Rep. Lisa Davis

Filed: 4/10/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 5434

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 5434, AS AMENDED,
3by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the
4following:
 
5    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
6Emerging Adult Criminal Justice Task Force Act.
 
7    Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that:
8        (1) Emerging adults are disproportionately involved in
9    the criminal justice system. National data consistently
10    show that individuals in this age group have the highest
11    rates of arrest, jail admissions, prison admissions, and
12    rearrest.
13        (2) Developmental psychology and neuroscience studies
14    have shown that judgment, impulse control, and
15    psychosocial maturity may continue developing into the
16    mid-20s. Emerging adults may differ significantly from

 

 

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1    older adults in risk assessment, susceptibility to peer
2    influence, emotional regulation, and decision-making under
3    stress.
4        (3) Emerging adults may also face elevated rates of
5    mental health disorders, trauma exposure, substance use
6    disorders, unemployment, and housing instability. These
7    vulnerabilities are closely linked to system involvement.
8        (4) Despite these challenges, emerging adults possess
9    strong capacity for change. Their brains retain high
10    neuroplasticity, and appropriate interventions during this
11    developmental period produce greater long-term benefits
12    than comparable interventions for older adults.
13        (5) Traditional adult criminal justice responses can
14    be counterproductive for emerging adults. Adult jails and
15    prisons can be associated with higher rates of
16    victimization, self-harm, long-term disability, and
17    recidivism among this population.
18        (6) States and jurisdictions across the U.S. have
19    created special laws or practices for emerging adults,
20    including extended juvenile jurisdiction, youthful
21    offender statutes, specialized probation units, young
22    adult courts, and correctional units tailored to this age
23    group.
24        (7) Illinois has taken several important steps,
25    including youthful offender parole, the First Time Weapon
26    Offender Program, and the Cook County SEED Program, but it

 

 

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1    has not comprehensively examined the full spectrum of
2    policies affecting emerging adults.
3        (8) After decades of program based intervention
4    alternatives for juveniles, it is appropriate for the task
5    force to evaluate the efficiency of each of these programs
6    to ensure only those that are reducing criminal behavior
7    and providing for public safety and continues while those
8    that are not providing the expected benefits are phased
9    out.
10        (9) Illinois would benefit from a comprehensive,
11    bipartisan, data-driven review of approaches to emerging
12    adults across the criminal justice system.
 
13    Section 10. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to create a
14bipartisan, bicameral Task Force to study and recommend
15strategies for developmentally appropriate, cost-effective,
16and equitable approaches to emerging adults in Illinois that
17provides opportunities for emerging adults to divert from the
18criminal justice system.
 
19    Section 15. Definitions. In this Act:
20    "Department" means the Department of Corrections.
21    "Emerging adult" means an individual who is 18 to 25 years
22of age.
23    "Task Force" means the Task Force on Emerging Adults in
24the Criminal Justice System established under this Act.
 

 

 

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1    Section 20. Establishment of Task Force. The Task Force on
2Emerging Adults in the Criminal Justice System is established
3within the Department and shall be provided staffing,
4research, and administrative support by the Department.
 
5    Section 25. Membership.
6    (a) The Task Force shall be bipartisan, bicameral, and
7include representation from stakeholders in the criminal
8justice system, organizations that work extensively with young
9adults, and those with lived experience in the criminal
10justice system as emerging adults.
11    (b) The Task Force shall consist of the following members:
12        (1) two members of the Senate appointed by the
13    President of the Senate, one of whom shall be designated
14    as co-chair of the Task Force;
15        (2) two members of the Senate appointed by the
16    Minority Leader of the Senate;
17        (3) two members of the House appointed by the Speaker
18    of the House, one of whom shall be designated as co-chair
19    of the Task Force;
20        (4) two members of the House appointed by the Minority
21    Leader of the House; and
22        (5) the following members appointed by the Governor:
23            (A) the Director of the Department or the
24        Director's designee;

 

 

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1            (B) the Director of Juvenile Justice or the
2        Director's designee;
3            (C) the Director of the Administrative Office of
4        the Illinois Courts or the Director's designee;
5            (D) one circuit court judge with criminal or
6        problem-solving court experience;
7            (E) three State's Attorneys representing counties
8        of varying size;
9            (F) three Public Defenders representing counties
10        of varying size;
11            (G) one representative of a statewide or regional
12        victims' rights organization;
13            (H) two representatives of a municipal police
14        department;
15            (I) two representatives of a sheriff's office that
16        operates a county jail;
17            (J) two representatives of a community-based legal
18        services or holistic defense organization serving
19        emerging adults;
20            (K) one representative of a community-based
21        organization that provides reentry services to
22        returning citizens, including emerging adults;
23            (L) one representative of a community-based
24        organization providing education, workforce
25        development, housing, or behavioral health services to
26        emerging adults;

 

 

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1            (M) one representative of an employer association,
2        trade group, or major employer who regularly hires and
3        supervises young adults who are ages 18 to 25;
4            (N) one administrator or faculty member from an
5        Illinois community college or public university with
6        expertise in student development or the behavior of
7        emerging adults;
8            (O) one licensed mental health professional or
9        developmental psychologist with expertise in late
10        adolescence and emerging adulthood;
11            (P) two individuals with lived experience of
12        justice involvement for offenses committed between
13        ages 18 and 25, including at least one formerly
14        incarcerated in an adult facility;
15            (Q) the Director of the Sentencing Policy Advisory
16        Committee;
17            (R) a representative of an association that
18        represents attorneys statewide; and
19            (S) a representative of a philanthropic
20        organization with expertise and experience in funding
21        services and policies for justice-involved emerging
22        adults.
23    (c) Members shall serve without compensation but may be
24reimbursed for reasonable expenses subject to appropriation.
25    (d) Vacancies shall be filled in the manner of original
26appointment.

 

 

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1    (e) Membership shall reflect, to the extent practicable,
2the demographic and geographic diversity of the State.
 
3    Section 30. Meetings; quorum; public input. The first
4meeting of the Task Force shall be held within 60 days after
5the appointment of a majority of its members. Meetings of the
6Task Force shall be called by the co-chairs. A majority of the
7members of the Task Force shall constitute a quorum. All
8meetings of the Task Force shall be subject to the Open
9Meetings Act. At least 3 public hearings of the Task Force
10shall be held in different regions of Illinois.
 
11    Section 35. Duties. The Task Force shall:
12        (1) review Illinois law and practice affecting
13    emerging adults across pretrial, sentencing, corrections,
14    supervision, and reentry;
15        (2) examine emerging adult models in other states and
16    jurisdictions, including the United Nations Standard
17    Minimum Rules for Non-custodial Measures and the United
18    Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Administration of
19    Juvenile Justice;
20        (3) integrate and summarize current developmental
21    research on emerging adults;
22        (4) analyze racial, ethnic, gender, and geographic
23    disparities affecting emerging adults;
24        (5) conduct benefit-cost and fiscal analyses of

 

 

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1    current practices versus developmentally tailored
2    alternatives;
3        (6) engage stakeholders, including crime survivors,
4    law enforcement organizations, employers, higher education
5    institutions, community organizations, and individuals
6    with lived experience with the criminal justice system;
7        (7) develop recommendations for statutory, policy, and
8    programmatic improvements; and
9        (8) allow any Task Force member to prepare a written
10    dissent or statement of concern regarding any finding or
11    recommendation, which shall be included verbatim in all
12    interim and final reports.
 
13    Section 40. Reports.
14    (a) No later than January 31, 2027, the Task Force shall
15submit an interim report to the Governor and the General
16Assembly summarizing its preliminary findings, analyses, and
17recommendations. The interim report shall include any written
18dissents or statements of concern submitted by Task Force
19members.
20    (b) No later than December 1, 2027, the Task Force shall
21submit a final report to the Governor and the General
22Assembly, and the Department shall publish the report on its
23website. The final report shall include:
24        (1) all final findings and recommendations;
25        (2) draft statutory language, where appropriate;

 

 

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1        (3) estimated fiscal impacts and benefit-cost
2    analyses; and
3        (4) all written dissents or statements of concern
4    submitted by any member, which shall be included in full
5    and published in the public version of the report.
6    (c) Any member may submit a dissent or statement of
7concern up to 14 days following the adoption of any
8recommendation. The Department shall publish all dissenting
9statements alongside majority recommendations.
 
10    Section 45. Support; cooperation.
11    (a) The Department shall provide staff support, research,
12data analysis, and administrative assistance to the Task
13Force.
14    (b) State and local agencies shall cooperate with
15reasonable requests for data and information, consistent with
16all confidentiality laws.
 
17    Section 50. Repeal. This Act is repealed on June 30, 2028.
 
18    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
19becoming law.".