Title: Michigan Department of Corrections
1Michigan Department of Corrections
- Updated Prison Bed Space Projections
- Impact from Probation, Community Corrections,
Parole and the MPRI - Presentation to the Senate Appropriations
Subcommittee on Corrections - May 12, 2009
2Projection Model Methodology
- Projections issued in 2005 were 99.6 accurate
- Only 205 prisoners higher than actual
- Projections issued in 2006 were 96.9 accurate
- 1,540 prisoners lower than actual due to the
criminal justice system response to highly
publicized crimes in February 2006 - Projections issued in 2007 were 95.0 accurate
- 2,625 prisoners higher than actual due to
record paroles, 33 fewer parole failures, and
reduced prison admissions - Projections issued in 2008 were 94.7 accurate
- 2,708 prisoners higher than actual Past-ERD
Reduction Strategy produced 3rd highest number of
paroles, fewer parole failures, and less than
expected prison admissions
3Actual Population versus Net Operating Capacity
4Evidenced Based Practices Reducing Crime by
Focusing on What Works
- Studies show there is little direct relationship
between crime and incarceration and that the cost
benefit of imprisonment is not the best way to
reduce crime. - Return to prison rates for former prisoners who
serve one, two, three, four or five years in
prison are nearly the same. - The rising cost of the corrections budget is not
driven by increases in crime, it is driven by the
sheer size of the prison system. - Dollar for dollar, investments in effective
police practices reduce crime more than
imprisonment. - Employment is a critical dimension of successful
offender rehabilitation and is associated with
lower rates of re-offending higher wages are
associated with lower rates of criminal activity. -
- Educational and training programs that address
fundamental abilities and teach skills directly
applicable to the job market contribute to
successful reintegration of offenders into
society and reduce recidivism.
5Evidence Based PracticesMichigan Prisoner
ReEntry Initiative
- Implemented statewide in FY 2008 with expansion
to up-to-scale possible in FY2009 - Focus on MPRI has provided improved resources to
Parole Board including better training and more
sophisticated assessment instruments - Annual parole revocations are down by 42 since
record high year of 2002, despite a 40 increase
in size of parole population - Successful MPRI process mitigates and controls
risk - raises Parole Board confidence in parole
plans and outcomes, enabling higher parole
approval rates across the board - Improved parole guidelines are being developed as
a way to sustain and expand the impact of these
improvements
6Projection AssumptionsSuccessful Approaches to
Controlling Prison Growth
- Front End Impacts on Prison Growth
- Comprehensive Planning through the Community
Corrections Act continues to keep prison
admission rate lower than other states - Graduated sanctions and services for probationers
respond to probationer risk and need less than
7 fail and go to prison - Residential substance abuse treatment programs
are effective - Efforts to Affect Length of Stay, Releases and
Returns - MPRI statewide expansion includes every county in
the state - Improved Parole Board risk and need assessment
strategies - Focus on special populations Mentally Ill,
Youthful Offenders, SAI, Female Offenders - Continue Aggressive Review of Past ERD Prisoner
Population - Cross System Efforts Driven by MPRI Focus
- More sophisticated risk and need assessment
approaches - Offender based accountability plans
- Collaborative Case Management approaches
- Focus on employment as primary offender need
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9Recent TrendsThrough April 30, 2009
- Current actual population is within 926 of the
projection through April (98.0 accurate). - Male population is 961 higher than the forecast,
while female population is 35 lower than the
forecast. - In terms of bed space, actual net operating
capacity at the end of April was slightly higher
than forecast due primarily to the opening of the
Maxey Facility and the beds added at Macomb
Correctional Facility for male mental health
treatment. - All trends in the key corrections data indicators
continue to point to an accelerating prison
population reduction over the coming months. - The Council of State Governments Justice
Reinvestment Work Group Recommendations,
originally expected to take effect by April 1,
2009, have not yet been taken up by the
Legislature. - The expansion of the Parole Board from 10 to 15
members has been accomplished and increased
numbers of reviews will result in additional
paroles.
10Front End Impact Felony court dispositions have
declined in 2008 after 8 consecutive years of
growth
11Front End Impact Prison intake decreased due to
reduced dispositions, and improved community
corrections and probation practices lowest
since 2001
12Impact on Length of Stay Parole approval rate
reached highest level since 1993 due to MPRI and
Parole Board efforts to improve risk need
assessment
13Impact on Releases The number of moves to parole
in 2008 was the 3rd highest in history due to
MPRI and improvements by the Parole Board
14Impact on Releases Max outs have steadily
declined due to the MPRI after a decade of annual
increases
15Impact on Returns Parole violator new sentence
admissions to prison have been stable for 3 years
- despite about 3,000 more offenders on parole-
due to MPRI and improved parole supervision
approaches
16Impact on Returns Parole violator technical
returns to prison decreased to the lowest number
since 1992 - despite a record high parole
population due to MPRI and improved parole
supervision approaches
17The Council of State Governments /Justice
Reinvestment Work GroupData-Informed, Policy
Driven Recommendations
- Recommendations that Affect Prison Admissions
- Probationers with high risk and need factors have
high rearrest rates and need intensive
supervision, health services, education and other
supports. - The Justice Reinvestment Work Group recommends
- Amend the Community Corrections Act (CCA) to
eliminate the restriction to only allow targeting
of non-assaultive offenders and to require the
use of validated risk and need assessment - Target High Risk probationers under the CCA and
measure impact of evidence based practices on
reducing rearrest. - Expand graduated sanctions and services for
probationers including the use of short jail
stays as sanctions and, in the service area,
improved approaches for employment - Demonstrate the quality of the programs funded
under the CCA
18The Council of State Governments /Justice
Reinvestment Work GroupData-Informed, Policy
Driven Recommendations
- Recommendations that Affect Length of Stay
- 2007 prison releases to parole served an average
127 of their court-imposed minimum sentence. - The Justice Reinvestment Work Group recommends
- Legislation to require that the Parole Board
release prisoners after serving between 100-120
of their court-imposed minimum sentence with
limited exceptions - Legislation to require that the Parole Board
revoke parole for no more than 9 months for first
time revocations related to condition violations - Legislation to require that the Parole Board,
with only few exceptions, provide at least 9
months of parole supervision for prisoners who
otherwise would have served their entire maximum
sentence (no max outs, with few exceptions)
19New Prison Population Projections
- Expand Front End Impacts on Prison Growth under
the Community Corrections Act - Amend the Community Corrections Act (CCA) and
increase diversions - Implement demonstrations of impact when targeting
higher risk probationers and measure impact of
evidence based practices - Use COMPAS for risk and need assessments of
probationers and improve case planning and case
management efforts - Expand graduated sanctions and services for
probationers including short stays in jail when
possible - Improve the use of the County Jail Reimbursement
Program for diversions - Reduce Length of Stay, Increase Releases and
Reduce Returns to Prison under the MPRI - Take MPRI up-to-scale in FY 2009 NO EARLY
RELEASES - Expand efforts to work with mentally ill
prisoners - Expand Review of Past ERD Prisoner Population by
adding 5 new parole board members and increase
number of paroles - Implement CSG work group recommendations for
parole reforms immediately and decrease length of
stay of prisoners
20New Bed Space ProjectionsPast ERD Prisoner
Reduction Strategy
- Experience over the past five years with MPRI and
the capability to focus on special populations
statewide allow for greater attention to
prisoners who have served time beyond their
Earliest Release Date (ERD) - Number of prisoners past their ERD was over
17,000 in 2003 - From 2003 to 2008, number was slowly reduced to
15,000 - Beginning in June 2008 with statewide presence of
MPRI and improved parole board resources, number
has reduced to approximately 12,000 allowing
several prison closings in 2009 - Focus in 2009 is to further reduce past ERD
population by another several thousand - In addition, prison admission reduction efforts
will be expanded
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22New Bed Space ProjectionsImpact and Reinvestments
- Reduced Need for Prisons
- Trends in community efforts to keep prison
admissions low - Increased paroles for past ERD prisoners NO
EARLY RELEASES - Reduced technical violations and parolee failures
- Reassessment of classification approaches for
prisoners will allow re-configuration of prison
system - As prison space becomes available, prison
closings will be assessed - Reinvestments on the Front End
- Expand use of sophisticated risk and need
assessment approaches - Improved offender based accountability plans
- Improved comprehensive planning under PA 511
- Improved Collaborative Case Management approaches
- Focus on offender employment using Stimulus funds
- Reinvestments on the Back End
- 20M for MPRI and Parole Supervision expansion in
FY 2009 - 24.2M more for parole services in FY 2010
- 22.7M more for MPRI in FY 2010
- Improvements in prisoner education academic
training