Government

Los Alamos Juvenile Justice Advisory Board Holds Virtual Meeting April 15

Los Alamos' Juvenile Justice Advisory Board opens its youth policy process to the public April 15 at 5:30 p.m. virtually, with juvenile probation and school behavioral health on the agenda.

Marcus Williams1 min read
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Los Alamos Juvenile Justice Advisory Board Holds Virtual Meeting April 15
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The Los Alamos Juvenile Justice Advisory Board will convene publicly on Wednesday, April 15, at 5:30 p.m. in a virtual format, opening the county's primary youth justice oversight body to parents, educators, therapists, and community members who can directly influence how the county allocates prevention and intervention funding.

JJAB is a statutorily mandated board that sits at the intersection of juvenile probation, local schools, social services, law enforcement, and county government. The board advises on funding priorities, recommends procedural changes to juvenile intake and diversion processes, and serves as the formal conduit between youth-serving agencies and both county and state policymakers.

The April 15 agenda, available through the board's official website, is expected to cover updates from juvenile probation and school-based behavioral health programs, along with status reports on any active grants or pilot initiatives currently under JJAB's review. The board announced the meeting on April 9.

Holding the session virtually broadens practical access in a community where school counselors, social workers, and working parents face scheduling constraints that make in-person attendance difficult. Los Alamos is a small, tightly networked county where diversion programs, school counseling resources, and family support initiatives are calibrated to local conditions, and public board meetings are among the few formal venues where that calibration happens in the open.

The meeting also carries weight beyond county lines. New Mexico has been navigating statewide debates around juvenile crime, rehabilitation, and the scope of diversion programs, and JJAB's recommendations can feed directly into county budget requests and grant applications targeting mentorship, restorative justice, and expanded behavioral health services.

Members of the public who wish to speak can contact JJAB directly for virtual access credentials and instructions for participating in the public-comment portion. Written comments may also be submitted for the record prior to the meeting.

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