This is the preview version of the Wisconsin State Legislature site.
Please see http://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov for the production version.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)1.b.b. Vocational training and counseling.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)1.c.c. Alcohol and other drug abuse outpatient treatment and education. Programs used to treat alcohol or drug abuse by youth shall be certified by the department of health services under ch. DHS 61.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)1.d.d. Family-focused services and family counseling.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)1.e.e. Employment services.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)1.f.f. Recreational opportunities.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)1.g.g. Assistance with independent living skills and arrangements.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)2.2. A written description shall address the availability and accessibility of other community services that a youth and the youth’s family may need, such as:
DCF 81.04(4)(c)2.a.a. Day treatment or alternative school programs.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)2.b.b. Restitution programs.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)2.c.c. Interpersonal skills training.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)2.d.d. Discipline training including anger and impulse control.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)2.e.e. Problem-solving and decision-making skills training for youth.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)2.f.f. Training for parents, including discipline management skills, communication skills and interpersonal skills.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)2.g.g. Health-related care.
DCF 81.04(4)(c)3.3. A written description shall identify the manner in which a youth and the youth’s family will obtain or have access to needed services.
DCF 81.04(4)(d)(d) Case plan. A written description shall provide assurances that a case plan under sub. (5) shall be developed for each youth and his or her family, and will be filed with the court within 30 days of the dispositional order.
DCF 81.04(5)(5)Case plan requirements. A youth in an ISP shall have a case plan that specifies the following:
DCF 81.04(5)(a)(a) The goals for the youth and family for the time the youth is in the ISP.
DCF 81.04(5)(b)(b) The community-based treatment services and educational, vocational, employment and other programs that are expected to be used to meet the needs of the youth and family.
DCF 81.04(5)(c)(c) The number and frequency of supervisory contacts that the youth shall receive.
DCF 81.04(5)(d)(d) The estimated time the youth and his or her family will participate in the program.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)(e) The rules and conditions of the youth’s participation in the program, including the following:
DCF 81.04(5)(e)1.1. Avoiding of any conduct that violates a federal, state or municipal law.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)2.2. Reporting any contact with the police to ISP staff within 12 hours.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)3.3. Reporting any arrest or citation to ISP staff immediately.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)4.4. Cooperating with ISP staff and fully participating in all aspects of the case plan.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)5.5. Following all curfews established by ISP staff.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)6.6. Attending all scheduled educational and vocational programs.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)7.7. Following his or her daily appointment schedule with ISP staff.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)8.8. Obtaining advance permission from the lead caseworker to travel outside the state.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)9.9. Cooperating with electronic monitoring procedures and refraining from altering, damaging, or interfering in any way with the operation of the electronic monitoring equipment.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)10.10. Refraining from using or possessing any drug, item, or substance which is illegal to possess, or any prescription drugs except as prescribed for the youth by a licensed health care provider.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)11.11. Refraining from purchasing, owning, carrying or possessing a firearm, knife, or other weapon, or ammunition, without the advance written permission of an ISP caseworker. The ISP caseworker may not grant a youth permission to possess a firearm if the youth is prohibited from possessing a firearm under state or federal law.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)12.12. Agreeing to submit to any test ordered by the ISP caseworker that is permitted under law, including but not limited to, urinalysis, breathalyzer and blood tests.
DCF 81.04(5)(e)13.13. Complying with any special rules issued by ISP staff including, but not limited to, rules relating to companions, medical and dental appointments, counseling, therapy or other mental health appointments, family responsibilities, court-ordered restitution, participation in community service, educational and vocational programs, job seeking and job attendance, purchasing, trading, selling, or operating a motor vehicle, and borrowing money or making a purchase on credit.
DCF 81.04(5)(f)(f) The consequences for violation of a rule or condition, may include, but are not limited to:
DCF 81.04(5)(f)1.1. Counseling and a warning.
DCF 81.04(5)(f)2.2. Changing one or more of the rules or provisions of the youth’s case plan.
DCF 81.04(5)(f)3.3. Placing the youth in a secure detention facility for not more than 72 hours.
DCF 81.04(5)(f)4.4. Placing the youth in non-secure custody under s. 938.534, Stats., for not more than 30 days as a crisis intervention if the youth is in need of crisis intervention.
DCF 81.04(5)(f)5.5. Requesting revision of the dispositional order under s. 938.363 or 938.357, Stats.
DCF 81.04(5)(f)6.6. Imposing a sanction permitted by law.
DCF 81.04(6)(6)Discussion with parents. A case plan shall include a statement signed by a youth and the youth’s parent, if the youth is under 18 years old, that the plan has been discussed with the youth and the parent and that they understand the content, conditions, consequences and sanctions delineated in the plan.
DCF 81.04(7)(7)Caseload requirements.
DCF 81.04(7)(a)(a) Caseworker. A caseworker shall be assigned to each youth participating in the ISP. The assigned caseworker is responsible for developing and monitoring the case plan under sub. (5), any decision to take the youth into custody under s. DCF 81.05 and the majority, more than 50%, of the face-to-face contacts.
DCF 81.04(7)(b)(b) Limited caseload. A caseworker assigned to the ISP full time shall have a caseload of no more than 10 youth. A caseworker assigned to the program part time shall have a pro-rata partial caseload.
DCF 81.04(7)(c)(c) Face-to-face contacts.
DCF 81.04(7)(c)1.1. Each participant in the program shall receive at least one face-to-face contact per day with the assigned caseworker and the participant’s activities shall be monitored through the use of intensive surveillance.
DCF 81.04(7)(c)2.2. Face-to-face contacts shall be of a planned and purposeful nature to include monitoring behavior and compliance with rules, problem solving, or skills training.
DCF 81.04(7)(d)(d) Contacts with others. An assigned caseworker shall have at least one contact every week with a youth’s parent or caretaker and supervision and one contact every week with the educational or vocational service provider for each youth participating in the ISP.
DCF 81.04(7)(e)(e) Multiple caseworkers. Caseworkers other than an assigned caseworker may be designated by the case plan to make face-to-face contacts with a youth, in addition to those required by par. (c), if the following conditions are met:
DCF 81.04(7)(e)1.1. The case plan for a youth identifies the caseworker(s) and the frequency of contacts.
DCF 81.04(7)(e)2.2. Any contract or written working agreement with agencies providing related services delineates the responsibilities and requirements for supervision of a youth.
DCF 81.04(7)(e)3.3. The assigned caseworker communicates weekly with other caseworkers supervising the youth regarding pertinent information relating to contacts with a youth and other people involved with the youth during the past week. A daily log shall be maintained for each youth. The information from the log shall be summarized in the case record every 30 days.
DCF 81.04 HistoryHistory: Cr. Register, June, 2000, No. 534, eff. 7-1-00; corrections in (4) (c) 1. c., (7) (a) made under s. 13.92 (4) (b) 6. and 7., Stats., Register December 2015 No. 720.
DCF 81.05DCF 81.05Placement in non-secure or secure detention.
DCF 81.05(1)(1)Authority.
DCF 81.05(1)(a)(a) Notwithstanding ss. 938.19 to 938.21, Stats., but subject to any written policies adopted by the court or the county board, a youth’s assigned caseworker may, without a hearing, take the youth into custody and place the youth in a place of non-secure custody for not more than 30 days as crisis intervention, if the youth is in need of crisis intervention. The placement may be made only if the court at the dispositional hearing informed the youth of the possibility of that placement or if before the violation the youth has acknowledged in writing that he or she has read, or has had read to him or her, those conditions and that possible placement and that he or she understands those conditions and that possible placement.
DCF 81.05(1)(b)(b) Notwithstanding ss. 938.19 to 938.21, Stats., but subject to any written policies adopted by the court or the county board, if a youth violates a rule or condition of the youth’s participation in the ISP, the youth’s assigned caseworker may, without a hearing, take the youth into custody and place the youth in a secure detention facility for not more than 72 hours as a consequence of that violation or while the alleged violation and the appropriateness of a sanction are being investigated, if at the dispositional hearing the court explained those conditions to the youth and informed the youth of the possibility of that placement or if before the violation the youth has acknowledged in writing that he or she has read, or has had read to him or her, those conditions and that possible placement and that he or she understands those conditions and that possible placement. Investigation of the violation includes inquiry into the facts of the violation and the appropriateness or availability of a proposed response to the violation.
DCF 81.05(2)(2)Informing and transporting the youth.
DCF 81.05(2)(a)(a) An assigned caseworker making the decision to place a youth in a non-secure or secure facility shall promptly inform the youth, the youth’s parent(s) or caretaker of the decision to place the youth, the condition or rule the youth violated, when the youth violated the rule, and the reason for the placement decision.
DCF 81.05(2)(b)(b) An assigned caseworker shall make arrangements for transporting and admitting a youth to the facility pursuant to county department policy.
DCF 81.05(2)(c)(c) A youth may request to speak with the caseworker’s supervisor if the youth disagrees with the placement. That request shall be granted within 24 hours, exclusive of Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. A youth’s request to speak with a supervisor does not stay the decision to proceed with the placement. During the conversation with the assigned caseworker’s supervisor, the youth shall be allowed to make a statement as to why the youth believes the placement to be inappropriate.
DCF 81.05 HistoryHistory: Cr. Register, June, 2000, No. 534, eff. 7-1-00.
DCF 81.06DCF 81.06Right to hearing in secure detention. A youth held in a secure detention facility for more than 72 hours, regardless of whether the continued detention is for a new or additional violation, is entitled to a hearing under s. 938.21, Stats. as provided in s. 938.534 (1), Stats.
DCF 81.06 HistoryHistory: Cr. Register, June, 2000, No. 534, eff. 7-1-00.
DCF 81.07DCF 81.07Duration of program. A youth ordered to participate in an ISP may be released from the program in any of the following ways:
DCF 81.07(1)(1) The original dispositional order specifies that participation in the program is time-limited in duration, and the time period has expired.
DCF 81.07(2)(2) The original dispositional order is revised pursuant to s. 938.363 or 938.357, Stats.
DCF 81.07(3)(3) The original dispositional order expires.
DCF 81.07(4)(4) A subsequent dispositional order is entered which would preclude the youth from participating in the program, such as placement in another county or transfer of supervision to the department for placement in a secured correctional facility.
DCF 81.07 HistoryHistory: Cr. Register, June, 2000, No. 534, eff. 7-1-00.
Loading...
Loading...
Published under s. 35.93, Stats. Updated on the first day of each month. Entire code is always current. The Register date on each page is the date the chapter was last published.