Title: South Carolina
1South Carolina Sentencing Reform
Commission Projecting the Impact of Our
Proposed Reforms
John Speir, Ph.D. Applied Research Services,
Inc. June 27, 2009
2Defining a Projected Impact
Designed not to predict what will happen but
rather explore what would happen if assumptions
unfold in different ways... Donella Meadows
Thinking in Systems A Primer, 2008
3Why Forecast the Future? How Do We Know our
Reforms will Work?
- Conduct legislative policy impact analyses
- Assess the impact of resources on efficiency and
operations
4Projections
- Assess financial impact of agency, court,
legislative decisions
5Simulation
- Answer what if questions
- Can test every aspect of a proposed change
- Can explore new policies or operating procedures
without the expense disruption of experimenting
on the real system
6Simulation
- Reduces the emotion associated with hard
decisions - What is the probability associated with possible
consequences? (also called a risk profile) - With uncertainty, policy-makers will invariably
get different results with forecast
7What is Micro-Simulation?
- Actual offender records are read into the model
Past Admissions Active Inmates - Inmate records are re-built based on policy
scenario - Create a new sentence or LOS outcome for any
policy group of interest
8Flow of Offenders Through the Model
Past Inmate Admissions 2008-09
What Do We Know?
Uncertainty??
- Mandatory minimums
- 2. Inmates who have already been released
- Past institutional behavior and projected release
date - Past Board Decisions
- Past Institutional Conduct
- Historical Sentencing time-served
- Future Admissions
- Future Parole Board decisions
- Future Institutional conduct among active
- Inmates with extended prison terms
- Product failure (returns to prison)
- Demographics
- Prior History
- Current Offense
- Sentence Length
- Geography
- Parole Data
- Admission Type
- Etc.
9Known Outcomes Residual Uncertainty
85 - No Parole Mandatory Minimums Already
Released Inmates Historical max out LOS
for Short-term inmates
Simulated Estimates Needed
Future conduct for long stay inmates Board
Decisions Change in Admissions New Admits Or
Revocations
10How Do You Project Future Admissions?
History SCDC Inmate Admits 2005 13,234 2006
13,397 2007 13,906 2008 13,950
11Future admissions are still a major uncertainty
But We look for collateral data and
methods/tools to help project the future (status
quo)
12What about proposals without any historical
data?
- Pennsylvania High Speed chase law was split into
two groups. - High Speed chase
- High speed chase under the influence or involves
an out-of-state pursuit
13 Review CCH or Sentencing Report
- What percent () were charged/convicted of a DUI
- What percent () occurred in out an out-of-state
jurisdiction - We set up a range (35 to 45) and ran the model
hundreds of times to identify the most likely
impact
14Think in Terms of What-if Policy Scenarios
Policy Groups
15Policy Scenarios Policy Groups
- What would happen if we could divert just 15 of
the inmates with a specific offense and profile? - What would happen if we used the prison term
instead of the total sentence to set the parole
eligibility date?
16Think in Terms of What-if Policy Scenarios
Policy Groups
- Judges used a bench book summarizing state
sentencing practices and judges sentenced just
30 of the sentences in the middle sentencing
range? - What if we could divert simple drug users
from prison?
17Strategy
- Create a status quo projection that take into
account anticipated changes in prison admissions - Status quo projection serves as the baseline for
all proposed reforms - (individually and collectively)
18Strategy
- Define the proposals and policy groups
sufficiently to assign a cost estimate - Example Driving under suspension would be a
minimum security bed - Each proposal is evaluated using conservative
estimates and is simulated hundreds of times
using different error rates
19Visit our web site at www.ars-corp.com or
call (404) 881-1120