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The National Institute of Corrections’

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Title: The National Institute of Corrections’


1
The National Institute of Corrections
  • Transition To Community Initiatives
  • TPC Transition from Prison to Community -
    Center for Effective Public Policy
  • - and -
  • TJC Transition from Jail to Community
  • The Urban Institute

Kermit Humphries Program Specialist
2
What Are We Going to Do?
  • NIC Overview of Transition
  • Kermit Humphries, NIC
  • Audience Introduction and Information -
  • Transition from Prison to Community (TPC) -
  • Peggy Burke, Center for Effective Public
    Policy (CEPP)
  • Transition from Jail to Community (TJC) -
  • Jesse Jannetta, The Urban Institute
  • Questions and Discussion

3
NICs Interest in Transition
  • 1985-2000 Decision-making Violations Policies
    ? Systems Change Collaboration.
  • NIC has an overarching concern for public
    safety. Taking Several Forms.
  • Big increases in number of released offenders
    each year.
  • Transition practices are often fragmented and
    compartmentalized.
  • Stakeholders compete rather than cooperate.

4
Critical NIC/TPC/TJC Principles
  • Involve multiple stakeholders
  • Concentrate on reforming systems
  • Transition starts at admission or before
  • Risk-reduction reforms are driven by
    evidence-based practices
  • Monitor performance and evaluate

5
Transition/Reentry Climate
  • Learned much since 2000 from theory to practice
  • Much more awareness and interest in offenders
    returning to local communities
  • Not just the job of corrections anymore
  • Multiple agencies and organizations investing
  • Consistent and complimentary messages and tools
  • Economy is changing attitudes opportunities

6
Transition From Jail to Community
  • The Urban Institute Amy Solomon,
    Project Director
  • Two Learning Sites over past year
  • Douglas County, KS, and Denver, CO
  • Four more jurisdictions began to receive two
    years implementation assistance Sept. 10
  • Orange County, CA Kent County, MI
  • Lacross County, WI Davidson County,
    TN
  • Future products will document what is learned.

7
  • Transition From Prison to Community
  • Center For Effective Public Policy Peggy Burke,
    Project Director
  • Phase I Oregon, Missouri, Michigan, North
    Dakota, Indiana, New York, Rhode Island, Georgia
  • (Began in 2001 and ended in 2009)
  • Phase II Kentucky, Tennessee, Texas. Wyoming,
    Iowa, Minnesota.
  • (Began in November 2009 and will receive
    assistance for about 21/2 years.)

8
Transition from Prison to the CommunityAn
Initiative of the National Institute of
Corrections
  • Overview by
  • Peggy Burke, Project Director
  • Center for Effective Public Policy
  • Prepared for presentation at
  • APPA 2010 Winter Institute
  • Tuesday, February 2, 2010, 830 1000 a.m.

9
TPCs Primary Goal
  • To enhance the successful transition of offenders
    from prison to the community in order to enhance
    public safety and reduce future victimization
    through recidivism reduction.

10
The TPC Model
Transition From Prison to Community
Release Authority
Community Supervision
Prison
Human Services Agencies
Institutional Phase
Community Phase
Re-Entry Phase
TPC Integrated Case Management
IA, KY, MN, TN, TX, WY GA, IN, MI, MO, ND, NY,
OR, RI
Transition from Prison to Community Initiative
11
TPC.
  • Round One--8 states GA, IN, MI, MO, ND, NY, OR,
    RI
  • Duration from 4 years 8 years
  • Round Two6 states IA, KY, MN, TN,
  • TX, WYbeginning Oct 09
  • NICthrough CEPPhas provided technical
    assistance and the guidance of the
  • TPC Model
  • Distinctive among many national/local efforts
  • Second round involves Urban Institute with a
    focus on measurement

12
Distinctive aspects of TPC
  • Its goal is public safety through offender
    success
  • Leadership
  • Change agentscollaborative teams
  • Focused on system change
  • Based on evidence
  • Targets by risk and need to reduce recidivism
  • Demands measurable outcomes
  • Recidivism reduction
  • System change
  • reentry indicatorsemployment, education,
    reduced drug use, access to services, etc.
  • Driven by a rational implementation process based
    on good information about current practice and
    what works

13
A Roadmap for Implementing the TPC Model
Form and Charter Teams Expand Partnerships
Clarify and Affirm Vision and Mission
Target and Implement Change
Assessment and Classification Behavior and
Programming Release Preparation Release/Revocation
Supervision/Services
Identify Opportunities To Introduce
Evidence-Based Practice
Understand And Evaluate The NOW
14
Sites Participating in First Round of TPC
Data from the Bureau of Justice Assistance Web
Site and the U.S. Census Bureau
15
LessonsKey Ingredients of Success
  • Commitment of key leadership of critical partners
  • Ability to assign reasonable staff support
  • Infrastructurecapacity for planning, analysis
  • Balancing pressure for change with distractions
  • Perseverance

16
A Critical Insight
  • Successful reentry depends upon a seamless and
    collaborative process from admission to
    discharge.It also requires us all to do business
    differently.

17
Seeks to move from
  • From
  • Custody/monitoring
  • Silos
  • Agency isolation
  • Unproven methods
  • Measuring inputs
  • Offender failure
  • To
  • Behavior change
  • Coherent process
  • Collaboration
  • Using what works
  • Measuring outcomes
  • Offender success and public safety

18
Barriers
  • This is about system changethe major barrier is
    the system itselfits HUGE
  • The current system is designed to punish and
    incapacitatenot to change behavior
  • Inertia
  • Ingrained ways of doing business
  • Lack of skills, tools, for mid-level and line
    staff
  • Silos
  • Population pressures that make access to programs
    difficult
  • Budget pressure

19
KEY ASSETS
  • Realization that successful transition is about
    public safety
  • Collaborative change teamswithin the system and
    with external partners
  • Community interest has been stimulated.should be
    a significant source of resources
  • Cross-trainingexamining together the current
    situationproblems, resources, possible solutions
  • Budget pressureforces redeployment

20
GEORGIA
  • Implemented new assessment protocol--COMPAS
  • Electronic sharing of reentry plans between
    institutions and the field
  • Developing dash board measures in order to
    track progress
  • Increasing percentage of successful completions
    of parole

21
INDIANA
  • Plainfield Educational Reentry Facility
  • In-reach by local resources
  • Developing a quality assurance capability

22
MICHIGAN
  • 11,925 MPRI offenders, 9,388 of them released
  • 2007 data show a 26 improvement in return to
    prison rates over pre-MPRI population
  • Dedicated staff to implementing Collaborative
    Case Management--training of staff on case
    management
  • Review of all institutional programs to assess
    compliance with EBP

23
MISSOURI
  • Transitional Housing Units operate in 11
    institutions state-wide
  • Missouri Reentry Process (MRP) Steering Teams now
    serve every county in the State of Missouri
  • MRP has successfully spanned THREE administration

24
NEW YORK
  • Established a dedicated Offender Reentry Unit
    within the Division of Criminal Justice Services
  • Implementing new approaches to risk and need
    assessments (COMPAS)
  • Formed Local Reentry Task Forces to
  • do team-based case management

25
NORTH DAKOTA
  • Total reorganization of the Department of
    Corrections
  • Using the LSI-R and focusing case plans upon high
    risk cases and criminogenic needs
  • Developing a Transition Accountability Plan that
    will move with offender from admission to
    discharge from supervision

26
OREGON
  • Balanced Scorecard
  • Governors Reentry Policy Council established by
    Executive Order
  • Working groups on housing, employment and mental
    health

27
RHODE ISLAND
  • Governor has established Steering Committee on
    Prisoner Reentry by Executive Order
  • Risk assessment (LSI-R) in place as is a new case
    plan format geared specifically to the domains of
    need identified for each offender
  • New discharge planning process
  • Comprehensive case management based on assessment
    is under development

28
OUTCOMES
  • MISSOURI--Decreasing rates of recidivism (return
    to prison) 6 and 12 month follow-ups (23 down
    to 15, 37 down to 30)
  • GEORGIAUpward trend in successful completions of
    parole 2005-2007 ( 66 up to 71)
  • MICHIGAN--MPRI outcomes through August 2007 --
    26 improvement in total returns to prison (net
    400 fewer returns to prison)

29
Major Resources Respond to the Overwhelming
Interest in Transition and Reentry
  • Major federal focus on transition and reentry
  • Transition from Prison to the Community
  • Transition from Jail to the Community
  • Serious and Violent Offender Reentry Initiative
  • The Presidents Prisoner Reentry Initiative
  • Second Chance Act

30
ToolsCOMPANION DOCUMENTS
  • TPC Reentry HandbookImplementing the NIC
    Transition from Prison to the Community Model
  • Increasing Public Safety Through Successful
    Offender Reentry Evidence-Based and Emerging
    Practices in Corrections
  • Integrated Case Management Handbook Lessons
    from Implementing the NIC Transition from Prison
    to the Community (TPC) Model (in press)

31
Sites Participating in the Second Round of TPC
Data from the Bureau of Justice Assistance Web
Site and the U.S. Census Bureau
32
Work under way in new sites to be completed by
May 15, 2010
  • Policy Team Formation
  • Development of a Transition Vision
  • Documenting Current Practice
  • Identifying Targets of Change
  • Recommendations to the Policy Team
  • Development of Workplan to Implement beginning
    after May 15, 2010

33
Iowa
  • Focusing on reentry for some time
  • Conducted a state-wide training in September 2008
    and a follow-up in spring 2009
  • Developed models for urban and rural reentry
    approaches
  • Governors Ex-Offender Reentry Coordinating
    Council

34
Iowa
  • Working to bring innovations in some areas of the
    state into common practice everywhere in the
    state
  • Further developing a state-wide case management
    and information sharing system
  • Development of quality assurance system
  • Bringing non-correctional partners to the table
  • Developing approaches tailored for both urban and
    rural areas

35
Kentuckyprior to TPC
  • Executive Order establishing a statewide reentry
    effort
  • Established a Reentry Coordinator position within
    DOC
  • Involved in strong local reentry efforts
    (Lexington and Louisville)
  • Received BJA reentry training for 250 staff

36
Kentucky (contd)
  • Establishing a multidisciplinary statewide
    reentry steering teamoperations level
  • DOC Reentry Task Forcethe spark plug
  • Implementing an assessment tool for all offenders
  • Evaluating programming re EBP standards
  • Charters developed for task force and team work
  • Developing a system map for the process

37
Minnesota
  • Comprehensive Offender Reentry Plan (MNCOR) 2007
    Reentry Pilot Project in Five Counties (Ramsey,
    Hennepin, Dodge, Fillmore and Olmstead)
  • Early release planning in the institution
  • Collaboration between institutional caseworkers
    and supervisions agents
  • Increased access to critical reentry services in
    the community

38
Minnesota
  • Results to Date
  • Participation in the pilot project reduced
    recidivism
  • Lowered the risk of rearrest for a new offense by
    37
  • Decreased the risk of reconviction for new crime
    by 43
  • Reduced the risk of reincarceration for a new
    felony offense by 57
  • Did not have statistically significant effect
    when recidivism was measured as a return to
    prison for a technical revocation
  • TPC challenge to build on this initiative, create
    collaborations statewide, and implement the full
    model

39
Tennessee
  • State team co-chaired by DOC Commissioner and
    Parole Board Chair
  • Working on transition since 2004under the
    Tennessee Reentry Cooperative (TREC)
  • Implementing a Transition Accountability Plan
    statewide
  • Implementing LSCMI statewide
  • Working on a state-wide vision and system map

40
Texas
  • The Texas Department of Criminal Justice
    reorganization--created a reentry unit, and has
    received a legislative mandate to report a
    reentry plan by Sep 1, 2010 
  • The TDCJ and Parole Board have developed a
    Steering Committee for TPC, chaired by the TDCJ
    Executive Director and the Parole

41
Texas
  • Vision statement in development
  • Sub-committees formed to focus on 
  • Assessment issues
  • Case planning
  • Programming
  • Transition and Release
  • Community Supervision
  • Data/information/evaluation issues

42
Wyoming
  • Has established a state-wide policy team and a
    working steering team
  • Subcommittees have been organized around topics
    to
  • Identify desired outcomes
  • Assess current status
  • Identify problems
  • Make recommendations

43
Wyoming focus of work groups
  • Information and data
  • Performance measurement
  • Information sharing
  • Assessment, case management and programming
  • Transition and release
  • Community partners, and
  • Supervision

44
  • Work with these new states will benefit from
  • A vibrant reentry movement
  • Public safety clearly understood as the core
    goal
  • Collaboration and involvement of non-correctional
    stakeholders clearly understood and embraced
  • Risk reduction and recidivism reduction sought as
    outcomes

45

Work with these new states will benefit from
  • Sentencingcourts coming to the reentry table
  • State-level policy collaboration becoming the
    norm
  • Risk/Needs assessments implemented at admission
  • Case plan development with targeted interventions

46
  • This round will benefit from
  • More tools available
  • More experience available
  • The inclusion of specific performance measurement
    technical assistanceUrban Institute
  • Round One Sites have agreed to serve as resources

47
TPC Performance Measurement Along Three Dimensions
  • System Change
  • Use of assessment
  • Provision of case management
  • Targeted interventions
  • Collaboration
  • Reentry Indicators
  • Employment
  • Housing
  • Substance abuse treatment/desistance
  • Mental and physical health
  • Public Safety
  • Successful completion of supervision
  • Re-arrest, reconviction, readmission to prison

48
Performance measurement challenges in TPC states
  • Incorporating TPC into existing performance
    measurement
  • Getting consistency in goals over time
  • Measurement in system vs. program performance
  • Moving from performance measurement to
    performance management

49
  • Contacts Information
  • Kermit Humphries, Program Specialist,
  • National Institute of Corrections
  • khumphries_at_bop.gov 202-514-0118
    www.nicic.org/tpci
  • Peggy Burke, Principal
  • Center for Effective Public Policy
  • pburke_at_cepp.com 301-589-9383
    www.cepp.com
  • Jesse Jannetta, Research Associate
  • The Urban Institute
  • JJannetta_at_urban.org 202-261-5593
    www.urban.org

50
Download Documents
  • TPC Handbook
  • http//nicic.org/Downloads/PDF/Library/022669.pdf
  • SVORI Handbook
  • http//www.cepp.com/documents/CEPP20SVORI_final.p
    df

51
For copies of this presentation
  • http//www.prisontransition.com/new.htm
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