1 / 42

Maine Board of Corrections March 25, 2009

Presents:. Maine Board of Corrections March 25, 2009. ONE MAINE ONE SYSTEM. Maine’s Unified Correctional System Design Development Process Discussion. Mission, Goals, Guiding Principles. MISSION

audi
Download Presentation

Maine Board of Corrections March 25, 2009

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Presents: Maine Board of Corrections March 25, 2009 ONE MAINE ONE SYSTEM Maine’s Unified Correctional System Design Development Process Discussion

  2. Mission, Goals, Guiding Principles

  3. MISSION   The mission of the Board of Corrections is to design, guide and invest strategically in the development of a unified state and county corrections system and to sustain and manage the system in order to accomplish the following goals:

  4. Goals • Reduces recidivism;   • Increases pretrial diversion and post conviction release;  • Reduces the rate and use of incarceration;   • Achieves efficiencies; and  • Reduces the rate of growth in the cost of corrections

  5. Guiding Principles A Unified State and County Corrections System that: • Reduces risk through the use of Evidence Based Practices and encourages sentencing in accordance with risk; • Creates an integrated, regional system built on the strengths of the existing state and county facilities and services and is based on differentiated missions; • Is a stewardship approach that manages and maintains the existing assets and resources for the maximum benefit and invests strategically to accomplish system goals;

  6. Guiding Principles, cont • Allows innovation, but is collaboratively based and recognizes that decisions about change and its management are shared; • Creates incentives for us all to work together and promotes cohesion;

  7. Guiding Principles, cont • Is consistent with the compromise enacted in Public Law 653; • Incorporates the recommendations of the Corrections Alternatives Advisory Committee and the two plans developed by the state and the counties;

  8. Guiding Principles, cont • Meets the system’s needs for risk management and security housing; and • Works in concert with other policy makers including the Legislature, the Judiciary and the Sentencing Council. • Involves and includes local stakeholders including prosecutors, local law enforcement, and others

  9. Objectives • Mission Change: Develop a plan for every correctional facility & county jail use and purpose within the adopted unified correctional system design; • Program Improvements: Adopt consistent statewide standards and policies, such as but not limited to: • Pretrial, alternative sentence, revocation and reentry programs; • Inmates with mental illness; • Coordinated transportation system of inmates in the unified correctional system • Improved use of technology • Achieve Efficiencies: Develop a method to identify and manage the cost of corrections to achieve systemic cost savings and invest these savings strategically

  10. Correctional Service Delivery System How do we incorporate the existing state and county facilities and programs into a systems approach?

  11. A Snapshot of Current Facilities:County Jails County Jails

  12. A Snapshot of Current Facilities:County Pre-Release Centers County Jails County Pre-Release Centers

  13. A Snapshot of Current Facilities:State of Maine Facilities

  14. A Snapshot of Current Facilities:Adult Community Corrections

  15. Correctional Services Can we categorize correctional services in a way that assists in creating service districts?

  16. Service Catchment Categories

  17. Community and court based services • Services that are community based: arrests, bail, court appearances, probation • Services that allow an offender to retain community, employment, treatment and family connections; primarily lower risk offenders • Examples: Short term holding facilities; diversion programs; alternatives to incarceration; short sentences, revocation centers, day reporting

  18. Probation Services • Services that are accessible to courts and community services • Allow for consistent risk based supervision and case management • Leadership in risk assessment, case management • Support reentry and alternatives to incarceration

  19. Reentry Services • Services that support successful return to community, employment, family, treatment • High risk offenders • Access to supportive community services and resources • Structured supervision

  20. Long Sentenced Offenders/Specialized Interventions • Services that provide appropriate security levels (medium security and higher) and programs for offenders with sentences of 9 months or longer • Specialized treatment and transition programs for high risk offenders, sex offenders and substance abuse treatment • Specialized interventions for female offenders, cultural approaches

  21. Acute/High Risk • Services that provide appropriate security level for high risk offenders (sentenced and pretrial) • Services that provide appropriate treatment or intervention for acute needs (infirmary, inpatient mental health)

  22. As the system evolves, it’s important to note that one size does not fit all in this process. The remainder of this presentation focuses on correctional service delivery based on Service Catchment Regions and Statewide Needs

  23. Recommended New System 1. Four Correctional Services Regions (based on aggregates of Judicial Districts) • 12 TO 72 Hour holding facilities as necessary based on need/cost/ benefit • Pretrial Facilities (Pretrial & Sentences of 90 days or less) • Full service jails (adult male/female, all classification, pretrial, & sentences up to 9 months) • Pretrial and Alternative Sentencing Programs • Community Corrections/Probation Services • Reentry Centers/work release • Victim Services

  24. Statewide System Needs:Infirmary Services Maine State Prison - Warren MCC - Windham Cumberland County Jail York County Jail

  25. Implementation Priorities and Timeline How does the Board develop its plan for implementing the system design? We cannot do it all, at once, everywhere

  26. Phased Approach To System Design • Phase 1 – July 1, 2009 – June 30, 2010 • Phase 2 – July 1, 2010 – June 30, 2011 • Phase 3 – July 1, 2011 – June 30, 2012

  27. Service Catchment Categories Phase 3 Phase 2 Phase 1

  28. Priority Timeline • Phase 1: Cost Reduction and Slowing the Growth in Costs • Major mission changes • Pretrial Services/diversion • Transportation • Pilot Reentry • Bail notification – victims • Performance measurement system • Goals • Efficiencies/cost

  29. Priority Timeline • Phase 2: Achieving Greater Efficiencies and Reducing the Growth in Costs • Reentry Services • Alternatives to Incarceration • Transition Services • Food Services/Commissary

  30. Priority Timeline • Phase 3: Improved Services and Systems of Care • Specialty Services • Standardize Medical

  31. Accomplishing the Priorities • Review and change mission for the facilities in each region to accomplish the priority objective • Revise the laws as need to accomplish the priority • Add capacity (not beds) for the board and the system • Identify the investment needs, savings from efficiencies and resource allocation decisions • Develop standardized policies and practices

  32. Phase 1Cost Reduction and Slowing the Growth in CostsJuly 1, 2009 – June 30, 2010 • County Jail Mission changes: pretrial • Statutory changes • Create director for pretrial/diversion/reentry • Investment of pretrial $; access federal assistance • Policy development for pretrial and home release • Pretrial services based on 4 regional contracts • Pilot reentry center • Transportation HUBS • Performance measurement

  33. Phase 1County Jail Mission Changes Piscataquis – Up to 72 hr Hold. Franklin – Up to 72 hr Hold. Waldo – Up to 72 hr Hold/Reentry Coastal Service Region Oxford– Up to 72 hr Hold.

  34. Phase 2Achieving Greater Efficiencies and Reducing the Growth in CostsJuly 1, 2010 – June 30, 2011 • Expand reentry services statewide • Mission changes for remaining 3 reentry locations • Policy development • Investment decisions

  35. Reentry Model Flow Chart Custody Screening, LSI & Case Plans Initial Classification: Appropriate security/programming housing placement Low Risk Moderate & High Risk SCCP, Home Release or Day Reporting Community Based Residential Reentry Centers Released Released SCCP or Home Release

  36. Phase 3Improved Services and Systems of CareJuly 1, 2011 – June 30, 2012 • Create specialty units for mental health, substance abuse • Infirmary services • Consistent medical services • Gender responsive programs • Culturally appropriate services

  37. Investment and Funding

  38. Investment Fund • $3.5 million request represents • Savings from mission changes in 4 counties; • 75% reduction in initial budget submissions of remaining 12 counties

  39. Budget Issues • Process for: • Reinvestment from Mission Changes • “Scrub” County Budgets • Can we “book” savings from efficiencies (transportation in FY10, pretrial/reentry FY11) • Federal Grant Funds availability • General Fund Appropriation • Resource allocation: • Reallocate CCA and fine revenue • Eliminate Boarding Rates

  40. Statutory Changes

  41. Legislative Proposals • Efficiencies in the Transportation of Prisoners • Home Release Monitoring Program • Early Release of Terminally Ill or Severely Medically Incapacitated Prisoners • Expand the Maine Governmental Facilities Authority’s Ability to Include County Correctional Facilities • Certificate of Need Process  • Process and Standards for Closing or Downsizing a Correctional Facility or a County Jail • Boarding rates, fund balances, DOC budget

More Related