Rome News-Tribune

Raising the age looks to be a boon, not a budget buster

- Marc Hyden is the director of state government affairs for the R Street Institute and a weekly columnist for the Newnan Times-herald.

Once a national leader in criminal justice reform, Georgia is tied for dead last in one justice-related metric. It is one of only three states that automatica­lly treats all 17-year-olds as adults in the justice system — a misguided policy that lawmakers need to reverse.

There have been successive attempts to raise the age of adult criminal responsibi­lity in Georgia over the past few years, but they have fallen short. Neverthele­ss, it looks poised to be an important issue in the 2023 legislativ­e session, but approving it could be a difficult slog.

If history is any indicator, opposition will claim that the measure will cost the state a tremendous amount of money — a notion that has been a recurring theme in some of the states that more recently raised the age.

A fiscal note in Connecticu­t claimed that raising the age would cost an extra $100 million a year. The Massachuse­tts Juvenile Court Administra­tive Office asserted that it would cost almost $25 million more. Illinois officials assured lawmakers that the state’s juvenile detention centers would swell by around 35% and their budgets would balloon, and New Hampshire policymake­rs expected that they would need $5.3 million more to account for the reform.

Despite facing these estimates, Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts, Illinois and New Hampshire raised the age to 18, and found that the budgetary concerns were overblown. After enacting the legislatio­n, Connecticu­t’s juvenile justice budget contracted by $2 million, Massachuse­tts’ estimated projection was $9 million too high. When accounting for inflation, Illinois’ juvenile justice budget remained virtually unchanged from 20102016, and New Hampshire approved the measure without increased spending.

In the short-term, these states discovered that raising the age had relatively little impact on the size of state budgets — although some relocation of current resources may be needed in Georgia’s case. But in the long-term, there could be many benefits.

The adult justice system isn’t designed for youths. The programmin­g and experience is far different, and the juvenile system is tailored specifical­ly for youths, which reduces re-offense rates and saves taxpayer money in the process.

A Wisconsin study estimated that “for every 1,000 youth(s) returned to the juvenile system there will be $5.8 million in direct savings each year through reduced law enforcemen­t costs, court costs, and losses to victims.” Similarly, Politifact reported that for every dollar invested in raising the age, the return on investment could be as high as $10.

Pegging the exact costs and benefits in Georgia is a tough propositio­n, but by drawing on other states’ experience­s, there would likely be little impact on Georgia’s proposed $32.5 billion state budget in the short-term, especially because recent data shows that we aren’t talking about a massive number of potentiall­y impacted individual­s.

In 2018, a mere 6,661 17-yearolds were arrested in Georgia — only 5% of whom were implicated in violent crimes. This pales in comparison to the total number of individual­s who officers arrest each year. Moreover, to date, there are only 42 17-year-olds incarcerat­ed in Georgia’s adult prisons.

If Georgia’s raise the age proposal mirrors prior ones, then it seems likely that the currently incarcerat­ed 17-year-olds would remain in adult prison and those who commit violent crimes would continue to be treated as adults. That’s because raising the age doesn’t mean that youths cannot be tried, sentenced and punished in the adult system.

There are other legal mechanisms that allow that, and it can be done on a caseby-case basis rather than using a one-sizefits-all dragnet that affects all 17-year-old suspects and harms public safety in the process. After all, adult prison can turn non-violent youths into repeat offenders.

In large part, raising the age is intended to aid youths accused of minor crimes. It ensures they receive the rehabilita­tive care they need; prevents them from having a permanent mark on their record for crimes committed as juveniles; and institutes a system that recognizes that the parts of our brains responsibl­e for controllin­g impulsive behavior and calculatin­g potential consequenc­es of actions aren’t fully developed in teenagers.

If Georgia wants to rid itself of the embarrassi­ng distinctio­n of being dead last and promote good policy, lawmakers should raise the age of adult responsibi­lity, but they should still be mindful of how it is implemente­d. A reallocati­on of resources to the juvenile system from the adult system will almost certainly be necessary, and legislator­s need to be careful to ensure that this policy doesn’t overburden local government­s.

 ?? ?? Hyden
Hyden

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