Christian County commissioners discussed whether the county should move the chief juvenile officer from a state position into a county position while retaining supervisory responsibilities over state-employed juvenile staff. The county’s chief juvenile officer, Kurt Perry, said he and Judge Johnson had discussed a transition that would keep him in the office but change the employing entity. Perry said he discussed the idea with prospective successors and staff and that Judge Johnson supported the plan.
Commissioner Bradley Jackson and others raised concerns about mixing county and state authority and the potential for confusion over supervision and benefits. Jackson said he could not approve the budget “without a little bit more information” and urged a meeting with all stakeholders to produce a memorandum of understanding (MOU) clarifying authority, responsibilities and repercussions for violations. Commissioner comments repeatedly stressed the need for clarity about whether the juvenile office would remain a state agency or become a county agency and how supervision would be structured.
No formal personnel action was taken. Commissioners agreed to start MOU discussions as soon as possible and to continue work on the budget pending the outcome. Several commissioners said they supported retaining Perry’s experience if the legal and administrative issues could be resolved.
Ending: Commissioners instructed staff to begin MOU discussions with the judge, human resources and the auditor, and to return with a clear proposal before any final budget changes were adopted.