The court may excuse the attendance of the child at the hearing in neglect, dependency, or abuse cases.
Ohio. Juv. R. 27
Staff Note (July 1, 2001 Amendment)
Juvenile Rule 27 Hearings: General
Juvenile Rule 27(A) General provisions
Rule 27(A) was completely rewritten and reorganized to conform to changes necessitated by Sub. Sen. Bill 179 (serious youthful offenders) (effective date January 1, 2002), and Sub. Sen. Bill 181 (chronic and habitual truants) (effective date September 4, 2000).
Rule 27(A) as amended deals separately with the informality of hearings [division (A)], public access to hearings [division (A)(1)], separation of juvenile and adult cases [division (A)(2)], and jury trials [division (A)(3)].
Division (A)(1) clarifies that in serious youthful offender proceedings, adult rules about public access shall apply, and thus a qualified presumption of public access is appropriate. The rule seeks to conform to the Supreme Court's ruling in (2000), 90 Ohio St. 3d 79, 734 N.E.2d 1214. In juvenile proceedings, there is no qualified right of public access, and no presumption that the proceedings be either open or closed. The amended rule recognizes that the policies of confidentiality and rehabilitation important in juvenile proceedings may justify closure to those without a direct interest after a hearing. In that hearing, the party seeking closure bears the burden of proof, but Rule 27(A)(1)(b) clarifies that closure is justified unless there is a "comparable competing interest" for public access, which the rule describes as a countervailing right. The amendment also conforms to Revised Code section 2151.35(A) as amended by Sub. Sen. Bill 179.
Rule 27(A)(2) conforms to Revised Code section 2151.35(A)(1), which provides that in cases in which both a child and an adult are charged for chronic or habitual truancy, the cases need not be heard separately, while preserving separate proceedings in all other cases.
Rule 27(A)(3) conforms to Revised Code section 2152.13(D) providing for a jury determination in cases seeking a serious youthful offender dispositional sentence, while preserving nonjury proceedings in all other cases.
Juvenile Rule 27(B) Special Provisions for Abuse, Neglect,
and Dependency Proceedings
Rule 27(B) was not amended, but was recaptioned to clarify that its provisions apply to abuse, neglect and dependency proceedings.