Skip to main content

Maine Juvenile Drug Treatment Court

An Effective Practice

This practice has been Archived and is no longer maintained.

Description

Maine, one of the few States to successfully implement a statewide system of juvenile drug courts, currently operates six such courts, which serve seven counties. The program provides comprehensive community-based services to juvenile offenders and their families (postplea, but prefinal disposition). It runs about 50 weeks and is in four phases, each with distinct treatment goals and specified completion times. Participants are required to attend drug treatment, weekly court appearances, and meetings with a drug treatment court manager. To advance to the next phase, participants must have a specified number of weeks of clean alcohol and drug tests and no unexcused absences from treatment or court appearances. In addition to treatment for substance abuse, the program offers a variety of other services, such as educational programming, job training, mental health services, and recreational planning. The program functions through a collaboration between the Maine District Court, the Maine Department of Behavioral and Developmental Services/Office of Substance Abuse, and the Maine Department of Corrections/Juvenile Services.

Goal / Mission

The goal of this program is to improve the quality of juvenile justice in Maine through timely and effective substance abuse, social services, and juvenile justice interventions.

Results / Accomplishments

The Maine Juvenile Drug Treatment Court evaluation employed a quasi-experimental design with nonequivalent comparison groups. The key evaluation findings include:

- A positive program effect, with fewer juvenile drug court participants (43 percent) being arrested than the control group (49 percent) and program graduates (40 percent) being the least likely to reoffend overall. Juvenile drug court participants are also less likely than the control group to be rearrested for alcohol- or drug-related offenses or for committing violent crimes.
- The juvenile drug treatment court program has produced a reduction in criminal justice-related expenditures (costs of detention/jail, probation, and averted crimes) and will become cost-effective with expanded capacity.
- An analysis of offender characteristics reveals that the majority of participants are moderate to high-risk, white males with fairly severe substance-abuse histories.
- Offenders requiring a relatively low level of treatment intervention are one third as likely to recidivate as offenders requiring more intensive treatment interventions.
- The rate of in-program positive drug tests among juvenile drug court participants in Maine (24 percent) is lower than the rate of positive drug tests for other adolescents in Maine's juvenile justice system (33 percent).
- Participants who are more frequently tested have lower rates of positive drug tests.

About this Promising Practice

Organization(s)
Maine District Court
Primary Contact
No current contact information available
Topics
Community / Crime & Crime Prevention
Health / Alcohol & Drug Use
Health / Adolescent Health
Organization(s)
Maine District Court
Source
The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention's Model Programs Guide (MPG)
Date of publication
2003
Location
Maine
For more details
Target Audience
Teens
Healthy North Texas
// Pop Up