FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CR TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1997 (202) 616-2765 TDD (202) 514-1888 PUERTO RICO TO UPGRADE CONDITIONS AT JUVENILE DETENTION AND TREATMENT CENTERS UNDER AGREEMENT WITH THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Juveniles confined in 18 detention and treatment centers and two group homes throughout Puerto Rico will be protected from harm and receive proper educational and mental health services under an agreement reached today between the Commonwealth and the Justice Department. The settlement, filed today in U.S. District Court in San Juan, stems from a long-term investigation by the Justice Department under the 1980 Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act (CRIPA) into conditions in Puerto Rico's juvenile correctional facilities. Under the agreement, Puerto Rico has committed to make widespread changes in the operation of the 20 facilities, addressing issues such as staffing, mental health and substance abuse treatment, and discipline procedures. The agreement also provides for a federal court monitor to oversee compliance throughout the system. "We must not give up on our children," said Isabelle Katz Pinzler, Acting Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. "We must make sure that juveniles entering these centers come out willing to give back to society, rather than eager to get back at it." The Department investigated the facilities, which house over 1,900 juveniles, and found that conditions at the centers failed to meet constitutional standards. In 1994, the parties entered into an interim agreement which the court ordered on an emergency basis. That agreement is superceded by the more comprehensive agreement filed with the court today. Under today's agreement, Puerto Rico will implement additional treatment services to ensure the juveniles become productive members of society upon release by: * providing mental health and substance abuse services; * providing educational services; * enabling a third party to monitor the state's compliance with the agreement; * building new facilities and renovating existing ones to comply with safety codes; and, * taking emergency steps to ensure the safety of the juveniles at the facility in Bayamon. "We are glad that we were able to work with state officials to reach agreement on how to address the problems in the juvenile facilities in Puerto Rico," added Pinzler. The agreement must be approved by the court. # # # 97-419