Transcript Slide 1

GEORGIA
GEORGIA
GEORGIA
Department
of Corrections
GEORGIA
GEORGIA
Probation Operations
House Bill 1176 Implementation
Presented by: Jay Sanders
Special Assistant to the Director of Probation Operations
Georgia Department of Corrections
Probation Operations
October 2, 2012
HB 1176 Implementation
Goals of the Council
• Address the growth of the state’s prison population,
contain corrections costs and increase efficiencies and
effectiveness that result in better offender management;
• Improve public safety by reinvesting a portion of the
savings into strategies that reduce crime and recidivism;
and
• Hold offenders accountable by strengthening
community-based supervision, sanctions and services.
HB 1176 Implementation
“…the analysis revealed that
inmate population growth is due in
large part to policy decisions about
who is being sent to prison and
how long they are staying.”
Report of the Special Council on Criminal
Justice Reform for Georgians – Nov 2011
HB 1176 Implementation
The Facts
• Drug and property offenders represent 60% of all
admissions
• Five of the top six most common prison admission offenses
are drug and property crimes
– Burglary
– Forgery
– Possession of Cocaine
– Theft By Taking
– Theft By Receiving Stolen Property
• In 2010, over 5,000 lower risk drug and property offenders
went to prison for the first time = 25% of 2010 admissions
HB 1176 Implementation
• Phase II Technical Assistance Requested from
– Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA)
– Justice Reinvestment Initiative (JRI)
• Site Visit by Vera Institute on October 3rd and 4th
– Meet with internal and external stakeholders
– Vera will make recommendation to BJA and JRI
– Timeframe for assistance is 18-24 months
HB 1176 Implementation
• Evidence Based Practices Utilized
– GDC will only deliver programming and treatment that
is researched based
• Performance Metrics
– Track treatment and recidivism outcome
– Goal is to implement a web based system
– Ability to be queried by internal and external
stakeholders
Electronic Records Submission
• 140 Counties have
signed on
• Received 430
sentences last
week
• Over 1600
sentences received
since July 1
HB 1176 Implementation
• Use of Graduated Sanctions for Probation
Violations
• Probation Detention Center (PDC)
– Establishes a cap on length of stay at 180 days
– Currently 325 awaiting entrance to a PDC
• Early Termination Encouraged
• Pilot Pre-Sentence Assessment
Week of
7-Sep-12
24-Aug-12
10-Aug-12
27-Jul-12
13-Jul-12
29-Jun-12
15-Jun-12
1-Jun-12
18-May-12
4-May-12
20-Apr-12
6-Apr-12
23-Mar-12
9-Mar-12
24-Feb-12
10-Feb-12
27-Jan-12
13-Jan-12
30-Dec-11
16-Dec-11
2-Dec-11
18-Nov-11
4-Nov-11
21-Oct-11
7-Oct-11
23-Sep-11
Number of offenders waiting to enter PDC
HB 1176 Implementation
PDC Backlog since September 2011
850
800
750
700
650
600
550
500
450
400
HB 1176 Implementation
Accountability Courts Expansion
• $10 Million for new courts
• DRC Lite
– $750K for collaborative pilot programs for
rural areas that do not have full drug court
capacity or capability
DRC Lite
Pilot Circuits
Alapaha
Appalachian
Cordele
Mountain
Northern
Southwestern
Toombs
11
HB 1176 Implementation
• Residential Substance Abuse Treatment (RSAT) Expansion
– Conversion of (3) Pre Release Centers to RSATs
– 600 additional beds
• Integrated Treatment Program (ITP) – Dual Diagnosis
– Appling – Male – 200 beds
– West Central – Female – 200 beds
• Additional RSAT
– Turner – Male RSAT
Questions?