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Public Safety Performance Project October 2, 2012

Less Crime at Lower Costs Special Council on Criminal Justice Reform for Georgians. Public Safety Performance Project October 2, 2012. Agenda. Background State Examples: Less Crime at Lower Costs GA Juvenile Corrections: High Cost, Low Returns. Public Safety Performance Project.

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Public Safety Performance Project October 2, 2012

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  1. Less Crime at Lower Costs Special Council on Criminal Justice Reform for Georgians Public Safety Performance Project October 2, 2012

  2. Agenda • Background • State Examples: Less Crime at Lower Costs • GA Juvenile Corrections: High Cost, Low Returns

  3. Public Safety Performance Project • Protect public safety • Hold offenders accountable • Control corrections costs • Goal: • Help states get a better public safety return on their corrections dollars

  4. Special Council : 2011 - 2012 Special Council on Criminal Justice Reform for Georgians created by General Assembly Council undertook: data-driven analysis of the adult system development of policy options and recommendations HB 1176 passed the General Assembly unanimously Gov. Nathan Deal signed legislation into law Gov. Deal: “a model of how the legislative process should work.”

  5. HB 1176 • Passed General Assembly unanimously. • Averts projected 8 percent increase in prison population and associated cumulative cost of $264 million over five years. • Budget reinvests more than $17 million of the prison savings in into measures designed to reduce reoffending. • Focus of HB 1176: • Focus Prison Space on Serious Offenders • Reduce Recidivism by Strengthening Probation and Alternative Sentencing Options • Relieve Local Jail Crowding • Improve Performance Measurement

  6. Special Council: 2012-2013 • Governor extends the Special Council through Executive Order and expands the membership. • The state requests technical assistance from the Pew Center on the States and the Annie E. Casey Foundation. • State leaders charge the Special Council with identifying ways to: • improve outcomes in the juvenile system • develop fiscally sound, data-driven juvenile justice policies • ensure Georgia’s tax dollars are used effectively and efficiently

  7. Phase I: Bipartisan, Inter-branch Process • Data Analysis / System Assessment • Policy Development • Consensus Building 1 2 Stakeholder Engagement 3

  8. State Examples: Less Crime at Lower Costs

  9. Case Study: Ohio 40% increase in the state’s juvenile custody population spanning the 13 years leading up to 1992 State’s juvenile institutions operated at 180% of capacity Many counties did not have the resources to supervise juveniles locally Challenges:

  10. Case Study: Ohio • Solution: RECLAIM Ohio • Provides incentives to counties to develop and utilize community-based alternatives • Counties receive a formula based allotment, which is reduced for each juvenile committed to an institution • Counties receive the remaining funds to use in the community on a monthly basis • Targeted RECLAIM provides additional incentives for the six counties that commit the most youth to the state

  11. Case Study: Ohio 1992 2011 2,600+ 650 Total average daily facility population 12% 21% Commitment rate for felony adjudicated youth

  12. Case Study: Ohio $50M+ 4 facility closures save in operational expenses $330M+ in RECLAIM funds provided to local counties As of 2009 $30.6M allocated to counties in FY2012 plus $16.7M through Youth Services Grant 610+ funded programs in 88 counties in FY2011

  13. Case Study: Ohio Cost Benefit Analysis $1 $11-$45 spent on a RECLAIM-funded local program instead of placement saves the state

  14. Case Study: Ohio Lowenkamp & Latessa (2005). Evaluation of Ohio’s RECLAIM Funded Programs

  15. Case Study: Texas $84.5 M New funding to counties (2009-2012) 60% Total average daily facility population (2007-2011) 14% Juvenile arrests (2007-2010)

  16. Georgia Juvenile Corrections: High Cost, Low Returns

  17. Georgia's Historical Juvenile Disposed Population: Out-of-Home Youth

  18. High Cost

  19. Low Return on Investment All Committed Youth = Recidivism Rate: 53% 65% • Youth Development Campuses = GA Department of Juvenile Justice

  20. Key Findings • Trends in Out-of-Home Youth • Greater concentration of felons • Increase in number of juveniles awaiting a long-term bed • High percentage of low risk juveniles • Non-Secure Residential: majority non-felony and non-violent, nearly half are low risk • Recidivism remains high, half are re-adjudicated within three years • Regardless of setting, public safety outcomes for out-of-home not improving • Community-based options vary across the state • DJJ spends more than 60% of its budget on out‐of-home • Community‐based options are dependent upon location and funding

  21. Youth Out-of-Home: Offense Class n = 2,652 n = 1,870

  22. Who is in the YDC? n = 1,236 n = 619

  23. Youth Out-of-Home: Legal Status

  24. Youth in YDC: Offense Types 2002 2011 Violent (30.8%) Violent (49.3%) Property (29.8%) Property (26.2%) Public Order (10.0%) Violent Sex (11.5%) Violent Sex (8.4%) Public Order (6.9%) VOP/VOAC/VOAP (8.2%) Weapons (3.1%) Drug Use (4.7%) VOP/VOAC/VOAP (1.9%) Weapons (3.4%) Drug Use (0.5%) Drug Selling (2.0%) Drug Selling (0.5%) Status (1.6%) Traffic (0.2%) Sex Non-Violent (0.6%) Traffic (0.5%)

  25. Georgia's Juvenile Population: Youth Out-of-Home on June 30

  26. Youth Out-of-Home: Risk Level n = 2,367 n = 1,777

  27. Youth in YDC: Risk Levels

  28. Designated Felons in the YDC: Risk Levels

  29. Who is in the Non-Secure Residential Placements? n = 863 n = 584

  30. Non-Secure Residential: Risk Levels

  31. Recidivism for all Released Youth Percent

  32. Recidivism: Youth at the YDCs 6 percentage point increase since 2003 Percent

  33. System Assessment: Key Finding on Community-Based Options • Community-based options vary across the state • DJJ spends more than 60% of its budget on out‐of-home. • Community‐based options are dependent upon location and funding

  34. Less Crime at Lower Costs Special Council on Criminal Justice Reform for Georgians Public Safety Performance Project October 2, 2012

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