Sen. Rose told the committee that West Tennessee faces a juvenile detention capacity crisis and urged the legislature to fund a pre-adjudicated juvenile detention facility planned in Madison County.
Rose said the region recorded 1,897 juvenile detentions in 2024 while local capacity is “11 beds for almost 2,000 juveniles” in many counties (e.g., Madison County 7 beds, Dyer County 4, other counties 0). She described repeated long transports — often several hundred miles and multiple officers per transport — and said transports and out-of-region placements remove youth from family and community supports and create staffing burdens and liability risks for counties.
Under current practice, Rose explained, a probable-cause hearing is required within 72 hours and an adjudicatory or transfer hearing no sooner than 14 days after a petition is filed; in practice long stays (60–90 days) occur because of staffing shortages and required mental-health evaluations. She detailed specific incidents she said illustrate the danger and complexity of the cases being detained.
Rose said Madison County has purchased land and planned the facility, which would include secure housing pods, individual sleeping rooms, intake/processing, medical and mental-health exam space, education areas, and visitor spaces. She asked for funding so the project can proceed, saying it would serve 20 West Tennessee counties and immediately relieve pressure on Central and East Tennessee facilities while reducing costly transports and overtime.
Committee members did not enter extended debate during the presentation; the amendment was presented for consideration during budget discussions and no formal vote occurred during this session.