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Welcome to the SWIJDC report page. This page and the pictures may be downloaded or copied, printed off to be used in reports for school. This page was started on May 1, 2003, and more will be added as more questions come in. If you think of something that is not covered here, please let me know, and I can add it to the page. Please email me at sjett@canyoncounty.org. (Don't you wish all your research was this easy?) Here is a view down one of the hallways. You are looking at 12 cells. There are 12 more immediately upstairs, making it 24 for each wing. We have 3 wings, giving us 72 regular rooms. We also have a 14 bed dormitory and 4 observation rooms. The bags hanging from the hinges contain laundry. The white piles on the floor are the freshly laundered bedding and linen. The closest door on the right, with the sliding hatch, is a shower.
This is one of the cells. The kids must fold their bedding and keep the room neat at all times.
The picture below is our booking office. Kathy is booking in a juvenile. All of the information goes into our database, then we fingerprint, photograph and change the kids into our clothing. All of the information we have, including fingerprints and photographs, are available to any law enforcement agency and the FBI.
This is the dayroom, almost all set up for the kids to come in and grab a tray before going to their rooms to eat. Just before the kids come through, we put sandwiches on the trays, and spoon out the soup. Our 'magazine rack' is the table in the back of the room. The game cabinet is the dark thing on the far right. Our library shelves are just out of sight past the game cabinet. You must earn the privilege of using the exercise machine.
This is our school. We have 3 classrooms in operation, with 3 teachers and an aide. In this picture, our aide is helping a juvenile. Notice the clothing. The kid on the right is on Level 3, which means he gets some more privileges that the kid on the left, who is on Level 2. Privileges include more time out of their room, more gym time, more phone calls each week, visitation with extended family members, more books in their cells, etc.
Over the years, juvenile detention centers
have evolved from warehouses that offered little or no programming into
centers where the juveniles can attend school, helpful classes such as anger
management, drug and alcohol awareness, cognitive restructuring, life
skills, creative writing, etc. Depending on size and resources, other
programs may be available. The SWIJDC also has a small wood shop(Very limited tools and projects),
and we do easy sewing projects, etc.
See these pages: http://www.canyoncounty.org/JUVDET/Scroll%20saw%20project.htm
and also http://www.canyoncounty.org/JUVDET/Hatprojectarticle.htm.
The juveniles have to earn the privilege to enter these programs.
It is the duty of the juvenile detention center to try to teach
things to the juveniles that will make them better citizens when they get out.
If you can think of any questions that you wish to have answered and cannot
find the answer on our website, please contact me at sjett@canyoncounty.org.
Also, if you use information from our page, please drop me a line and let me know you 'visited' us, and what you learned while you were here. Thanks Steve Jett
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