscal year, the amount appropriated shall be apportioned to counties based on the 2004-05 fiscal year allocation schedule as follows: Alameda ............. $6,667,935 Alpine .............. $584 Amador .............. $100,667 Butte ............... $538,712 Calaveras ........... $103,092 Colusa .............. $57,526 Contra Costa ........ $4,493,504 Del Norte ........... $197,338 El Dorado ........... $508,807 Fresno .............. $3,635,282 Glenn ............... $90,484 Humboldt ............ $286,072 Imperial ............ $572,419 Inyo ................ $241,575 Kern ................ $4,333,734 Kings ............... $647,746 Lake ................ $314,736 Lassen .............. $91,671 Los Angeles ......... $67,713,506 Madera .............. $404,791 Marin ............... $631,365 Mariposa ............ $22,394 Mendocino ........... $333,240 Merced .............. $584,419 Modoc ............... $36,005 Mono ................ $12,013 Monterey ............ $1,018,813 Napa ................ $593,942 Nevada .............. $209,805 Orange .............. $14,270,138 Placer .............. $450,012 Plumas .............. $46,127 Riverside ........... $5,438,322 Sacramento .......... $3,602,070 San Benito .......... $360,418 San Bernardino ...... $5,856,862 San Diego ........... $9,463,866 San Francisco ....... $3,232,706 San Joaquin ......... $1,493,704 San Luis Obispo ..... $1,013,424 San Mateo ........... $3,201,176 Santa Barbara ....... $2,794,054 Santa Clara ......... $9,799,213 Santa Cruz .......... $1,033,949 Shasta .............. $694,367 Sierra .............. $6,168 Siskiyou ............ $126,526 Solano .............. $1,748,360 Sonoma .............. $2,200,569 Stanislaus .......... $889,952 Sutter .............. $226,793 Tehama .............. $243,674 Trinity ............. $58,342 Tulare .............. $2,381,471 Tuolumne ............ $119,136 Ventura ............. $2,900,636 Yolo ................ $429,067 Yuba ................ $189,721 Total ............... $168,713,000 (C) Commencing with the 2005-06 fiscal year, the department shall allocate thirty-two million seven hundred thousand dollars ($32,700,000) among counties that operate juvenile camps and ranches based on the number of occupied beds in each camp as of 12:01 a.m. each day, up to the Corrections Standards Authority rated maximum capacity, as determined by the Corrections Standards Authority. 18221. (a) Subject to the availability of funds for the purposes described in this section, funds provided pursuant to subparagraphs (B) and (C) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 18220 may be used to serve children who are habitual truants, runaways, at risk of being wards of the court under Section 601 or 602, or under juvenile court supervision or supervision of the probation department. Funds may be used to serve parents or other family members of these children if serving them will promote increased self-sufficiency, personal responsibility, and family stability for the child. Services shall be provided pursuant to a family service plan. When a family is served by multiple public agencies or in need of services from multiple public agencies, the family service plan shall be developed through an interdisciplinary approach that shall include representatives from agencies that provide services to the family or that may be required to implement the service plan. (b) Services authorized under this section include all of the following: (1) Educational advocacy and attendance monitoring. (2) Mental health assessment and counseling. (3) Home detention. (4) Social responsibility training. (5) Family mentoring. (6) Parent peer support. (7) Life skills counseling. (8) Direct provision of, and referral to, prevocational and vocational training. (9) Family crisis intervention. (10) Individual, family, and group counseling. (11) Parenting skills development. (12) Drug and alcohol education. (13) Respite care. (14) Counseling, monitoring, and treatment. (15) Gang intervention. (16) Sex and health education. (17) Anger management, violence prevention, and conflict resolution. (18) Aftercare services as juveniles transition back into the community and reintegrate into their families. (19) Information and referral regarding the availability of community services. (20) Case management. (21) Therapeutic day treatment. (22) Transportation related to any of the services described in this subdivision. (23) Emergency and temporary shelter.
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