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Value of CJPA

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Title: Value of CJPA


1

2
CJPA Presenters
  • Karen Dalton, DrPH, CJM
  • Director, Offender Services Bureau
  • Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department
  • ksdalton_at_lasd.org
  • M.J. Robb, MPA
  • Director, Support Services
  • Contra Costa County Sheriffs Office
  • mrobb_at_so.cccounty.us

3
CJPA Presenters
  • Cammie Noah, MPA
  • Inmate Programs and Services Manager
  • Sonoma County Sheriffs Office
  • cnoah_at_sonoma-county.org

4
CJPA California Jail Programs Association
  • Goal at inception today, 27 years later,
    remains the same
  • Professionals united to create a voice for inmate
    programs
  • Share best practices
  • Strength in numbers
  • Reduce recidivism depopulate jails
  • Provide interventions for community reintegration

5
History of CJPA
  • Organized in 1984
  • Filed with State of California to obtain 501c3
  • status
  • Created CJPA constitution and by-laws
  • Established election of officers
  • Implemented quarterly meeting structure
  • Currently 32 counties represented a few hundred
    members
  • www.cjpa.net

6
CJPA Constitution
  • To provide humane and decent conditions
    essential to and compatible with the management
    of safe and secure jail facilities
  • Assure adherence to jail oversight standards
  • Recognizes and supports the impact programming
    can have on reducing inmates tensions and stress
  • Concurrently provide inmates constructive options
    to make life changes

7
Inmate Education Plan
  • Provide for academic education and/or vocational
    training programs for pretrial and sentenced
    inmates
  • California Penal Code, Sections 6030 4018.5
  • Title 15, Article 6 Minimum Standards for Adult
    Local Detention Facilities
  • California Education Code

8
Title 15, Article 6
  • Requires facilities provide
  • Inmate education
  • Visiting
  • Correspondence
  • Library service
  • Recreational reading
  • Voting
  • Religious observances (RLUIPA)

9
Organization Members
  • Inmate Programs, Support Services, Operations,
    Administrative Services (directors, managers,
    coordinators, staff, and command staff)
  • Recreational professionals
  • Detention facility command and line staff
  • Religious providers
  • Non-profit and CBO partners
  • Industry sponsors

10
Role CJPA Plays to Support Programs
  • Centralized, comprehensive resource for all
    counties
  • CJPA designate at quarterly Corrections Standards
    Authority meetings
  • In 2011, CJPA member appointed on Title 15
    Regulations Revisions Committee panel
  • Tailors trainings to address all levels of
    personnel working in jail programs, services, and
    administration

11
Benefits to Members
  • Professional social structure
  • Venues and avenues to exchange ideas
  • Share/promote best practices
  • Training by leading industry professionals
  • Opportunities to educate legislators, media, and
    the public about the positive interventions
    implemented throughout the State

12
Educational Involvement
13
Shared Resources
  • Eliminates reinventing the wheel
  • Easily replication of successful programs
  • Quick and easy List Serve
  • On-site access to jail programs statewide via
    quarterly meeting participation
  • Promote successful programming

14
AAT
15
Vermiculture Program
16
Training and Development
  • Tailored to various areas of expertise
  • State regulations and standards presentation
    from CDCR at annual CJPA conference
  • National, state, and local experts participate in
    and present at quarterly meetings
  • Concise delivery of information regarding
    goods/services from potential vendors

17
Previous Training Topics
  • Legal Issues Religious Practices Carrie Hill,
    ESQ (Monterey County)
  • Education Based Incarceration Evaluating Inmate
    Programs (Los Angeles County)
  • Manalive, Violence Intervention and Prevention
    Training Hamish Sinclair (Santa Cruz County)
  • Bridging the Gap Between Programs and Custody
    Staff (San Bernardino County)

18
More Training Topics
  • Women in the Criminal Justice System Stephanie
    Covington, Ph.D. (Tulare County)
  • Reducing Recidivism Principles of Effective
    Intervention Ed Latessa, Ph.D. (LA County)
  • Justice Reform, Dreams of the Monster Factory
    Sunny Schwartz, ESQ (Alameda County)
  • Gender Responsiveness Promising Jail Based
    Programs for Women Offenders Barbara Bloom,
    Ph.D. (Sonoma County)

19
Pew Center on the States
  •  April 2011 report on recidivism and value of
    behavioral interventions
  • Risk/needs assessments
  • Case management
  • Transition planning/reentry strategy
  • Swift probation sanctions for violations
  • Research or evidenced-based programs
  • Creating incentives

20
Successful Programming
21
Overcoming Challenges
  • Budget/economic issues and their fiscal impact on
    programs and services
  • Generate and maximize revenue streams
  • Establishing jail industry programs
  • Inmate work crews
  • Developing and/or growing volunteer programs to
    support paid program instructors

22
Overcoming Challenges
  • Grant proposals in collaboration with justice and
    community partners
  • Consider increasing contracted like services,
    such as legal research
  • Utilizing existing personnel for organizational
    cross training
  • Engage community
  • Diminishing budgets

23
PATHS Mental Health Program
24
Community Support
25
INMATE WELFARE FUND INMATE SERVICES PROGRAMS
26
Inmate Welfare Fund
  • The IWF is regulated by
  • CA Penal Code Sections 4025 and 4026
  • Commissary
  • Inmate Vocational Programs
  • Guidelines for use of revenue from these sources

27
Inmate Welfare Fund
  • All services/programs are funded through the
    INMATE WELFARE FUND (IWF)
  • IWF is revenue collected from various sources
  • Inmate telephone calls
  • Commissions from commissary sales
  • Sales of inmate industries products
  • Misc. revenue Court reimbursements for pro-per
    phone calls recycling
  • NO TAX DOLLARS ARE USED!

28
Program Funding Contra Costa County, CA
  • FY 2009-10 IWF Budget - 1.7 million
  • FY 2010-11 IWF Budget - 1.8 million
  • Based on an ADP of 1,600
  • IWF Program Services is a division of the
    Custody Services Bureau and all program
    staff/volunteers work in collaboration with
    custody staff

29
Inmate Services
  • In California, there are two legally mandated
    services
  • Legal services for pro-per inmates
  • Religious services
  • All other services Discretionary

30
  • WHAT PROGRAMS AND SERVICES
  • DOES THE
  • INMATE WELFARE FUND
  • PAY FOR?

31
Inmate Services
  • Legal Research (Mandated)
  • Legal Research Associates (LRA)
  • Provides unlimited criminal, not civil, legal
    assistance to court-appointed, pro-per inmates
    limited to general population
  • No civil issues unless mandated by law Habeas
    Corpus, Civil Rights - Confinement

32
Inmate Services
  • Request form in modules
  • Inmate completes gives to deputy deputy submits
    to CAS
  • Documents returned within 72 hours (pro-per
    policy)
  • Responsiveness and access to information reduces
    inmate stress

33
Chaplain Services (Mandated)
  • Counseling
  • Worship services
  • Bible studies
  • Marriage information for inmates
  • Approve religious diets
  • Provide requested reading materials
  • All services are INMATE DRIVEN

34
Educational Classes (Discretionary)
  • Contra Costa County Office of Education
  • GED and high school diploma prep
  • Adult basic education
  • DEUCE drug and alcohol education
  • Computer applications
  • Parenting
  • ESL English as a Second Language
  • Literacy (collaboration with libraries)
  • Transitional services

35
GED
36
Vocational Classes (Discretionary)
  • Woodshop
  • Inmate industries
  • Engraving, Signage (including Braille),
    Vinyl, and Vehicle Decaling
  • Picture framing
  • Landscaping

37
Agency Services (Discretionary)
  • AA and NA
  • Domestic Violence
  • Veteran Affairs
  • SSI/Homeless Cooperative
  • Anger Management
  • Child Protective Services
  • Child Support Services
  • UC Davis Immigration Law Clinic
  • Women of Worth (WOW)

38
Inmate Services
  • Library Services
  • Provide inmates information
  • Community programs
  • Published information from phone book
  • Limited copies of non-legal information

39
IWF Provides
  • Newspapers
  • TVs
  • Direct TV Services
  • Movie Rentals
  • Equipment Repairs
  • DVD/VCR Players
  • Electric Razors
  • Bus/BART Tickets
  • Sports Equipment
  • Inmate Rewards
  • Soda, Candy, Popcorn
  • Hair Trimmers
  • Nail Clippers
  • Disinfectant Spray

40
INTERNAL EXTERNAL IMPACTS
41
Buy -In
  • Develop solidify relationships
  • Includes command/line/programs staff and
    volunteer providers
  • Overwhelming support from CA Sheriffs
  • Promote agency transparency invite the
    community inside
  • Provide safety/security training bi-annually to
    all providers

42
Local Reentry
  • Tasked by federal and state governments to assume
    increased responsibility
  • Realignment of state inmates to local level
  • Provide EBP interventions for state prisoners
  • Facilities contracting for state prisoners to
    boost agency revenues

43
Collaboration with CBOs
  • Creating/strengthening programs with clearly
    defined reintegration links
  • In-custody ? Probation ? Community
  • Implement risk assessment tool and apply targeted
    interventions to the high risk-to-reoffend
  • Inmate case management
  • Exit planning

44
Quarterly Training
45
Criminal Justice Planning
  • Apply alternative diversionary programs
  • Initiate day reporting centers or community
    correction service center
  • Develop Education Employment Program
  • Napas outcome is an 85 employment rate
  • Institute an Education Based Incarceration plan

46
State Budget Impacts
  • Fiscal impact on local budgets
  • Collaboration, consensus building, partnerships
    key to success

47
Join CJPA
  • www.cjpa.net
  • 25 annually for non-voting member
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