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Bill

HB 2325

Relating to housing.

2025 Regular Session

HB 2325 expands juvenile detention options, allowing detention for probation technical violations and longer total detention, including stricter firearm-related placements.

In committee upon adjournment.
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Bill Summary · HB 2325

Summary — HB 2325 (Kansas, 2025)

Purpose

HB 2325 amends the Kansas Juvenile Justice Code to expand options for detention and custodial placement of juvenile offenders. The bill authorizes courts to commit juveniles to secure detention for technical probation violations, increases allowable cumulative detention time, tightens placement rules for youths alleged to have used or possessed a firearm, and lowers the risk-level threshold for sentencing certain repeat offenders to correctional facilities.

Key provisions

  • Authorizes judges to commit juvenile offenders to detention for technical violations of probation (previously limited to non‑technical violations).
  • Increases the cumulative detention limit for a juvenile from 45 days to a maximum of 90 days over the course of the case.
  • Removes the requirement that a “chronic offender” be classified as “high risk” before being sentenced to placement in a juvenile correctional facility (expands eligibility for secure placement of repeat offenders).
  • Requires juvenile offenders alleged to have possessed or used a firearm during commission of an offense to be placed directly in a juvenile detention facility while the matter proceeds.
  • Increases mandatory custodial ranges when a firearm is possessed/used in an offense that would be a felony if committed by an adult: minimum commitment increased from 6 months to 12 months and maximum from 18 months to 36 months (court may still order conditional release/ graduated responses after custody).
  • Amends multiple sections of the Kansas statutes (including K.S.A. 38-2361 and related juvenile code sections).

Who is affected

  • Juvenile offenders in Kansas: increased exposure to secure detention for technical violations and longer cumulative detention time.
  • Kansas Department of Corrections (juvenile facilities): increased admissions and operating needs.
  • County juvenile supervision systems: potential increased supervision and detention costs.
  • Defense and court systems: procedural and caseload impacts (Judiciary reports negligible fiscal effect; indigent defense reports no fiscal effect).
  • Victims and communities: potential public‑safety implications from more immediate detention for firearm allegations.

Fiscal impact (per Fiscal Note)

  • Estimated State General Fund cost: $2,648,850 annually beginning FY2026.
  • Driver: an estimated 42 additional admissions per year to the Kansas Juvenile Correctional Complex, requiring reopening at least three 15‑bed housing units.
  • Staffing: 26.50 FTE correctional officers + 2.00 FTE corrections counselors (28.50 FTE total). Position costs estimated at $2,340,331; other operating costs (food, healthcare, etc.) ~$308,519 per year.
  • Counties: Kansas Association of Counties indicates potential increased county expenditures for juvenile supervision but did not provide a precise estimate.

Procedural / timeline highlights

  • Introduced: February 3, 2025.
  • Referred to Committee on Corrections and Juvenile Justice (status shown as “Withdrawn from Committee on Federal and State Affairs; Referred to Committee on Corrections and Juvenile Justice”).
  • Public hearing scheduled (February 14, 2025 per notice in fiscal note); other recorded legislative actions include committee reports and readings (see legislative history for exact sequence).
  • No effective date specified in the documents provided.

Notes

  • The bill text in the provided materials is a session version amending K.S.A. juvenile code sections; unrelated documents for other states’ H.B. 2325 appear in the file and are not part of this Kansas measure.
  • Exact statutory language and final placement/penalty details should be confirmed in the enrolled bill if amended during committee or floor action.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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