Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 63E-7.102 - Basic Youth Rights
(1)
Access to
DCF's Central Abuse Hotline, Mail, Phone Calls, and an Attorney.
(a) The residential commitment program staff
shall treat youth with dignity and respect, and the program shall provide, at a
minimum, the following for its youth:
1.
Shelter;
2. Clothing;
3. Food;
4. Healthcare;
5. Mental health and substance abuse
services;
6. Educational and
prevocational or vocational services
7. Opportunities for recreation and large muscle
exercise;
8. Opportunities for
expression of religious beliefs;
9.
Visitation;
10. Access to incoming
mail and opportunities to send outgoing mail;
11. Telephone access;
12. Opportunity to access the courts;
13. Trauma responsive residential environment
that is physically and emotionally safe; and
14. Access to the Department of Children and Families'
central abuse hotline pursuant to chapter 39, F.S., or if the youth is 18 years
or older, the department's Central Communications Center that serves as the
department's incident reporting hotline.
(b) A residential commitment program shall address the
needs of the program's targeted gender group. Health and hygiene, the physical
environment, life and social skills training, and leisure and recreational
activities are key components in providing a gender specific program.
(c) A residential commitment program shall
provide opportunities for youth to send and receive mail and shall facilitate
correspondence that fosters the youth's reunification with his or her family,
unless specifically prohibited by court order, or where a family member is the
youth's victim, or it is determined not to be in the best interest of the
youth. The program shall not allow the youth to directly correspond with his or
her victim except through an apology letter whose content is approved by the
program director or designee and sent to the youth's JPO to forward to the
victim only if he or she expresses a willingness to receive it.
(d) A residential commitment program shall
provide opportunities for youth to receive incoming emergency telephone calls
from his or her parent(s), guardian, or supportive person(s), and calls from
the youth's JPO, attorney of record and, if applicable, the dependency case
manager. The program shall allow each youth to make outgoing calls to the JPO,
attorney of record and, if applicable, the dependency case manager. A written
procedure that fosters family reunification and community reintegration shall
specify youths' access to incoming calls from and outgoing calls to family and
other persons.
(e) If a youth
requests to contact an attorney of his or her choice, the facility must
accommodate that request. This supervised process may be done via telephone or
the internet. Communication between the youth and the contacted attorney shall
be confidential, but visually supervised. Once the youth identifies an attorney
willing to represent the youth, that attorney is to be given attorney of record
status. The facility is not required to provide an attorney for the
youth.
(2)
Youth
Hygiene.
(a) A residential commitment
program shall establish expectations for youth to engage in personal hygiene
activities to maintain a neat and clean personal appearance. At a minimum, the
program shall allow time on the schedule for youth to:
1. Practice dental hygiene twice daily;
2. Bathe or shower and wash hair daily unless
medically contraindicated;
3. Style
or comb their hair daily;
4. Option
to shave; and
5. Clean and trim
their fingernails.
(b)
Residential commitment program staff shall provide hygiene instruction and
assistance to youth, when necessary.
(c) A residential commitment program shall provide
each youth with hygiene supplies, as well as storage space for such supplies.
Individual hygiene supplies shall include such items as the following:
1. Toothbrush and toothpaste;
2. Soap;
3. Shampoo;
4. Combs or brushes, along with necessary grooming
products that are necessary to maintain hair and prevent damage;
5. Shaving supplies;
6. Body lotion; and
7. Hygiene supplies.
(d) A residential commitment program shall provide
clean clothing, bedding and towels that are in good condition or
repair.
(3)
Dress
Code.
(a) A residential commitment
program shall establish and enforce a dress code for youth. The dress code
shall be written to:
1. Promote a neat and
well-groomed appearance;
2. Foster
pride in appearance;
3. Deter the
transfer of attire or symbols associated with negative subcultures, such as
gangs, into the program;
4. Promote
safety and hygiene; and
5. Assist
in differentiating youth from staff.
(b) The dress code shall require the program to
provide youth with:
1. Clean, comfortable and
modest attire that is in good repair, fits properly, is suitable for the
climate, and does not compromise safety; and
2. At a minimum, clean underwear daily, four changes
of clothes weekly, shoes, and sleeping attire.
(c) The dress code for youth shall:
1. Require youth to wear clothing as designed, such as
pants or shorts pulled up and properly fastened so underwear is not
revealed;
2. Prohibit attire with
any messages, markings or designs that are gang-related, drug or
alcohol-related, profane or vulgar;
3. Prohibit youth from going barefoot except when
bathing, in their rooms resting or sleeping, during medical examination, or
under other circumstances deemed warranted by program staff, such as during
water related activities; and
4.
Prohibit jewelry except for a medical alert bracelet, or if authorized by the
program, a watch.
(d) The
program shall establish an internal process to review and provide a timely
response to a youth's request for exemption from the dress code based on a
religious belief. The program shall accommodate a youth's religious belief,
unless it is determined that doing so would compromise the safe and secure
operation of the program.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 985.64, 985.601(3)(a) FS. Law Implemented 985.601(3)(a), 985.03(44), 985.441 FS.
New 5-30-19.
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