2019 Senate Bill 102 / Public Act 97

Juvenile justice “raise the age” reform

Introduced in the Senate

Feb. 7, 2019

Introduced by Sen. Sylvia Santana (D-3)

To create a state “raise the age fund” to hold money “to support the cost of raising the age of criminal responsibility for juveniles.” The bill does not specify a source for this money. This is part of a broader "raise the age" juvenile justice reform effort.

Referred to the Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety

April 23, 2019

Reported without amendment

With the recommendation that the substitute (S-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass.

April 24, 2019

Passed in the Senate 37 to 1 (details)

Received in the House

April 24, 2019

Referred to the Committee on Judiciary

Oct. 15, 2019

Reported without amendment

With the recommendation that the substitute (H-1) be adopted and that the bill then pass. The substitute contains a compromise on how to fund the additional expenses the reform will generate.

Amendment offered by Rep. Graham Filler (R-93)

To revise details of the reimbursement by the state of additional juvenile justice expenses counties incur due to this reform.

The amendment passed by voice vote

Passed in the House 100 to 8 (details)

To reimburse counties for the cost of providing juvenile justice services to minors age 17 and under who are charged with a crime. This has been the contentious "who pays?" piece of a multi-bill "raise the age" initiative to no longer automatically treat minors who commit certain crimes as adults, and prohibit housing them in the same facilities with adult prisoners. Under the bill, counties would get 100 percent reimbursement from the state until October 2025, when the issue would be reviewed using cost data the legislation requires be assembled. This is part of a broader "raise the age" juvenile justice reform effort that with this week's votes now goes to Gov. Whitmer for approval.

Received in the Senate

Oct. 16, 2019

Passed in the Senate 38 to 0 (details)

To concur with the House-passed version of the bill, which would reimburse counties for the cost of providing juvenile justice services to minors age 17 and under who are charged with a crime. This has been the contentious "who pays?" piece of a multi-bill "raise the age" initiative to no longer automatically treat minors who commit certain crimes as adults, and prohibit housing them in the same facilities with adult prisoners. Under the bill, counties would get 100 percent reimbursement from the state until October 2025, when the issue would be reviewed using cost data the legislation requires be assembled. This is part of a broader "raise the age" juvenile justice reform effort that with this week's votes now goes to Gov. Whitmer for approval.

Signed by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer

Oct. 31, 2019