Community Transition Center: A Collaborative Approach to Offender Reentry

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Transcription:

Community Transition Center: A Collaborative Approach to Offender Reentry Presented by: KARNA LAU MPA, Division Chief, San Diego County Probation Department JESSICA FOY, MS, Senior Probation Officer, San Diego County Probation Department PERLA ARROYO-MORALES, LMFT, Program Manager, Optum Moderated by: GONZALO MENDEZ, MS, Division Chief, San Diego County Probation Department

Objectives 1. Provide overview of San Diego s response to California s Criminal Justice Realignment 2. Explain the development and implementation of the Community Transition Center (CTC) 3. Discuss how a collaborative approach impacts positive outcomes for the justice involved population 4. Summarize collaboration with treatment partners to improve outcomes

Realignment Goals for San Diego County Goal #1: Efficiently Use Jail Capacity Goal #2: Incorporate Reentry Principles Into In Custody Programming Goal #3: Incorporate Evidence-Based Practices (EBPs)

3 New Types of Offenders Now Housed or Supervised Locally Probation Formal Probation Supervised by Probation Department 1170(h) Offenders (Mandatory Supervision or MS) Full & Split Sentences Mandatory Supervision by Probation This IS a prison sentence Post Release Community Supervision (PRCS) Released from State Prison and Supervised by Probation Revocations in County Jail

The Balanced Approach Behavior Management (Supervision Strategy) Driven by Court Order 4 th Waiver Searches Drug Testing Compliance checks Behavior Shaping (Treatment Plan) Dynamic Case Plans driven by assessment Use of Incentives and Sanctions Quality Contacts Motivational Interviewing

Assessment Initial and on-going Different types of assessments: criminal risk/need, clinical Level of Care Formal and informal assessment Sharing information Coordinate the delivery of services

Linking Match the services to the targeted need. What services are available? How much will it cost? Does the offender have health insurance? Help the offender make the initial contact. Follow up after a referral is made (i.e. Effective use of Approval or Disapproval, incentivize or sanction)

Monitor Case Plan Goals Monitor progress towards case plan goals Maintain on-going contact with the offender Detect non-compliance Incentivize or sanction offender non-compliance and progress Follow the swift and certain principle Seamless relationships MDT Look for and recognize small changes

The Community CTC in the Transition News Center in the News

Community Transition Center (CTC)

CTC Statistics January 2013-June 2017 8,690 offenders screened and linked to services 47% Utilized on-site short-term transitional housing Release Types: 39% Returned Home 19% Residential AOD treatment 7% Absconded 6% Funded Transitional Housing 2% Returned to Custody 8% Of offenders reporting from state prison tested positive for illegal substances Over 850 Offenders were diverted to the CTC in lieu of jail: a savings of approximately 6,000 jail bed days 1% Mental Health housing

CTC Picks up from all CDCR Institutions Operated by Lighthouse/HCS INC. Goal: efficiently & effectively transport all offenders throughout the State & within County Transportation services for offenders from 33 Prisons, 38 CDCR State Fire Camps, 6 San Diego County jails and 5 San Diego Probation Offices to CTC and destination after initial check in 7 days a week, 365 days a year

Engagement Process

CTC Team Sworn Probation Officers Behavioral Health Services Team Treatment Staff Medical Case Manager Medi-Cal Application Assistor

Role of the Probation Officers 12 sworn probation officers on site 365 days a year Pre-release screening COMPAS criminogenic needs assessment Lead daily Multi-Disciplinary Team (MDT) meetings Case plan development Daily check-ins with offenders staying at the CTC Linking and coordinating with case managing probation officer

COMPAS Case Plan and Community Resource Directory Web-based application that allows POs to link their offenders to appropriate services in the community. Allows for tracking, analysis and contributes to the safety of staff and offenders. Addresses criminogenic needs Linked to the COMPAS Case Plan Facilitates referral process Allows providers to provide weekly updates

Behavioral Health Services Team

Collaboration is the Key HHSA Probation Law Enforcement Partners Individual Community Partners Court District Attorney Public Defender

Integration of Silos Mental & Medical Health Alcohol & Drug Justice Community Transition Center

Domains covered Screening Screening Domains

Mental Health & Physical Health Services Licensed MH clinician Pre-release planning Link to Services Urgent and emergent services MH providers Advocacy Coordination Medical Case Manager Pre-release planning Link to Services Community Health Centers On-Site weekly Mobile Clinic Medi-Cal application assistors Advocacy Coordination

Short-Term Intensive Case Management CTC officers and BHST clinicians daily check-in Coordination Collaboration Advocacy Continuum of Care Supervising Probation Officer Behavioral Health Treatment Programs Other needs

Multi-Disciplinary Team Meetings Behavioral Health needs Criminogenic needs Linkage to services Readiness for treatment Case Plan Public Safety

Lighthouse Recovery/CTC Support Staff Client centered Shift the culture Peer driven Follow a therapeutic model Goal : not just getting out of prison but getting the prison out

Shared Goals Strength based Treating the person as a whole Resilience Recovery Motivational Interviewing Client centered Stages of change Community safety

Increase likelihood to accept services. Support basic needs. Provide structure to normalize daily activities. Provide groups. Provide peer support. Provide empathy to drive responsibility and accountability. Partnership and collaboration. Why it Works

What have we learned about this population? Appropriate resources and care will lead to resiliency Revolving door Struggle to break the cycle They can recover

Our Commitment Public Safety Collaboration Continuity of care Coordination Consultation Communication Ongoing Assessments Continuous improvement

Summary Agents of Change Strong collaboration and communication Ongoing assessments Continuous improvement Public Safety

Lessons from the field

Advocacy Know what offenders can do and what they need help with Help the offender assert him/herself and learn to advocate for him/herself Develop an exit plan for after supervision ends Identify program areas that need advocacy for the benefit of all offenders Do the right thing

Resources and Contact Information San Diego County Community Corrections Partnership http://www.sdcounty.ca.gov/probation/ccp.html California State Association of Counties Smart Justice Videos Highlight AB 109 Best Practices http://www.csac.counties.org/ http://www.counties.org/post/smart-justice-san-diego-county Presenters: Karna Lau: Karna.Lau@sdcounty.ca.com Jessica Foy: Jessica.Foy@sdcounty.ca.gov Perla Arroyo-Morales: Perla.Arroyo@sdcounty.ca.gov Gonzalo Mendez: Gonzalo.Mendez@sdcounty.ca.gov

Questions? Thank You!