Oklahoma Code § 10A-2-7-305

Title 10A. Children And Juvenile Code: Agreements to establish or maintain community-based
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youth service programs, shelters and community intervention centers.
A.  The Office of Juvenile Affairs is authorized to enter into
contracts to establish or maintain community-based youth service
programs, shelters and community intervention centers out of local,
state and federal monies.
B.  The Office of Juvenile Affairs shall take all necessary
steps to develop and implement a diversity of community services and
community-based residential care as needed to provide for adequate
and appropriate community-based care, treatment and rehabilitation
of children in the care, custody, and supervision of the Office of
Juvenile Affairs.  Such community services and residential care
shall be consistent with the treatment needs of the child and the
protection of the public.
1.  The Office of Juvenile Affairs shall, to the extent
reasonable and practicable, provide community-based services,
community residential care and community intervention centers to
children in the custody of the Office of Juvenile Affairs through
financial agreements, as authorized in Sections 2-7-303 and 2-7-304
of this title.
2.  The Office of Juvenile Affairs shall establish procedures
for the letting of grants or contracts, and the conditions and
requirements for the receipt of such grants or contracts, for
community-based services, community residential care and community
intervention centers.  A copy of such procedures shall be made
available to any member of the general public upon request.

C.  Any state agency letting grants or contracts for the
establishment of community residential care or treatment facilities
for children shall require, as a condition for receipt of such
grants or contracts, documented assurance from the agency or
organization establishing such facility that appropriate
arrangements have been made for providing the educational services
to which residents of the facility are entitled pursuant to state
and federal law.
D.  1.  The Office of Juvenile Affairs shall certify community
intervention centers that are established by one or more
municipalities or one or more counties or juvenile bureaus pursuant
to rules promulgated by the Board of Juvenile Affairs.  The
municipality, county or juvenile bureau may enter into contracts or
subcontracts with one or more service providers.  The service
provider, whether a municipality, county or other entity, must have
access to the management information system provided for in Section
2-7-308 of this title and must employ qualified staff, as determined
by the Office of Juvenile Affairs.
2.  The community intervention center shall serve as a short-
term reception facility to receive and hold juveniles who have been
taken into custody by law enforcement agencies for the alleged
violation of a municipal ordinance or state law or who are alleged
to be in need of supervision and for whom detention is inappropriate
or unavailable.  The community intervention center may receive and
hold juveniles for whom detention is appropriate and available
pending transportation by law enforcement to a detention facility;
provided, custody by law enforcement shall not be relinquished to
the community intervention center until detention eligibility and
bed availability are determined by the designated detention screener
and an order for detention is issued.  The community intervention
center may be a secure facility.  Juveniles held in the community
intervention facility shall not be isolated from common areas other
than for short-term protective holding for combative or self-
destructive behavior, as defined by the Office of Juvenile Affairs.
3.  Juveniles shall not be held in a community intervention
center for more than twenty-four (24) hours.
4.  The community intervention center shall perform the
following functions:
a. enter demographic information into the management
information system provided for in Section 2-7-308 of
this title,
b. immediately notify the parents or parent, guardian, or
other person legally responsible for the juvenile's
care, or if such legally responsible person is
unavailable the adult with whom the juvenile resides,
that the juvenile has been taken into custody and to
pick up the juvenile,

c. hold juveniles until they can be released to a parent,
guardian, or other responsible adult or until a
temporary placement can be secured, but in no event
for longer than twenty-four (24) hours, and
d. ensure that a written promise is executed by the
parent, guardian or other responsible adult to bring
the child to court at any time if a petition is to be
filed.
5.  The community intervention center may perform the following
functions:
a. gather information to determine if the juvenile is in
need of immediate medical attention,
b. conduct an initial assessment pursuant to rules
promulgated by the Board.  Such initial assessment may
be given without parental consent if the juvenile
agrees to participate in the assessment, and
c. conduct an assessment pursuant to a Problem Behavior
Inventory or a Mental Status Checklist or an
equivalent assessment instrument authorized by rules
promulgated by the Board, if written permission to do
so is obtained from the parent, guardian or other
person legally responsible for the care of the
juvenile.  Such person and the juvenile may review the
assessment instrument prior to the assessment process,
must be informed that participation in the assessment
is voluntary and that refusal to participate shall not
result in any penalty, and must sign a written
acknowledgment that they were given an opportunity to
review the assessment instrument.  The assessment
shall be used to develop recommendations to correct
the behavior of the juvenile, to divert the
progression of the juvenile into the juvenile justice
system, to determine if the juvenile is in need of
nonemergency medical treatment, and to determine if
the juvenile is the victim of violence.  Information
derived from the assessment shall not be made
available to prosecutors or the court prior to
adjudication of the alleged offense, and shall not be
used in any phase of prosecution but may be used by
the court following adjudication for the dispositional
order and may be used for referrals to social
services.
6.  A juvenile alleged to have committed an offense which would
be a felony if committed by an adult may be fingerprinted at a
community intervention center.  No other juveniles shall be
fingerprinted at community intervention centers.

7.  Community intervention centers shall be certified pursuant
to standards established by the Office of Juvenile Affairs and rules
promulgated by the Board.
Added by Laws 1976, p. 600, S.J.R. No. 56, § 1, emerg. eff. March
16, 1976.  Amended by Laws 1978, c. 307, § 1, emerg. eff. May 10,
1978; Laws 1982, c. 312, § 12, operative July 1, 1982; Laws 1984, c.
182, § 3, emerg. eff. May 7, 1984; Laws 1989, c. 345, § 4, eff. Oct.
1, 1989; Laws 1990, c. 302, § 12, eff. Sept. 1, 1990; Laws 1995, c.
352, § 81, eff. July 1, 1995.  Renumbered from § 607 of Title 10 by
Laws 1995, c. 352, § 199, eff. July 1, 1995.  Amended by Laws 1996,
c. 247, § 13, eff. July 1, 1996; Laws 1999, c. 365, § 3, eff. Nov.
1, 1999; Laws 2006, c. 320, § 8, emerg. eff. June 9, 2006; Laws
2009, c. 234, § 9, emerg. eff. May 21, 2009.  Renumbered from §
7302-3.5 of Title 10 by Laws 2009, c. 234, § 171, emerg. eff. May
21, 2009.  Amended by Laws 2013, c. 404, § 21, eff. Nov. 1, 2013;

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