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LPSO Corrections Division. Population, Alternatives to Incarceration and Budget Information. 400 Employees 1,300 Offenders under supervision . Corrections Division Size. Lafayette Parish Correctional Center (LPCC ), Work Release Center Community Corrections Campus
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LPSO Corrections Division Population, Alternatives to Incarceration and Budget Information
400 Employees 1,300 Offenders under supervision Corrections Division Size
Lafayette Parish Correctional Center (LPCC), Work Release Center Community Corrections Campus Inmate Industries Facility LPSO Corrections Facilities
Lafayette Parish Correctional Center (LPCC), LPSO Corrections Facilities
Community Corrections Campus LPSO Corrections Facilities
Work Release Adult Day Reporting Juvenile Day Reporting GPS Offender Tracking Treatment Programs REHAB Inmate Industries Leadership and Resiliency LPSO Corrections Diversion Programs
Lafayette Parish Corrections History Jail Count and Projections Working with the Judiciary Development of assessment instruments Development of alternatives to incarceration Media / Public Buy In Partnerships Long Term Financials/Sustainability
LPCC Inmate Population Growth Sentenced and Unsentenced Inmates 1999 and 2009 32% Increase 47% Increase 2009
LPSO Corrections Expenses Per Major Program or Department
Inmate Population By Billing Class City Parish State INS Federal Transport
Offender Per Diem Costs Those in jail are the largest expense. After Off Sets
Corrections a Growth Industry National Numbers Staggering 12 million admissions/releases from jail each year 9 million unique individuals 766,010 in jail on any given day 81 percent of inmates stay less than 1 month 62 percent of inmates have not been convicted of a crime (for the current incarceration)
Local Jails See Most of the Traffic Per Major Program or Department According to recent estimates, nearly 650,000 people were released from prison in 2004, while over 12 million different individuals were released from jails across the US.
Most Offenders Will be Released National Numbers Virtually every person incarcerated in a jail in this country—and approximately 97 percent of those incarcerated in prisons—will eventually be released.
Across the U.S. A Revolving Door Each year, U.S. jails process an estimated 12 million admissions and releases. That translates into 34,000 people released from jails each day and 230,000 released each week.
Across the U.S. A Revolving Door In three weeks, jails have contact with as many people as prisons do in an entire year.
Across the U.S. In the United States, there are 3,365 independently operated jails
Across the U.S. Approximately two out of every three people released from prison in the US are re-arrested within three years of their release.
By the Numbers Nationally Three-quarters of those returning home have a history of substance abuse; two thirds have no high school diploma.
LPCC Inmate Population Growth Sentenced and Unsentenced Inmates 1999 and 2009 32% Increase 47% Increase 2009
In Lafayette Parish Approximately 13,000 bookings a year. Over half released the same day. 60% of arrested are for misdemeanors. Average stay is 13 days. Daily manages 1300 offenders.
In Lafayette Parish 2009 January Snapshot 1018 individuals arrested 816 Males, 202 Females 532 African, 484 Caucasians, 2 Asians Felonies 395, Misd 613, CC 6, CT 4 48% of all offenders stay less than 1 day
(S.T.O.P) was designed for early identification of offenders’ individual needs and placement of those in appropriate programming, as a means of monitoring the offenders’ progress, or lack thereof. Sheriff’s Tracking Offender Program
Diversion Programs Work LPSO Corrections Recidivism by Program 577 411 396 229 226 189 148 87 55.7%
A non-residential alternative jail sentence or pre-trial status, which allows participants to stay at home, as long as they meet all of the Day Reporting Center selection criteria. Day Reporting Program Description
About the Day Reporting Program The DRC includes monitoring, treatment, employment and daily contact. Participants must submit written itineraries on a daily and weekly basis. They must pay their own fees on a weekly basis. The program is viewed as providing close supervision, case management, and treatment in a manner that keeps offenders employed and is less expensive for the community.
Addiction Treatment & Counseling Community Building /Life Skills Training GED Education & Academic Enhancement Job Training & Placement Assistance Day Reporting Program Structure
GPS Offender Tracking • GPS offenders are monitored by an ankle bracelet equipped with a state of the art global positioning satellite (GPS) monitor. Offenders are assigned a caseworker that assists the offender in developing a weekly schedule. The offender is held accountable to follow the mandated schedule, as well as other conditions of release as stipulated by the court or LPSO’s GPS Offender program’s caseworker. Inability to abide by program requirements results in termination from the program. • 2002 – 2009 • Enrolled = 1259 • Completions = 919 • Terminations = 239
To increase long term community protection by returning offenders back into society as productive citizens with employment, cash savings, and the skills to maintain a responsible lifestyle by providing the opportunity to re-establish dignity and self-esteem and to facilitate the transition back into the community as a responsible adult. Work Release ProgramMission
Work ReleaseProgram Description A residential alternative to incarceration which allows offenders to be released from the LPCC and housed at the Work Release Center. State sentenced, Parish sentenced, and pre-trial offenders may participate if approved. All participants are expected to maintain employment and pay all program fees, obligations, and expenses from such employment.
$11,233,177 participant earnings from employment $93,490 in health care expense related taxpayer savings $69,899 in court ordered restitution payments from participants’ earnings $212,175 in court ordered child support payments from participants’ earnings 872 successful program completions $3,362,375 in savings immediately available to participants upon return to society Work Release ProgramGeneral Statistics (2005-2009)
Currently located in downtown Lafayette for over past 5 years. Operated and staffed 24 hours per day, 7 days per week by specially trained staff. Housing consists of 190 male beds and 16 female beds that are physically separated by sight and sound of each other. Work Release ProgramFacility Information
Addiction Treatment Day Reporting Intensive Outpatient Program (DRIOP) A 3-month substance abuse program that meets four times a week (day and evening classes offered). It is a structured and regimented program that operates on a Phase System. Progressing through each phase will determine a client’s length of stay and eligibility to graduate from the program.
Addiction Treatment Day Reporting Intensive Outpatient Program (DRIOP) • The program has both specific and unique tasks geared • toward individual client’s needs. Clients are • expected to attend 12-step meetings, related recovery • activities, and schedule weekly individual counseling • sessions, while active in the program. Aftercare for up • to one year will also be available.
Addiction Treatment Day Reporting Intensive Outpatient Program (DRIOP)
Anger Management designed to help inmates learn effective ways of dealing with their anger. Behavior, Emotions, Thinking (B.E.T) helps inmates learn new skills to regulate behavior, emotions, and thinking. The Work of Byron Katie learning to take total responsibility for you thoughts and actions. Grief & Loss designed to help inmates work through personal losses such as death of a loved-one, divorce, loss if children, abuse, or any other grief related issues. Parenting an open-ended interactive process group focusing on family and parenting issues. Behavioral Counseling
Behavioral Counseling Mental Health Evaluations and Counseling Assessments are performed by licensed and trained clinicians with follow-up counseling available. Referrals for medication are made as needed.
Behavioral Counseling Mental Health Evaluations and Counseling Assessments are performed by licensed and trained clinicians with follow-up counseling available. Referrals for medication are made as needed.
Assess offender needs and develop re-entry plans for those involved in the correctional system. Inmates must have at least 3 months remaining on sentence prior and will only be accepted towards the latter part of sentencing. Reentry Programs at LPCC Options
A 12-week program designed to teach inmates how to get a job And retain a job after they are released. Topics covered included, but are not limited to: resume writing, interviewing, job searching and skill building. Reentry Programs at LPCC JSEP (Job Skills Education Program):
Group Treatment Programs Available at the Lafayette Parish Correctional Center • Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) • Anger Management (MRT format) • Art Expressions Group • Behavior, Emotions, Thinking (B.E.T) • Grief & Loss • Male Moral Recognition Therapy (MRT) • Meaningful Minds • Project H.O.P.E (Helping Offenders Parent Effectively) • Project KITE • Relapse Prevention
Group Treatment Programs Mental Health Evaluations and Counseling
REHAB is a six-month residential substance abuse program offered to Parish inmates who qualify. Inmates are housed at the work release center and attend treatment at the Community Corrections Campus. The program requires that a person be willing to work full-time upon the completion of their initial 30 day orientation period they are also required to attend continued therapy in the evenings. Addiction Treatment Re-entry Housing 4 Addictive Behaviors (REHAB)
Addiction Treatment Re-entry Housing 4 Addictive Behaviors (REHAB) 2009 Program Graduates 27
A structured alternative school and day program which serves expelled and out-of-school youth who need intensive behavioral modification in order to succeed in a traditional school environment. Program Services Physical Training NovaNET and Classroom Instruction Moral Reconation Therapy Team Building Skills Social Skills Development Drug Testing Individual Case Management Referrals to Community –based Organizations Juvenile Day Reporting