Massachusetts Department of Youth Services
The Massachusetts Department of Youth Services is a state agency of Massachusetts. Its Administrative Office is headquartered in 600 Washington Street Boston. The agency operates the state's juvenile justice services.
The DYS regions are the Central, Metro, Northeastern, Southeastern, and Western regions.
History and leadership
Massachusetts created the nation's first publicly funded juvenile correctional system in 1846 with the opening of the Massachusetts State Reform School for Boys at Westborough, later known as Lyman School for Boys. In 1969 Governor Francis Sargent established the Department of Youth Services as a separate agency under the Executive Office of Health and Human Services. Under the leadership of the new department's first commissioner, Jerome G. Miller, Massachusetts initiated a bold deinstitutionalization effort with the closure of Lyman School for Boys and the Massachusetts Industrial School for Boys at Shirley. The reforms initiated over forty years ago have proven to be sustainable and remain foundational to the state's juvenile justice system.From circa 1995, where there were 165 female inmates, to 2005, where there were 453 female inmates, there was a 168% increase in the number of girls committed to DYS.
DYS Commissioners
- Jerome G. Miller, 1969-1973
- Joseph Leavy, 1973-1976
- John Calhoun, 1976-1979
- Edward M. Murphy, 1979-1985
- Edward J. Loughran, 1985-1993
- William D. O'Leary, 1993-1997
- Robert P. Gittens, 1997-2002
- Michael Bolden, 2002-2005
- Jane E. Tewksbury, 2005-2012
- Edward Dolan, 2012–2013
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Overview
- 63 residential programs, ranging from staff secure group homes to small highly-secure locked units, and
- 22 district offices to provide supervision and services to youth who live in the community.
Continuum of care
- Bail Detention
- Assessment
- Residential Treatment
- Community Phase/ Day Reporting
- Discharge
- Clinical Services
- Medical and Health Services
- Substance Abuse Services
- Assessment and Classification
- Revocation
DYS treatment programs and services
Clinical Services
The Massachusetts Department of Youth Services provides clinical and rehabilitative services to its detained clients and committed youth based on the Comprehensive Strategy outlined by the Office of Juvenile Delinquency and Prevention.Dialectical Behavior Therapy : This system of psychotherapy was adopted to fit the needs of the juvenile justice population by teaching youth skills from DBT skill modules that are basic fundamental skills underlying positive pro-social development. DBT is used as a behavior management tool in DYS to increase skill development in youth, improve relationships between youth and staff and create a positive pro-social learning environment. While DBT is not the only clinical treatment offered in DYS, it does serve as the structure for therapeutic work and for the behavior management system across all DYS programs in the Commonwealth.
Positive Youth Development: The Positive Youth Development model focuses on the positive attributes young people need to make a more successful transition to adulthood. The Positive Youth Development framework revolves around the cognitive, emotional and social needs of a young person. A strong focus on three aspects of positive youth development will provide effective guidance for the goals and plans for each youth's successful re-entry into the community. These include a focus on each youth's strengths and personal assets, providing opportunities for youth empowerment and leadership, and cultivating community partnerships and supports that assist youth in moving successfully through the continuum of care.
Clinical Assessments: Upon commitment to DYS, youth are given a comprehensive assessment conducted by licensed mental health clinicians, licensed teachers and medical and psychiatric staff. Licensed mental health clinicians provide psychosocial interviews, administer psychological testing, and review prior records that include educational, medical and criminal histories. Screening instruments are used to determine if the youth needs to be referred for a comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation to aid in treatment planning. Following the assessment phase, an individual treatment and service plan is developed for the youth that focuses interventions on the youth's strengths and risks factors for re-offending.
Residential Support: The clinical focus in the residential treatment programs is to rehabilitate the youth by preparing him or her to rejoin their community by teaching pro-social attitudes and behaviors. This is done through weekly individual counseling and participation in required group therapies which include: Dialectical Behavior Therapy ; substance abuse groups ; and violent offender/sex offender groups which focus on relapse prevention planning. Depending on the individual service needs of the youth, other treatments may be incorporated such as: family counseling, trauma work, teen dating violence prevention, and parenting skills classes for DYS youth with children of their own.
Community Continuum: As the DYS youth transitions from residential treatment to the community, the casework team ensures that the youth and family are enrolled in community-based services to support the gains the youth has made in treatment.
Facilities
Juveniles charged with murder and juveniles with adult sentences are held within a DYS-operated facility inside the Plymouth County Correctional Facility,Juvenile secure units:
- Plymouth Juvenile Secure Unit
- Robert F. Kennedy School - The school is the most secure juvenile facility in the state. Operated by the Robert F. Kennedy Children's Action Corps, Inc., the center was the first Massachusetts juvenile correctional facility operated by a private provider.
- Springfield Secure Treatment Program
- South Hadley Girls Treatment Program
- Metro Youth Service Center
- * Construction was scheduled to be completed in the fiscal year 2000
- Judge John J. Connelly Youth Center
- Reception-Detention Center for Girls
- Westfield Detention Center
- Worcester Detention Center
- Lyman School for Boys
- Phaneuf Youth Treatment Brockton
- Bishop Ruocco Girls Youth Treatment Lakeville
- Fay A. Rotenberg School - The Rotenberg School was a secure juvenile treatment center for girls that closed in 2016 . It was operated by the Robert F. Kennedy Children's Action Corps, Inc. Rotenberg houses most of the adjudicated females deemed to be dangerous, and it was the sole secured facility for female juvenile delinquents in Massachusetts.
- * Rotenberg, which first opened in 1982, previously occupied a building in North Chelmsford, a section of Chelmsford; this facility, which had 16 beds, was located on Princeton Street, near the border with Lowell. In 2006 the school moved to its new location in Westborough. That year Mary Harte, the Rotenberg director, stated that of the detained females, about 35-40% had previously been victims of commercial sexual exploitation of children.