Title: Corrections Alternative Advisory Committee
1Corrections Alternative Advisory Committee
- Presentation by Ginger Martin
- Oregon Department of Corrections
- August 2, 2006
2Topics
- Community Corrections Act Principles and
Practices - Experiences with System Change
- Sanctions and Service Delivery
- Governance, Roles
- Funding
- Performance Monitoring
3Oregon Department of Corrections
4Community Corrections
- Evaluate each offenders likelihood to commit new
crimes - Monitor offenders according to behavior and risk
to re-offend, concentrating their efforts on
those offenders who are most likely to re-offend - Holding offenders accountable to conditions of
supervision - Applying a continuum of effective community-based
punishments according to behavior and risk to
re-offend - Offering programs designed to reduce the risk of
a return to criminal activity
5Community Corrections Act
- Legislative policy and intended purpose
- ORS 423.505
6Oregon Community Corrections Act Guiding
Principles
- Support of Local Decision-Making
- Avoid Prison Costs
- Support Effective Practices
7Principle Support of Local Decision-Making
- COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS PARTNERSHIP ACT of 1995
- Full county participation
- Includes supervision, correctional treatment and
services, and intermediate sanctions - Felony probation, parole, and post-prison
supervision
8Principle Support of Local Decision-Making
- Promote Local CJS Planning
- Public Safety Coordinating Councils
- Mandated planning
- Increased local control and flexibility
9Principle Avoid Prison Costs
- Transfer of Responsibility for Short Prison
Sentences - 12 months or less, including most revocations
- Construction projects to build local capacity
- Powers of the supervisory authority
10Principle Effective Practices
- Administrative Sanctions (1993)
- Swift response to violations
- Use intermediate sanctions prior to revocation
- Consistency provided by sanctioning grid
- Reduce cost to the public
11Principle Effective Practices
- Financial Consideration Improved System
- Coordinated local criminal justice response will
impact crime better than a short prison stay - Community based sanctions are effective against
crime
12Effectiveness of Community Sanctions
Risk Level
13Why Change the System?
- Mandatory prison terms in a crowded prison system
- More than 25 of prison beds filled with
revocations - Local policy decisions drive that number
- Revocation practices vary widely from county to
county
14What Made the Change Acceptable?
- Multi-party negotiation
- Leadership, outside and inside corrections
- Data to answer the questions
- Perceived crisis
- History
- Principle-centered
- The poison pill
15Benefits of the Changes
- Enhanced local planning and coordination
- Increased efficiency in using corrections
resources - Community owns community corrections
- Crime and corrections are better understood at
the local level - Local officials are more involved
16Benefits of the Changes
- Improved relationships between local law
enforcement and corrections - Increased funding
- State-financed construction/capacity
- Funding neither rewards nor punishes local
practices
17Mix of Supervision, Services and Sanctions
18Community-Based Services
- Alcohol/drug treatment
- Mental health treatment
- Sex offender treatment
- Domestic violence treatment
- Drug courts
- Cognitive restructuring
- Anger management
19Community-Based Sanctions
- Electronic home detention
- Community service and work crews
- Intensive supervision
- Work release
- Day reporting
- Jail
20Graduated Sanctions
- Funding includes dollars for community sanctions
- Administrative sanction process supports use of
community sanctions - History statewide policy to reduce technical
revocations - Present needed to manage local CJS resources
21Governance Role of State
- Operate prisons
- Build local capacity (one time)
- Corrections Information System
- Interstate compact
- Jail inspections
- Sustain funding level at defined baseline based
on actual costs
22Role of the State Office
- Leadership for Community Corrections support the
value of community corrections at the state and
local level - Work in partnership with counties open and
participatory planning efforts - Representation at the state legislature
- Clearinghouse for information and technical
assistance
23Role of Counties
- Operate community corrections agency
- Supervise felons on probation or following prison
- Carry out sentence for felons sentenced to prison
for one year or less
24Funding
- Policy impact of formulas
- Actual Cost
- Building the budget forecasting
- Distributing the dollars
25Performance Indicators
- Process to develop performance indicators
- Goals of community corrections are to contribute
to public safety and reduce the future criminal
conduct
26Performance Measures
- Reduce Criminal Behavior
- Reduce recidivism, as measured by felony
convictions from initial admission to
supervision, tracking for three years from
admission.
27Performance Measures
- Enforce Court and Board Orders
- Increase percentage of positive case closures
28Performance Measures
- Assist Offenders to Change
- Increase employment rates for offenders on
supervision. - Increase the rate of participation in treatment
programs for offenders on supervision.
29Performance Measures
- Provide Reparation to Victims
- Increase the percentage of restitution and
compensatory fines collected, owed to victims. - Increase the number of community service hours
provided by offenders on supervision. Reduce
recidivism