Justice Center Wv Justice Reinvestment Jan 2013
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January 2013 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia Analyses & Policy Options to Reduce Spending on Corrections & Reinvest in Strategies to Increase Public Safety Background I N JUNE 2012, GOVERNOR EARL RAY TOMBLIN, Chief Justice Menis Ketchum, legislative leaders from all four caucuses, and other state policymakers requested technical assistance from the Council of State Governments Justice Center (CSG Justice Center) to employ a data-driven “justice reinvestment” approach to develop a statewide policy framework that would reduce spending on corrections and would reinvest savings in strategies to increase public safety and reduce recidivism. Assistance provided by the CSG Justice Center was made possible through a partnership with and funding support provided by the Pew Center on the States Public Safety Performance Project and the Bureau of Justice Assistance, a division of the U.S. Department of Justice. To guide the effort, these state leaders established a bipartisan, inter-branch Justice Reinvestment Working Group comprising state lawmakers, corrections between June 2012 and January 2013 to review analyses that the CSG Justice Center conducted and to discuss policy options that would increase public safety and slow the growth in the prison population. In preparing its analyses, the CSG Justice Center reviewed vast amounts of data, drawing on information systems maintained by West Virginia’s Division of Corrections (WVDOC), Division of Justice and of Technology, Regional Jail and Correctional Facility Courts (AOC), and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In total, the CSG Justice Center analyzed over 650,000 individual records across these information systems. In addition to these quantitative analyses, the CSG Justice Center convened focus groups and meetings with prosecutors, defense attorneys, behavioral health and substance use treatment providers, community leaders, victim advocates and survivors, judges, prolaw enforcement executives, and others. Between June 2012 and January 2013, the CSG Justice Center conducted 84 in-person meetings with nearly 200 individuals. This report summarizes the CSG Justice Center’s work to address key issues that emerged from the quantitative and qualitative analyses. Policy options are organized around three objectives: 1) strengthening community supervision; 2) improving accountability; and 3) reducing substance use. Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 1 Summary of Challenges 1. The number of people whose community-based supervision1 was revoked, as well as the length of time they spend in prison once incarcerated, have 3. Failure to complete the terms of probation or parole often stems from an individual’s substance use. Few of these people receive treatment in their communities. trend is the single biggest driver of the state’s growing prison population. 2. An increasing number of people are released from prison without any community-based supervision. Justice Reinvestment Policy Framework Objectives Policies 1. Strengthen Community Supervision 2. Improve Accountability 3. Reduce Substance Use 1 (A): Adopt a statewide risk/need assessment instrument to determine an individual’s likelihood of reoffending and to focus supervision resources on people who are most likely to reoffend. 2 (A): Ensure that all people released from prison to the community are supervised. 3 (A): Invest in communitybased treatment for people on supervision with substance use needs. 1 (B): Maximize potential of Day Report Centers to reduce recidivism. 1 (C): Ensure effective implementation of evidence-based practices. 1. Community-based supervision includes probation, parole, home 2 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 2 (B): Respond to violations with swift, certain, and cost-effective sanctions. 2 (C): Streamline correctional system processes to reduce delays in parole eligibility and other 3 (B): Establish effective partnerships and resources across systems. 3 (C): Ensure effective substance use treatment for people incarcerated in state prisons. report, community corrections and Day Report Centers are used interchangeably. Additional information can be found on page 7. Projected Impact of Policy Framework Savings Reinvestment As a package, the policies described in this report could ginia. Adopting the policy framework would slow the growth in the state prison population between 2014 and 2018 and help the state avoid at least $200 million in construction costs and more than $140 million To achieve these outcomes, a portion of the expected savings must be reinvested in substance use treatment services that are focused on high-risk, moderate- to high-need people on probation and parole supervision, and in training assistance and quality assurance measures. Expanding access to substance use treatment accommodate the current prison population forecast. factor to recidivism rates. Figure 1: Summary of Impact, Savings & Reinvestment 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 ToTal $13.6M $28.2M $32.3M $32.7M $34.9M $141.8M Reinvestment (%) $3.5M (26%) $5.5M (20%) $5.5M (17%) $5.5M (17%) $5.5M (16%) $25.5M (18%) Housing Plan Assistance $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $0.5M Training & Sustainability $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $2.0M Gross Operational Savings (Rounded) Community-Based Substance Use Treatment $3,000,000 $5,000,000 $5,000,000 $5,000,000 $5,000,000 Net Savings $10.1M $22.7M $26.8M $27.2M $29.4M $23M $116.3M years for budgeting Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 3 Assumptions The following analysis projects the impact of the policy framework on the West Virginia prison population mentation begins in January 2014, with most policies being phased in by the end of 2015. The West Virginia casted that, absent any changes to current policies and practices, the prison population will increase 24 per7,146 people in 2012 to 8,893 people in 2018.2 Using this prison population forecast as well as recent growth staff has projected the impact of each proposed policy option on the relevant prison subpopulation. Impact calculations utilize either month-to-month population tion under a proposed policy change versus the status quo. Considerations for improved outcomes through expanded risk assessment, more effective supervision, better access to treatment, and reduced recidivism were factored into the estimates. In addition, the analysis took into account the possible effects that each of the policies in this proposal might have upon each other. Cost savings and proposed levels of reinvestment are based on projected impacts to the prison population as calculated by the CSG Justice Center in comparison to the West Virginia correctional population forecast, in consultation with the West Virginia Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety. Figure 2. Policy Framework Estimated to Slow Growth of the Prison Population3 West Virginia Correctional Population Forecast January 2013 2013−2018 Status Quo Forecast +1,362 (+18%) 10,000 8,893 9,000 2007−2012 Actual Growth: +1,201 (+20%) 8,000 7,531 7,418 7,000 6,000 5,000 5,869 2013−2018 Projected Change with Policy Options ‐113 (‐2%) 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2. 2012 2013 2015 2016 2017 2018 Planning, Division of Justice and Community Services, Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety, January 2013). 3. Ibid. 4 2014 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia Goal 1: Strengthen Community-based Supervision CHALLENGE: The number of people whose community-based supervision is revoked, as well as the length trend is the single biggest driver of the state’s growing prison population. West Virginia’s recidivism rate—the percentage of people who are reincarcerated within three years after release from prison— is relatively low, but it has increased 45 percent in the past seven years. The number of people incarcerated for committing a new crime has increased over the past seven years. West Virginia’s violent crime rate increased 13 percent between 2001 and 2010, from 280 to 315 reported crimes per 100,000 state residents. During this same period, national violent crime rates declined 20 percent, from 505 to 404 reported crimes per 100,000 residents.7 Nationally, 43 percent of people are reincarcerated within three years of release from prison.4 In West Virginia, 28.5 percent of people released from prison in 2008 returned to prison within three years (727 returned out of 2,546 released). In 2001, 19.6 percent of people released from prison returned within three years (190 returned out of 968).5 Between 2001 and 2010, West Virginia’s property crime rate declined 2 percent from 2,281 to 2,240 reported crimes per 100,000 state residents. During this same period, the national property crime rate declined 20 percent from 3,658 to 2,942.8 Among new commitments to prison, the number of people with a prior incarceration increased 23 percent, from 678 people in 2007 to 835 in 2011.6 New Commitments 1,704 (51%) Property (32%) Drug (22%) 2011 Commitments 3,324 Other (21%) Probation & Other Revocationsi 762 (23%) Parole Revocations 490 (15%) Other 368ii (11%) Technical (58%) New Crime (42%) Technical (51%) Assault Forc. Sexiii (35%) (24%) Other (17%) Violent (24%) Robbery (24%) Figure 3. More than Half of New Prison Commitments are for Nonviolent Convictions9 Burglary Larceny Other (39%) (29%) (32%) Manufacture/ Deliver (92%) DUI (25%) Poss.iv (8%) Other (75%) Over half of revocations are listed as technical violations New Crime (49%) ACC (69%) Diag. (30%) iv. Possession (Poss.) 4. negligent manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery, and aggravated assault. Division of Corrections, August 2012). 6. Crime in the United States,” United States Department of Justice, http://www.fbi. gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/crime-in-the-u.s/2010/crime-in-the-u.s.-2010. The 8. Ibid burglary, larceny-theft, and motor vehicle theft. 9. Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 5 Despite the increase in reported violent crime and decrease in reported property crime, the proportion of people convicted of nonviolent offenses in prison is growing. Between 2007 and 2011, the number of people in prison for property and drug offenses increased 42 percent and 32 percent respectively, and together composed 42 percent of the prison population in 2011.10 Regular commitments to prison increased 20 percent between 2005 and 2011. In 2011, over half of new commitments were convicted of nonviolent offenses.11 Whereas admissions to prison for people committing new crimes has increased by 20 percent between 2005 and 2011, admissions to prison for people whose community supervision was revoked increased by 47 percent. Revocations to prison from all types of community supervision increased 47 percent between 2005 and 2011. Approximately half of people revoked from probation and parole supervision were in prison for violating conditions of supervision, not for committing a new crime.12 Between 2007 and 2011, revocations to prison from munity corrections cost the state more than $150 million.13 Figure 4. Growth in Revocations Outpaces Growth in New Commitments14 Prison Commitments by Type, 2005 and 2011 3,500 3,324 2,605 2,500 2,000 1,500 597 Other +12% Community Corrections / Home Confinement Revocations +117% Probation Revocations +53% 490 Parole Revocations +27% 368 3,000 329 76 389 165 Total increase among all revocation types from 2005 to 2011 47% 386 1,000 1,425 1,704 New Regular Commitments +20% 2011 Total Commitments +28% 500 0 2005 10. Data. 11. Data. Regular commitments are direct commitments to prison for a new crime. 12. Data. 6 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 13. Data. Revocations to prison are for committing new crimes and violating conditions of supervision. The cost of these revocations is not intended to suggest that all of these costs could be avoided. 14. The number of people whose probation is revoked is increasing at a faster rate than that of the probation population itself. Between 2006 and 2011, the total adult probation population increased 11 percent, from 7,472 to 8,306 people. In the same period, revocations to prison increased 16 percent, from 534 to 621 people.15 People released in 2011 after being incarcerated as a result of a probation revocation spent nearly two years in prison on average. People failing on probation cost more than $80 million between 2007 and 2011.16 Longer sentence lengths for parole revocations contribute to prison population growth. Most revocations are for low-severity violations. The number of people in prison as a result of parole revocations has increased 86 percent from 465 peothese revocations cost the state $53 million.17 The length of stay for people in prison as a result of parole revocation is increasing. Between 2007 and 2011, the average length of stay increased 13 percent, from 1.5 to 1.7 years.18 Types of Community-based Supervision in West Virginia Unsupervised Probation: Magistrates may place a person convicted of a misdemeanor on unsupervised probation for up to two years. As a condition of probation, bail, or an alternative to incarceration, someone charged with a program is paid for through court fees and is administered by the county sheriff. Drug Court: offers nonviolent, misdemeanor or felony offenders an alternative to incarceration. People enter the program Day Report Centers: Day Report Centers (DRC) are designed to provide counties with an alternative to Probation: the state’s 31 circuits. Parole: Parole Board is a full-time, nine-member body charged with making parole release and revocation decisions. Supervision. 15. 17. 16. Data. 18. Data. Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 7 In 2011, half of the people returned to prison for a parole revocation had their community supervision revoked for violating the conditions of their supervision, commonly referred to as “technical violations.”19 Most decisions made about whether to incarcerate someone or place them under community supervision are not informed by risk assessment tools. Circuit judges in West Virginia do not receive the results of a risk assessment to inform sentencing decisions. jail system on any given day are awaiting trial. At the jails, 1,895 people were held pre-trial. Magistrates make decisions about pre-trial release without infor20 Judges regularly order people to probation, home of reoffending or criminogenic needs.21 Risk assessment tools do not inform most supervision practices. ments to inform supervision intensity or programming needs. Approximately one out of three about half of those trained used this information to guide supervision practices.22 risk of reoffending and identify which services to provide their clients. However, an assessment of practices at DRCs by the WVDJCS indicates that DRCs are not tailoring services based on risk or need, but provide the same level of services and supervision to most people. Furthermore, court orders often contradict assessment results or limit a program’s ability to provide services.23 ment, along with other diagnostic instruments and a psychological evaluation, to determine placement in prison-based programs. Understanding Risk Assessment24 Risk assessment tools help users sort individuals into low-, medium-, and high-risk groups. They are designed a new arrest and conviction or reincarceration for violating the terms of supervision. They usually consist of 10 and life circumstances. Risk assessments can be administered at any time during a person’s contact with the correctional facility, the period prior to release, and post-release supervision. They are similar to tools used by an 19. 20. 21. Criminogenic needs are the characteristics or circumstances (such as antisocial attitudes, beliefs, thinking patterns, and friends) that research has shown are associated with criminal behavior, but which a person can change (i.e., they are dynamic). of Service/Case Management Inventory (LS/CMI) is an assessment that measures the risk and need factors of late adolescent and adult offenders. The LS/CMI is also a case management tool. 23. 2012). 22. 24. surveyed, 117 responded to at least a portion of the survey. The Level CSG Justice Center, January 2011). 8 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia The Parole Board currently scores and uses a 10-question risk assessment as part of its decisionmaking and the Board considers the results of the able.25 The Board also relies on commentary in a psychological evaluation, including results from the Minnesota Muliphasic Personality Inventory 2 Restructured Form (MMPI-2-RF), which provides a Policy Options: 1 (A): Adopt a statewide risk/need assessment instrument to determine an individual’s likelihood of reoffending and to focus supervision resources on people who are most likely to reoffend. Require the Division of Probation, Parole Supervi- of reoffending.26 management assessment when a person is placed on parole. However, information from that assessment is not used to guide supervision. Rather, the intensity of supervision is based on the length of time people are under supervision as well as their behavior. 27 inform supervision practices, focusing resources on those who pose the greatest risk of reoffending as Establish supervision standards for people who are behavior. Require the use of a pretrial screening instrument Community supervision systems do not share data or information about supervision practices. A person may be placed on multiple forms of community supervision for a single offense, but superinformation or data about the people they supervise.28 Focus group meetings with probation and parole jurisdictions share information, while others had no established method of communication.29 that must be utilized within three days of placement in a regional jail to inform judicial decisionmaking. rationale: Revocations from community supervision are driving prison population growth, yet most decisions about supervision practices are not informed need assessment to inform supervision practices is fundamental to reducing recidivism of people under community supervision. Studies show supervision intensity that is based on risk, need, and responsivity can reduce recidivism by as much as 30 percent.30 Research also demonstrates that applying the same level of supervision resources to high- and low-risk offenders can actually increase recidivism rates for low-risk offenders.31 25. West Virginia Division of Corrections Case Management Manual, 29. CSG Justice Center focus group meetings with probation and parole with Parole Board members. DRC personnel, October 2012. 26. and Use,” Criminal Justice and Behavior 30. Stephanie Lee, Steve Aos, Elizabeth Drake, Annie Pennucci, Marna 27. on August 8, 2012. Institute for Public Policy, April 2012). 28. 31. and Risk.” Criminal Justice and Behavior supervision. delivered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on September 14, 2011. Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 9 Requiring the use of a screening instrument to inform pretrial detention decisions would ensure that decisionmakers have information about a person’s risk vidual’s charge and criminal history could lead to better decisionmaking. For example, the Ohio Risk Assess6 times less likely than high-risk people either to fail to appear for future court proceedings or to be re-arrested (5 percent compared to 29 percent).32 1 (B): Maximize potential of Day Report Centers to reduce recidivism. assessment to focus supervision and treatment to high risk of reoffending and criminogenic need. Permit people convicted of felony offenses to be eligible for placement in a program determined by a DRC for up to 12 months. Permit people convicted of a misdemeanor subsequent to a prior offense to be placed in a program determined by a DRC for up to six months. rationale: is used to inform decisions about what services and supervision a person will receive at a DRC will improve the impact these centers have on reducing recidivism. 1 (C): Ensure effective implementation of evidence-based practices. Require an inter-agency committee to oversee implementation of evidence-based practices, conduct regular assessments for quality assurance, and report to Require the Division of Probation to establish a committee for the purposes of designing and deploying a method for probation, parole, and DJCS to share information and coordinate across agencies carrying out community supervision. Require the committee to develop a strategy to collect and share information about assessed and collected restitution among supervision agencies. Require DJCS to assess regularly the quality of DRC programs. rationale: As supervision agencies change their practices to assess individuals’ risk of reoffense and focus supervision resources on those who are most likely to reoffend, it is important for agency adminisin practice yields and to hold accountable organizations that do not generate the anticipated outcomes. An established inter-agency committee, such as the Community Corrections Subcommittee of the Governor’s Committee on Crime, Delinquency, and Correction, may be best positioned to report on such measures. To minimize redundancy of services and supervision provided to people in DRCs who are on probation and parole, these community supervision agencies should share information or use the same case management system. As the administrator of the Community Corrections cers, and community organizations on evidence-based practices. In addition to such training, DJCS should audit program quality regularly to determine the extent to which services and supervision delivered adhere to evidence-based practices. 32. Edward Latessa, Paula Smith, Richard Lemke, Matthew Cincinnati, 2009). 10 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia Goal 2: Improve Accountability CHALLENGE: An increasing number of people are released from prison without any community-based supervision. The number of people who complete their sentence in prison and return to the community without any post-release The number of people leaving prison without parole period, from 676 people in 2007 to 896 in 2011. More than one-quarter of people leaving prison in 2011 returned to the community without supervision.33 Nearly three-quarters of the people who completed or “maxed out” their sentences in prison were never granted parole. Just 16 percent of people maxing out their sentences were convicted of violent offenses and 19 percent were convicted of sex offenses. The remaining two-thirds of the people who max out were convicted of property, drug, and other offenses.34 For some people, there is very little time between the date they become eligible for parole and the date they complete their sentence. The Parole Board, therefore, may have a very short window to decide whether to release a person to parole supervision before the individual completes his or her sentence in prison. Missing paperwork, particularly home plans, frequently delays parole hearings, which also contributes to the growing number of people completing their sentences in prison.35 When interviewing someone for parole, the Parole Board reviews a person’s home plan, psychological evaluation, criminal history, and post-sentence investigation reports. If any of these documents are missing, the person is placed under “further consideration” status. The hearing is postponed until these documents are completed and submitted. The number of people under further consideration nearly doubled in 5 years from 730 people in 2007 to 1,432 people in 2011.36 State prison system crowding has resulted in more than 1,700 individuals sentenced to prison to be conin intake processes and program delivery for people in regional jails awaiting transfer to prison. These delays include obtaining the paperwork required by the Parole Board. WVDOC prioritizes movement between the regional jails and WVDOC based on parole eligibility dates, but delays continue. In 2011, 57 percent of people placed under “further consideration” received this designation because they lacked a home plan. Another 17 percent were awaiting a psychological evaluation only. In 2010, 402 people under further consideration were ultimately granted parole; however, the delay caused by this incomplete paperwork cost $2.2 million.37 When calculating the parole grant rate, the Parole Board takes into account only the number of people who were granted or denied parole. Using this approach to calculating the parole grant rate, 48 percent of people interviewed were granted parole in people who were eligible for parole, but were unable to receive an interview. Modifying the parole grant rate calculation to include all people who were eligible for parole consideration (i.e., including those placed under further consideration) reduces the Board’s actual approval rate in 2011 to 33 percent.38 33. 36. 34. Ibid. 37. 35. a recommendation to the parole board about their habitability. The Parole Board decides whether or not to approve a home plan. granting parole was 112 days. The total cost is $2.2 million (112 days multiplied by $48.80 minimum cost per day). 38. the number of people granted parole divided by the number of people eligible for parole. Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 11 Figure 5. Majority of Further Considerations Involve the Home Plan and Psychological Evaluation39 Further Considerations with Known Reasons, 2011 100% 7% All Other Reasons 90% 80% 70% 60% 17% 7% 12% Psych Eval Only Home Plan and Other Home Plan and Psych Eval 50% 40% 30% 57% ‘Other’ reasons include post‐sentence investigations, criminal history checks and victim notifications Home Plan Only 76% of cases under further consideration in 2011 involved a missing home plan 20% 10% 0% 2011 People convicted of property and drug convicted of property and drug offenses. For people are more likely to be granted parole than as low risk were granted parole while only 24 percent of high-risk people were paroled. For people convicted of drug offenses, 53 percent of low-risk people and 43 percent of high-risk people were granted parole. moderate or high risk are more likely to be granted parole. The West Virginia Parole Board uses a 10-question risk assessment instrument when assessing a candidate for parole. To its credit, the Parole Board is the only entity in the West Virginia correctional system to use a validated risk assessment.40 Using risk assessment to guide decision-making Conversely, for the most serious offenses, (i.e., violent or sex offenses) the Parole Board is more likely high risk of reoffending. In 2011, of people convicted moderate risk were granted parole; 21 percent of lowrisk and 13 percent of high-risk people were granted parole. For people convicted of sex offenses, 11 per- would be more likely to be granted parole than those indeed, apply to the parole grant rate for people 39. 41. 40. 12 parole, while 8 percent of moderate-risk and 5 percent of low-risk people were granted parole.41 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia Figure 6. Mandatory Supervision for Violent and Nonviolent Offenses42 Parole Eligibility 1st Deg. Robbery w/o firearm (10 Years) 2.5 1st Deg. Robbery w/ firearm (10 Years) Example: Violent Offense (10 Years) 2.5 Example: Non-Violent Offense (10 Years) 2.5 Maximum Sentence Earliest Discharge for those with 100% Good Time 5 10 5 10 5 4.5 6 10 5 Once a lengthy psychological evaluation is mental health needs. WVDOC does not use a mental health screening a potential mental health problem that should be further assessed. Instead, every person who enters WVDOC undergoes a full psychological examination, which consists of a face-to-face interview with a psychologist, a review of mental health records and collateral information, and a series of tests such as the Revised Beta Examination 3 and the MMPI-2-RF. Results from this intensive process indicate that 78 percent of people entering prison in 2011 had minimal or no mental health treatment needs.43 Policy Options 2 (A): Ensure that all people released from prison to the community are supervised. Adjust prison “day-for–day good time” policies for people who would otherwise be released to the community unmonitored to effectively create periods of 10 Challenge: The window between parole eligibility and max out with good time can be very narrow or even nonexistent Policy option: Additional window of mandatory supervision mandatory supervision for people convicted of violent or nonviolent felony offenses. Require that, following enactment of this policy, people sentenced to prison for a violent felony offense undergo one year of mandatory supervision upon reaching their discharge dates, by deducting from Require that people sentenced to prison for nonviolent felony offenses, including those sentenced prior to enactment of this policy, undergo at least six months of mandatory supervision. For people not already paroled six months prior to their discharge date, then they shall spend the remainder of their sentence under parole supervision. rationale: This policy addresses the growing number of people who complete their sentences in prison and are released to the community with no one watching them. Studies show that people are most likely to months.44 A period of mandatory supervision would hold people accountable for their behavior and assist them in their transition into the community. Currently, day good time, which can reduce sentences by half. Deducting from “good time” creates an opportunity 42. Email correspondence with Philip Morrison, Executive Director of 44. 43. Justice,Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2002). Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 13 for people convicted of the most serious violent felony offenses to serve a period of community supervision without modifying the length of their time in prison. This policy would also create a mandatory period of supervision for people convicted of nonviolent felony offenses. Focus group meetings with victims and their advocates indicated support for requiring everyone with a felony conviction to leave prison with a period of mandatory supervision if not already paroled. 2 (B): Respond to violations with swift, certain, and cost-effective sanctions. ditions of supervision by people convicted of felony parole, or community corrections, with a sanction of more intensive programming in the community provides a less costly and much more effective method of holding offenders accountable for their behavior. 2 (C): Streamline correctional system processes to reduce delays in parole eligibility Restrict the current option of sending a person to a WVDOC facility prior to sentencing to people convicted of child abuse and sex offenses. Require WVDOC to screen people for mental health treatment needs. A full psychological assessment should be conducted only when the results of the preliminary screening indicate that the individual may need further assessment. not apply to individuals who abscond from supervision or commit a new crime. Require the Parole Board to interview people whose paperwork is missing a home plan. cation as an initial sanction and up to 120 days for a second sanction as part of a graduated sanction framework. For people on parole supervision, if the WVDOC determines a person will stay beyond 60 Require WVDOC to prioritize developing alternatives for people who do not have approved home plans, through methods such as hiring or contracting personnel responsible for connecting people in prison with reentry community resources, and providing short-term loans for housing costs such as rent or security deposits. shall provide the Parole Board an opportunity to ment, a person may be revoked for the remainder of ment. To encourage program compliance, violators will be eligible for day-for-day good time credit durEnsure that when a person’s sanction involves a brief incarceration in a regional jail, the WVDOC reimburses the Regional Jail and Correctional Facilrequired under current policy for a person whose probation or parole has been revoked. Require continuation of remaining supervision term rationale: About half of people in prison for revocations from community-based supervision were revoked because they violated the conditions of supervision, such as breaking curfews or testing positive for drug use. These people spend long periods in prison. Sanctioning the individual with two to three months of 14 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia Require the Regional Jail and Correctional Facility Authority to provide cognitive behavioral interventions to people bound for WVDOC, which have been shown to be effective at reducing recidivism. rationale: WVDOC, the Parole Board, and the Regional Jail and Correctional Facility Authority must work together to prepare people for parole eligibility by providing interventions to reduce recidivism and preparing people for release. Due to the large number of people waiting to be transferred from the regional jails to WVDOC, many people are unable to participate in the programs offered by WVDOC to prepare them for release. Focus group meetings with Parole Board members and jail administrators indicated a need for jails to provide programs to people bound for WVDOC to reduce delays in achieving readiness for parole. Providing assistance to people who are eligible for parole home plan while in prison would help reduce delays. Furthermore, expensive prison resources are often There are many assessments conducted during the prison intake process. The psychological evaluation is percentage of people with mental health treatment may be a potential mental health problem that should be further assessed. The mental health screen serves as a form of triage. Modifying the current process with a mental health screen is a cost-effective use of resources and is a best practice used in other states.45 Goal 3: Reduce Substance Use CHALLENGE: Failure to complete the terms of their probation or parole often stems from an individual’s substance use. Few of these people receive treatment in their communities. Substance use is a chronic problem in West Virginia. West Virginians are more likely than residents of any other state to die from a drug overdose. The number of overdose deaths in West Virginia increased 550 percent (the largest increase of any state) between 1999 and 2004. Prescription drug overdose deaths counties of West Virginia. Across West Virginia, there were 26 overdose deaths per 100,000 people between 2006 and 2010. In Mingo, Logan, Wyoming, McDowell, and Mercer Counties there were 46 to 90 overdose deaths per 100,000 people.46 To combat substance use in the state, Governor Tomblin issued an Executive Order in 2011 creating the Governor’s Advisory Council on Substance Abuse (GACSA) and six Regional Task Forces. Since then, GACSA has issued reports that include recommendations to develop funding sources for substance use treatment and to monitor purchases of prescription drugs.47 45. In 2012, legislation restricting prescription drug purchases was enacted and Governor Tomblin dedicated $7.5 million to establish new and expand existing regionally based substance use services.48 Drug offenses and substance use contribute to the growing prison population. Arrests for drug offenses increased 6 percent between 2007 and 2011. During this same time period, the percentage of people in prison who were convicted of a drug offense increased 32 percent.49 Drug and alcohol use contributes to the growing number of probation and parole revocations, which are one of the main drivers of prison growth. Sixtytwo percent of probation revocations to prison in sion or use of alcohol or drugs was cited in 78 percent of technical parole revocations and 65 percent of revocations for new crimes in 2011.50 47. on Substance Abuse, April 2012). 48. accessed January 2013, http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/bhhf/sections/programs/ ProgramsPartnerships/AlcoholismandDrugAbuse/Pages/SBIRT.aspx Health and Human Resources, Bureau for Behavioral Health and Health January 2013, http://www.governor.wv.gov/media/pressreleases/2012/ Pages/GovernorTomblinUnveilsPlantoFightSubstanceAbuseEpidemic.aspx. 49. 50. Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 15 While most people entering prison who needed substance use treatment received services while in prison, many without a need were also assigned to treatment programs. Abuse Treatment (RSAT) program. Research shows that substance use treatment in the community can have a greater impact on reducing recidivism than treatment in prison. No dedicated funds, however, are appropriated to provide substance use treatment to people on probation or parole supervision. In 2011, 66 percent of people entering prison were Of the 7,500 adult probationers in the community at any given time, an estimated 1,450 have a moderate to high likelihood of reoffending and a high need for targeted substance use services. The full continuum of outpatient, intensive outpatient, and residential substance use treatment services, including cognitive behavioral interventions that address “criminal thinking,” are required. An additional 492 people on parole are estimated to need this same range of services.53 96 percent of those people were assigned to at least one substance use-related program.51 At the same time, 34 percent of people entering their need for treatment was unknown. Two-thirds of this population was also assigned to at least one substance use-related program.52 Resources to treat people with substance use disorders are focused on people in prison instead of during community supervision, where treatment can have the greatest impact. Surveys of probation, parole, and DRC personnel indicate that people are more likely to receive lowintensity services, such as self-help, or outpatient services than to access intensive outpatient or residential treatment. Staff indicated that people with all levels of need for treatment could wait more than a month to receive services.54 WVDOC provides different degrees of substance use treatment for its population through its threetiered non-residential substance use program (ALADRUE) and through its Residential Substance Figure 7. Few Substance Use Services are Provided for Those on Community Supervision55 DRC PRobaTion DRug CouRT DoC PaRole Funding for services $986,088 $0 $1,137,838 $872,000 $0 Capacity to provide services Unknown Estimated demand for services*† – Total 430 108 1,449 263 2,431 492 Outpatient 43 580 105 973 197 Intensive Outpatient 43 580 105 973 197 Residential with step-down 22 290 53 486 98 * Demand for services are based on estimates of the proportion of the population under supervision or incarcerated who have treatment needs and a moderate to high criminogenic risk level. 51. The Level of Service Inventory - Revised: U.S. Norms, Christian University Drug Screen (TCUDS). Program placement determined by TCUDS results and additional evaluations. 54. CSG Justice Center survey of 275 Community Corrections, Probation, and Parole Personnel. 52. Assignment Data. 55. The Level of Service Inventory - Revised: U.S. Norms, 53. Stephanie Lee, Steve Aos, Elizabeth Drake, Annie Pennucci, Marna Inmates.” Drug and Alcohol Dependence 16 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia People under community supervision face multiple barriers to receiving treatment, including the inability to pay for services, the inability to reach the services, and the lack of availability of these services generally.56 Treatment resources in the community and in prison could be improved. The Correctional Program Checklist (CPC) assesses a program’s ability to deliver effective programming consistently and to adhere to the principles of effecindividually (leadership and development, staff, offender assessment, treatment characteristics, and quality assurance) and assesses the overall effectiveness of the program. A CPC assessment of a prisonbased RSAT program concluded that the program is of high quality overall. However, treatment in the program and quality assurance measures received the weakest individual scores and needed improvement. A similar assessment of a DRC showed the program also needed to improve the quality of treatment provided and its quality assurance process.57 Policy Options: 3 (A): Invest in community-based treatment for people under supervision with substance use needs. Create a treatment supervision sentencing option for judges to impose supervised probation with dedicated state treatment resources to people convicted of felony offenses who have a high likelihood of reoffending and who have moderate to high substance use treatment needs. Reinvest funding for people serving on probation and parole, who have a moderate to high likelihood of reoffending and a moderate to high need for substance use treatment in the community. Require 56. CSG Justice Center survey of 275 community corrections, probation, and parole personnel. these entities to partner with behavioral health providers to provide services to this population. Support training, data collection, and other investments in the state treatment infrastructure to ensure treatment is delivered according to research-based approaches for providing substance use treatment to people under community-based supervision. rationale: Focus group meetings with most stakeholders emphasized the need to expand substance use treatment across the criminal justice system. Research shows that substance use treatment in the community can have a greater impact on reducing recidivism than treatment in prison. However, neither probation nor parole funds any substance use treatment in the community, despite supervising 1,900 people who could portion of the savings generated by other policy options in this framework into substance use treatment would address a critical gap in services.58 3 (B): Establish effective partnerships and resources across systems. Require behavioral health providers to participate in community corrections boards. Require DJCS to review the membership of all community corrections committees to close gaps in the network of service providers. In addition, require DJCS to review the range of available services, sanctions, and programs that address criminogenic needs and develop programming beyond DRCs. rationale: Establishing new and strengthening existing partnerships among community supervision agencies and behavioral health providers will improve access to treatment and identify gaps in services for people under community supervision. Currently, community criminal corrections boards are not required to include behavioral health providers despite the large number of people on supervision who require behavioral health treatment services. Every jurisdiction receiving Community Corrections Grant funding 58. Stephanie Lee, Steve Aos, Elizabeth Drake, Annie Pennucci, Marna 57. CSG Justice Center assessment of an RSAT program and a DRC using Correctional Program Checklist, conducted in October 2012. The CPC is designed to measure whether a correctional program has the capability to deliver evidence-based interventions and services for offenders, and the content area measures the extent to which the program meets the principles of risk, need, responsivity, and treatment. The Level of Service Inventory - Revised: U.S. Norms, Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 17 chose to establish DRCs despite having the option to develop many types of services. While DRCs provide a variety of services to their clients, other types of services may be needed in these communities. Identifying current gaps in services around the state would assist communities in ensuring appropriate programs and services are made available and would reduce recidivism. 3 (C): Ensure effective substance use treatment for people incarcerated in state prisons. Prioritize substance use treatment resources based on the results of a risk and needs assessment. 18 Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia Require the Division of Corrections and the Parole Board to agree to a treatment matrix that uses a risk and needs assessment instrument to focus resources on high risk people with moderate to high substance use treatment needs, and does not inappropriately treat low-risk people. rationale: Requiring WVDOC and the Parole Board to agree to a treatment matrix would assist placement of people into appropriate services and limit delays in parole eligibility caused by disagreement between WVDOC and the Parole Board about needed programs. Focusing treatment resources on people who are more likely to reoffend and have sigthe impact of treatment in prison. Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia 19 To learn more about the justice reinvestment strategy in West Virginia and other states, please visit: www.justicereinvestment.org and federal levels from all branches of government. The Justice Center provides practical, nonpartisan advice and consensus-driven strategies, informed by available evidence, to increase public safety and strengthen communities. public safety, hold offenders accountable, and control corrections costs. State Governments Justice Center, or the Council of State Governments’ members. Justice Reinvestment in West Virginia: Analyses & Policy Options to Reduce Spending on Corrections & Reinvest in Strategies to Increase Public Safety Council of State Governments Justice Center Bethesda, MD Austin, TX project contact: Megan Grasso Policy Analyst mgrasso@csg.org www.justicecenter.csg.org