April 2009 e-newsletter


Consensus Project

 
Consensus Project Newsletter " April 2009  

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Spotlight on JMHCP: Denver, Colorado

Each month the Justice Center spotlights collaborative criminal justice/mental health initiatives that have received funding from the Bureau of Justice Assistance's Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Program (JMHCP).  Center staff ask the practitioners in these programs to discuss some successes and challenges they have encountered in the planning and implementation process. This month's profile is from the Support Advancement and Opportunity Renewal (SOAR) Project, a 2008 JMHCP Implementation and Expansion Grantee from Denver, Colorado.


Program Summary

The Support Advancement Opportunity and Renewal (SOAR) Project is run by the Denver Juvenile and Family Justice Treatment Accountability for Safer Communities (DJFJ TASC).  It focuses on female juvenile offenders with substance and co-occurring mental health issues who have had difficulty engaging in traditional mental health and substance abuse services, such as outpatient programs and residential treatment facilities. SOAR uses evidence-based interventions along with intensive outreach to involve and retain girls who have traditionally resisted treatment.

How did your jurisdiction realize that there was a need to respond to the prevalence of individuals with mental illnesses in the criminal justice system?  

More than 50 percent of girls sentenced to Denver Juvenile Probation are placed out of the home due to noncompliance issues, such as running away, family conflicts, truancy, and gang involvement.  These also struggle with the transition back to their old environment from out-of-home placements.  Given that up to 90 percent of girls involved in the juvenile justice system have been exposed to significant trauma, program planners thought that an evidence-based approach for dealing with substance abuse and trauma could decrease rates of out-of-home placement while reducing substance use and criminal recidivism.

How did your initiative capitalize on pre-existing relationships or partnerships in the jurisdiction, or build new ones? 

SOAR was built on a strong foundation of partnerships among the Denver Juvenile Probation Department, Denver Juvenile Court, Denver Police Department, Kempe Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Child Abuse and Neglect, and the Denver Department of Human Services.  The stakeholders from these various agencies had the common interest of addressing mental health and substance abuse issues for court-involved youth and their families, and this common goal helped form important working relationships.

How did you identify your program's target population?  

The initiative identified its target population by assessing each youth's level of probation supervision; previous behavior in the home, at school, and in treatment settings; and substance abuse and metal health issues.

What has been your biggest challenge and how are you addressing it? 

The philosophy of the juvenile probation officers is to focus on the youth's charge and risk, while the approach of the program staff, providers, and case managers is to focus on each girl's mental health and substance abuse needs. These two different approaches to assessing the youth is the biggest challenge to collaboration.

Provide an example of one of your successes

An illustration of our success involves one of the first girls who participated in the SOAR program. This client is 17 years old and has a one year old daughter. She has a history of drug use, including cocaine, opiates and THC, and is a survivor of a violent domestic relationship. She has engaged in a variety of services at DJFJ TASC, including a group for trauma survivors, an art therapy group, one-on-one therapy and Functional Family Therapy (FFT). Over time, we have seen her improve her ability to accept consequences, verbalize her needs, and begin creating a better life for her daughter.

We see this success as an outcome of collaboration among the program staff working with this client, including her FFT therapist, case manager, individual therapist, and group facilitators. The different stakeholders in mental health and juvenile justice were able to agree on consistent boundaries and consequences and also the need for providing her with incentives and support. She has successfully completed the majority of her treatment goals and has remained clean of all substances except for one relapse in March. Because of the support of staff and the client's willingness to ask for help, she overcame this relapse and has returned to a drug-free life.

What steps have you taken or are planning to take to sustain your initiative?

We are performing a process- and outcome-based evaluation. Assuming the project has lowered recidivism rates, we plan to use the data to help get support for sustaining the initiative. We are also currently working with the chief probation officer to institutionalize SOAR within the juvenile female offender program. Finally, there are some local and state funding opportunities that could be leveraged to enhance or expand the program.


Contact Information

Lilas Rajaee-Moore
Lilas.rajaee-moore@judicial.state.co.us
720-913-4248


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APAI Focuses Attention on Supervisees with Mental Illness
at Annual Training Conference

Members of the Association of Paroling Authorities International (APAI) heard from national experts last week about evidence-based supervision and treatment principles to improve outcomes for people with mental illnesses on probation and parole.  The conference, held April 19-22 in Newport, Rhode Island, featured a plenary presentation by the CSG Justice Center's Dr. Fred Osher, director of health systems and services policy, and Dr. Jennifer Skeem, associate professor at the University of California, Irvine.  Skeem and Osher, with support from the National Institute of Corrections, presented research findings on the extent and nature of the problem; strategies to reduce recidivism and improve clinical outcomes; and the implications of these findings on policy and practice at the system, agency, and practitioner levels. 

To download a copy of the presentation, click here.

 

The presentation follows the Justice Center's recent release of Improving Outcomes for People with Mental Illnesses under Community Corrections Supervision: A Guide to Research-Informed Policy and Practice, which reviews the body of recent research on community corrections supervision for people with mental illnesses and translates the findings to help officials develop effective interventions. The guide was supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the National Institute of Corrections, U.S. Department of Justice.

Click here to download the guide for free.

 

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Reminder - Webinar: Improving the Mental Health Court Response to Victims

This webinar, scheduled during National Crime Victims' Rights Week, will explore why the rights due to victims in traditional criminal court proceedings are not always made available to individuals who are victimized by people accepted into mental health courts.  Speakers will suggest practical solutions for improving victims' rights policies, and will highlight recommendations from the Justice Center publication, Guide to the Role of Crime Victims in Mental Health Courts developed with support from the Office for Victims of Crime. Panelists will outline strategies for involving victims at various points in the mental health court process without compromising adherence to medical privacy mandates and principles. Discussion will also focus on working with family members who have been victimized by mental health court participants, and at the close of the webinar there will be an opportunity for Q&A with panelists.

Carol Dorris, Senior Staff Attorney, Public Policy
National Center for Victims of Crime

Tim Murray, Executive Director
Pretrial Justice Institute

Hope Glassberg, Policy Analyst
Council of State Governments Justice Center

April 30, 2009
2:00-3:00 p.m., Eastern Time

To register, please follow the link listed below:

https://csg.webex.com/csg/onstage/g.php?t=a&d=962524337

*The event will have a limited number of attendees, so if there are multiple participants in one location, we recommend registering as one attendee and participating in the webinar together in an office or conference room.

For inquiries about this webinar, please contact:
Hope Glassberg

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Announcements


  • Save the date: 2nd Annual Community Voices Freedom's Voice Conference, Strengthening Familes During Incarceration and Homecoming, taking place from April 30 - May 1 in Atlanta, GA. Please click here to see the event invitation. 
  • PBS FRONTLINE's, "The Released," is a documentary that looks at the lives of the seriously mentally ill who are released from prison, and their struggles to find care and support in the communities that help them stay out of prison and integrate into society.  This program is airing on Tuesday, April 28 at 9:00 P.M. on PBS.  Please click here to watch the trailer and read the full press release.
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Criminal Justice and Mental Health in the News

Articles from newspapers around the country covering issues at the intersection of mental health and criminal justice can be found on the Criminal Justice/Mental Health InfoNet website. Some recent headlines from the Consensus Project homepage are posted below.

Bastrop Daily Enterprise (LA) - Officers learn crisis intervention
4/16/09 - "Officers from Morehouse Parish and West Carroll Parish are taking part in a week-long session of Crisis Intervention Training."

The Stanly News and Press (NC) - Officers earn CIT designation
4/14/09 - "Five members of law enforcement from Albemarle Police Department and Stanly County Sheriff's Office were among those earning Crisis Intervention Team designation at a special graduation ceremony April 10."

Herald Palladium (MI) - Mental health court opens
4/11/09 - "A new court recently began addressing the problems of mentally ill people who repeatedly come into contact with the criminal justice system. Six people are now being supervised and getting services through the Berrien County Mental Health Court, set up as a pilot program with a $160,780 state grant. Berrien Trial Court Chief Judge Alfred Butzbaugh said the voluntary program has a capacity of 15 cases."

CantonRep.com (OH) - Courts set up alternate program for patients with mental-health concerns
4/10/09 - "Help rather than jail time could be the answer for some defendants in Municipal Court. The court is working with the Stark County Mental Health and Recovery Services Board to offer mental-health treatment to certain mentally ill and emotionally disturbed people as an alternative to jail."

MLive.com (MI) - Allegan County seeks grant to fund mental-health court
4/10/09 - "The Allegan County Board of Commissioners took the first step Thursday toward creating a mental-health court. The board applied for a $39,774 federal grant for the court, being called the 'Problem Solving Court'.''

The Democrat and Chronicle (NY) - Mental health court knows the value of tough love
4/9/09 - "Like the county's Veterans and Drug Treatment courts, Mental Health Court offers offenders the chance for a reduced sentence in exchange for addressing a problem."

Helena Independent Record (MT) - Senate panel moves forward with mental health measures
4/7/09 - "A Senate panel Monday defiantly approved three bills to create new programs helping mentally ill people in crisis, refusing to accept suggestions that they can't be afforded right now."

Morning Sentinel (ME) - Legislators set to tackle issue of training for first responders during times of mental stress
4/6/09 - "A family's fear for their mentally ill son prompted Rep. Jeff McCabe to submit a bill establishing a statewide training protocol for first responders who try to help people experiencing a mental-health crisis."

Miami Herald (FL) -  Early intervention works for mentally ill 
4/4/09 - "To keep just 1,700 of these people locked up, as Florida currently does, costs $250 million each year. When they are released from prison, as inevitably all of them are, their mental-health conditions have worsened. There is a better way. Instead of warehousing these people in prisons, the state can diagnose and treat their illnesses. It can use supportive diversion programs in community-based facilities to put them on a path of recovery."


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Please send them to cp_editors@consensusproject.org.

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