Legislature(2015 - 2016)HOUSE FINANCE 519

02/18/2015 01:30 PM House FINANCE

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Audio Topic
01:37:56 PM Start
01:39:37 PM 2015 Recidivism Reduction Plan: Cost Effective Solutions to Slow Prison Population Growth & Reduce Recidvism
03:33:04 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Presentation: TELECONFERENCED
2015 Recidivism Reduction Plan by the Recidivism
Workgroup
Co-Chairs: Jeff Jessee, CEO, Alaska Mental
Health Trust Authority & Ron Taylor,
Commissioner, Dept. of Corrections
Members: Valerie Davidson, Commissioner, Dept.
of Health & Social Services, Christine Johnson,
Administrative Director, Alaska Court System &
Brian Butcher, CEO, Alaska Housing Finance
Corporation
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                     February 18, 2015                                                                                          
                         1:37 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:37:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  called the House Finance  Committee meeting                                                                    
to order at 1:37 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Mark Neuman, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Steve Thompson, Co-Chair                                                                                         
Representative Dan Saddler, Vice-Chair                                                                                          
Representative Bryce Edgmon                                                                                                     
Representative Les Gara                                                                                                         
Representative Lynn Gattis                                                                                                      
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
Representative Scott Kawasaki                                                                                                   
Representative Cathy Munoz                                                                                                      
Representative Lance Pruitt                                                                                                     
Representative Tammie Wilson                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Jeff Jessee,  Chief Executive Officer, Alaska  Mental Health                                                                    
Trust  Authority;  Carmen   Gutierrez,  Consultant,  Justice                                                                    
Improvement Solutions; Nancy  Meade, General Counsel, Alaska                                                                    
Court  System;  Ron   Taylor,  Commissioner,  Department  of                                                                    
Corrections; Valerie  Davidson, Commissioner,  Department of                                                                    
Health and  Social Services; Bryan Butcher,  Chief Executive                                                                    
Officer  and  Executive  Director,  Alaska  Housing  Finance                                                                    
Corporation,  Department  Of  Revenue;  Joe  Thomas,  Deputy                                                                    
Commissioner,    Department   of    Labor   and    Workforce                                                                    
Development;                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2015 RECIDIVISM REDUCTION PLAN:  COST EFFECTIVE SOLUTIONS TO                                                                    
SLOW PRISON POPULATION GROWTH & REDUCE RECIDVISM                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  provided   background  details  about  the                                                                    
recidivism working  group. He explained  that the  group was                                                                    
born  out of  an  idea  that a  set  of  legislators had  to                                                                    
examine ways to reduce  costs associated with inmates within                                                                    
the  Department  of  Corrections (DOC),  the  Department  of                                                                    
Public  Safety  (DPS),  and the  Department  of  Health  and                                                                    
Social Services (DHSS). He spoke  of his positive experience                                                                    
in  bringing the  group together  over the  previous summer.                                                                    
The  presentation   that  would   be  heard   reflected  the                                                                    
recommendations resulting  from the collaborative  effort of                                                                    
the  group. The  focus  of the  recommendations  was how  to                                                                    
reduce  and  maintain  costs within  the  state's  operating                                                                    
budget. He  relayed that  the state's  correction facilities                                                                    
were at 101 percent capacity.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:39:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
^2015  RECIDIVISM REDUCTION  PLAN: COST  EFFECTIVE SOLUTIONS                                                                  
TO SLOW PRISON POPULATION GROWTH & REDUCE RECIDVISM                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:39:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JEFF JESSEE,  CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, ALASKA  MENTAL HEALTH                                                                    
TRUST  AUTHORITY, pointed  out  that  DOC Commissioner,  Ron                                                                    
Taylor,  co-chaired the  recidivism workgroup.  He explained                                                                    
that the purpose  of the group was to look  at what could be                                                                    
done  to  contain  the  state's DOC  budget  over  time.  He                                                                    
introduced  the Power  Point presentation,  "2015 Recidivism                                                                    
Reduction  Plan: Cost  Effective  Solutions  To Slow  Prison                                                                    
Population Growth & Reduce Recidivism."                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee turned to slide 2, "Right on Crime":                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     "We want to  reduce crimes as rapidly  and as seriously                                                                    
     as possible. But  the real cost in doing  this wrong is                                                                    
     broken  families,  destroyed  neighborhoods  and  lives                                                                    
     that  didn't need  to be  stunted." --Grover  Norquist,                                                                    
     San Diego  Pew Public  Safety Conference,  November 19,                                                                    
     2014                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Jessee  highlighted  that  looking  at  recidivism  and                                                                    
minimizing the  amount of  time people  spent in  prison was                                                                    
not some sort of left-winged  agenda. It was about trying to                                                                    
do  things the  right way  in order  to achieve  the desired                                                                    
results. He mentioned  that, based on the  quote from Grover                                                                    
Norquist,  people started  to realize  that the  federal and                                                                    
state  governments  were  spending  significant  amounts  of                                                                    
money  on   correctional  systems  without   correcting  the                                                                    
problem.  The  country   was  still  facing  ever-increasing                                                                    
numbers  of people  in the  correctional systems  with ever-                                                                    
increasing  budgets. Alaska  legislators realized  two years                                                                    
prior that  periodic multi-million dollar  capital projects,                                                                    
prisons with operating costs, were necessary.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Jessee turned  to slide  3,  "HB266 Legislative  Intent                                                                    
Language."                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
    · Goal is to collaboratively reduce recidivism by:                                                                          
        · Gather/analyze data on:                                                                                               
             · substance abuse                                                                                                  
             · mental health                                                                                                    
             · employment                                                                                                       
             · housing services needed                                                                                          
             · current services provided to returning                                                                           
               citizens                                                                                                         
        · Propose effectiveness/efficiency measures                                                                             
        · Develop and implement plan for those who are                                                                          
         released from correctional institutions.                                                                               
     · Use the plan to:                                                                                                         
        · Assist the ADOC, DHSS, DOLWD, AMHTA, AHFC, & ACS                                                                      
          to improve treatment & outcomes for recently                                                                          
          released inmates.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  reported that the  group was charged  to analyze                                                                    
data  on  all  of  the  various issues  having  to  do  with                                                                    
substance  abuse,  mental  health, employment,  and  housing                                                                    
services. The  purpose was to figure  out a way to  turn the                                                                    
curve on recidivism.  The good news was  that state agencies                                                                    
were already  addressing the issues  surrounding recidivism.                                                                    
The  results  of  the  group's  efforts  far  exceeded  past                                                                    
collaboration.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
He  turned the  presentation  over to  Carmen Gutierrez.  He                                                                    
described  her experience  working in  the criminal  justice                                                                    
arena  for twenty  years as  an attorney  and as  the deputy                                                                    
commissioner of  DOC under Commissioner Joseph  Schmidt. She                                                                    
had a tremendous amount of  experience that she brought with                                                                    
her. The  Trust contracted with  her to work with  the group                                                                    
to develop  a plan. He  relayed that the committee  would be                                                                    
hearing  presentations  from  all  of  the  members  of  the                                                                    
workgroup.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CARMEN    GUTIERREZ,    CONSULTANT,   JUSTICE    IMPROVEMENT                                                                    
SOLUTIONS, thanked committee members  for the opportunity to                                                                    
speak on a  subject she felt was important  to all Alaskans;                                                                    
promoting  public  safety.  She  turned to  slide  4,  "AK's                                                                    
Prison Population is the 3rd Fastest Growing in the U.S.":                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
   · Even with GCCC, DOC operates at101% of general                                                                             
     capacity                                                                                                                   
   · GCCC cost $250,000,000 to build                                                                                            
   · GCCC added $50,000,000/year to Alaska budget                                                                               
   · AK's prison population growing 3% per year                                                                                 
   · Prison growth rate exceeds AK population growth rate 4                                                                     
     fold                                                                                                                       
   · Increases while crime rate decreases                                                                                       
   · 32 other states facing budget deficits, have cut the                                                                       
     rate of prison growth & crime rates                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
She  reported that  even with  the opening  of the  recently                                                                    
completed  Goose  Creek  Correctional Facility,  Alaska  was                                                                    
operating  at 101  percent  of its  general  capacity as  of                                                                    
January 2015.  The state spent  $250 million to build  a new                                                                    
prison  that  housed over  1500  inmates.  The cost  of  the                                                                    
prison  added $50  million per  year to  the state's  annual                                                                    
operating budget. She highlighted  that Alaska had the third                                                                    
fastest-growing prison  population in the U.S.  only falling                                                                    
behind  Wyoming   and  Iowa.   The  prison   population  was                                                                    
consistently  growing  in  Alaska  at 3  percent  per  year.                                                                    
Alaska's prison  growth rate exceeded the  population growth                                                                    
rate 4-fold.  It continued to increase  while Alaska's crime                                                                    
rates  decreased.  She  illuminated that  32  other  states,                                                                    
beginning in  2007 with the  nation-wide fiscal  crisis, had                                                                    
to start looking at how  they were running their corrections                                                                    
and criminal  justice systems because  they had  reached the                                                                    
point where  they could  no longer  afford to  continue with                                                                    
the failed  practices of the  past. She pronounced  that the                                                                    
U.S., of  all the countries  in the world,  incarcerated the                                                                    
highest number of people. Every  state had a high recidivism                                                                    
rate. If  asked whether policies  produced a good  value for                                                                    
criminal justice dollars spent,  most legislators would say,                                                                    
"No!" She  summarized that Alaska incarcerated  many people,                                                                    
its prison  population continued to  grow at 3  percent, and                                                                    
former inmates were Alaskans' neighbors.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:45:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez advanced  to slide 5, "Former  Inmates Are Our                                                                    
Neighbors."                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
   · Today ADOC incarcerates > 6300 offenders                                                                                   
   · 95% of inmates are released                                                                                                
   · 377 convicted felons released into AK communities                                                                          
     every month                                                                                                                
   · 63% recidivism rate as of 2011                                                                                             
   · Public safety requires a continued reduction of this                                                                       
     rate                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez relayed  that people in halfway  houses and on                                                                    
electronic  monitoring made  up a  portion of  Alaska's 6300                                                                    
offenders.  Department  of  Corrections  estimated  that  on                                                                    
average  95   percent  of   the  people   incarcerated  were                                                                    
eventually released. In 2014,  Alaska released 377 convicted                                                                    
felons into its  communities every month. She  added that an                                                                    
Alaska Judicial  Council study showed  that since  1980, 255                                                                    
thousand Alaskans had  been convicted of a  crime in Alaska.                                                                    
In  reviewing the  state's population  many people  had been                                                                    
convicted  of crimes,  yet Alaska's  recidivism rate  was 66                                                                    
percent in 2009  [2007] and continued to drop  to 63 percent                                                                    
by 2011. She opined that  Alaskans deserved better and posed                                                                    
the question about what to do.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:46:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez continued  to slide  6,  "Have Alaskans  Been                                                                    
Receiving  Good  Value  For  The  Criminal  Justice  Dollars                                                                    
Spent?"                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
   · In 2007, AJC reported 2 out 3 former offenders return                                                                      
     within the first 3 years of release. The majority,                                                                         
     within 6 months.                                                                                                           
   · This comes at a high price. In FY14, it cost $158 per                                                                      
    day per inmate to incarcerate in a hard-prison bed.                                                                         
   · In 2009, DOC began to implement previously eliminated                                                                      
     reformative programs.                                                                                                      
   · Recidivism declined from a high in 2007 of 66%,                                                                            
     to63.54% in FY 2010 and to 63.19% in FY 2011.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez explained  that the  price to  incarcerate an                                                                    
inmate  was substantially  more than  it would  cost to  put                                                                    
someone  in  a  half-way  house,  have  them  on  electronic                                                                    
monitoring, or have them on supervised probation.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez  reported  that   in  2009  the  commissioner                                                                    
recognized that DOC was not  doing any correcting, thus, not                                                                    
promoting public  safety. A reformative program  began being                                                                    
re-implemented   within  DOC   with  the   support  of   the                                                                    
legislature.  The good  news was  that  the recidivism  rate                                                                    
started  to decrease.  In 2007  the recidivism  rate was  66                                                                    
percent, dropped to  63.5 percent in 2010,  and descended to                                                                    
63.19 percent in 2011. She  was unable to provide numbers in                                                                    
2012  and 2013  because it  reflected a  look-back of  three                                                                    
years.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:48:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   Gutierrez  advanced   to   slide  7,   "Alaska  At   A                                                                    
Crossroads."  She  reviewed  that Alaska  was  operating  at                                                                    
about  100  percent  capacity  with  the  prison  population                                                                    
growing at  about 3 percent  per year. She  wondered whether                                                                    
the state  was planning to  build a new prison,  recommit to                                                                    
incarcerating  out of  state,  or  invest in  cost-effective                                                                    
strategies  that  targeted   the  factors  driving  Alaska's                                                                    
prison population. She believed  that the third option would                                                                    
provide  more  value  for the  dollars  spent  in  promoting                                                                    
better public safety.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:49:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez explained  slide 8, "Do We Wish  To Spend $300                                                                    
Million to Build A New Prison?"                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
   · Or, invest in cost-effective strategies proven to                                                                          
     reduce recidivism, produce better public safety                                                                            
     outcomes & cost less money?                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
   · Should the State choose cost-effective strategies, how                                                                     
     does it determine those strategies?                                                                                        
        · Identify    factors   driving    Alaska's   prison                                                                    
          population growth                                                                                                     
        · Identify who is recidivating & why.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez intimated that the  state would have to decide                                                                    
how  to  identify  cost   effective  strategies  and  better                                                                    
understand the  factors driving the annual  3 percent growth                                                                    
rate  in  the prison  population.  She  remarked that  other                                                                    
states  were   doing  work  with   the  Pew   Public  Safety                                                                    
Performance  Project   (PSPP)  and  the  Council   of  State                                                                    
Governments. Next, she would be talking about the Pew PSPP.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:49:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez  advanced to slide  9, "Invite The  Pew Public                                                                    
Safety Performance Project To Alaska."                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
   · Mission: The PSPP helps states advance fiscally sound,                                                                     
     data-driven sentencing & corrections policies that                                                                         
     protect public safety, hold offenders accountable, and                                                                     
     control corrections costs.                                                                                                 
   · Goal: Help states get a better return on their public                                                                      
     safety dollars.                                                                                                            
   · Strategies:                                                                                                                
        · Research on national trends & on what works.                                                                          
       · Provide FREE technical assistance to state.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez  offered that the  Pew PSPP was  interested in                                                                    
helping   Alaska   deal   with  the   unsustainable   prison                                                                    
population   growth   that   the  state   was   experiencing                                                                    
currently.  The Pew  PSPP  typically brought  in  a team  of                                                                    
about five  data experts  to look  at criminal  justice data                                                                    
from DOC, DPS, and the Alaska  Court System. The goal of the                                                                    
Pew  PSPP  was  to  identify, in  a  systemic  fashion,  the                                                                    
factors  driving  Alaska's  prison  population  growth.  She                                                                    
stressed  that the  project's approach  was  not a  soft-on-                                                                    
crime approach.  She pointed out that  the project's primary                                                                    
goal was to ensure states  received a better return on their                                                                    
investment  of public  safety dollars.  Technical assistance                                                                    
from PSPP  was free. The only  burden on the state  was that                                                                    
departments needed to supply data to the Pew data divers.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez advanced  to slide 10, "Pew Would  Guide AK In                                                                    
A Justice Reinvestment Process."                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
   · Skilled data analysts perform criminal justice                                                                             
     overview                                                                                                                   
   · Examine drivers of AK's prison population growth                                                                           
   · Outline lessons learned from other States                                                                                  
   · Policy Development                                                                                                         
   · Make Final Findings & Recommendations                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez outlined  that the Pew team would  do the data                                                                    
analysis  on  Alaska's   criminal  justice  system,  examine                                                                    
drivers causing  the growth in prison  populations, and then                                                                    
share with  Alaska the lessons  learned in 32  other states.                                                                    
Many states  had very different  systems. That Pew  PSPP had                                                                    
assimilated an  array of evidence-based practices  to attack                                                                    
identified  drivers  and  made policy  recommendations.  She                                                                    
emphasized that  states were not obligated  to implement any                                                                    
of the strategies recommended by Pew.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:52:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez thought it would  be helpful for the committee                                                                    
to hear  what other policy makers  had to say about  the Pew                                                                    
experience in a video.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman recognized  that Representative  Pruitt and                                                                    
Representative Munoz had joined the meeting.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez played  a video  for the  committee entitled,                                                                    
"PEW."                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:57:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NANCY MEADE,  GENERAL COUNSEL,  ALASKA COURT  SYSTEM, joined                                                                    
the presentation  and continued to slide  13, "Known Factors                                                                    
Driving AK's Prison Growth."                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
   1. Increased Number of Pretrial & Unsentenced Inmates                                                                        
   2. Increased % of Non-violent Offenders                                                                                      
   3. Increased Average Length of Stay                                                                                          
   4. Increased Probation Violations                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead  pointed out  that it was  complex to  identify the                                                                    
factors that were causing an  increase in the prison growth.                                                                    
She suggested that  there were a few  conclusions that could                                                                    
be made based  on DOC's data. Slide 13 listed  what the data                                                                    
showed. First,  there were more  people in  Alaska's prisons                                                                    
who  were  pre-trial and  sentenced.  Second,  there was  an                                                                    
increase  in  the  number  of  non-violent  offenders.  Most                                                                    
people  wondered if  filling the  state's  prison beds  with                                                                    
non-violent offenders  who likely did  not pose a  threat to                                                                    
public safety  was the best  use of state  resources. Third,                                                                    
she reported  an increased  length of  stay in  which prison                                                                    
terms  were  getting  longer after  people  were  sentenced.                                                                    
Fourth, there were more probation violations.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead  scrolled  to  slide   14,  "Increased  Number  Of                                                                    
Pretrial and  Unsentenced Inmates."  She posed  the question                                                                    
of why  there was an  increase in people sitting  in prisons                                                                    
pre-trial. The  problem was that  the questions  were fairly                                                                    
complex. The Pew  organization would be able  to help answer                                                                    
such questions.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead  wanted to  discuss  the  Alaska Criminal  Justice                                                                    
Commission,  a  very  high-level,  blue-ribbon  panel  which                                                                    
included judges,  the attorney general,  district attorneys,                                                                    
and   Mr.  Jessee.   She  expounded   that  there   were  18                                                                    
commissioners on the panel. They  had been working since the                                                                    
summer  on  identifying some  of  the  problems Alaska  had,                                                                    
hopefully coming up with solutions,  and trying to implement                                                                    
them.  The commission  was a  three-year commission  with an                                                                    
established  deadline,  and  therefore, not  a  bureaucratic                                                                    
beast.  She  relayed  that  each  year  the  commission  was                                                                    
supposed   to   come   back    to   the   legislature   with                                                                    
recommendations.  She claimed  that  the  questions were  so                                                                    
complex  that  they  were  being   studied  by  one  of  the                                                                    
subgroups of  the Criminal Justice  Commission. There  was a                                                                    
subgroup  called "Pretrial  Practices  and Procedures."  The                                                                    
focus  of  the subgroup  was  to  evaluate the  numbers  and                                                                    
determine a  course of action. They  were evaluating whether                                                                    
the state's  dollars were being  put to good use.  They were                                                                    
trying to  answer such questions  about whether  the results                                                                    
of the  dollars spent  were good  for society;  whether they                                                                    
were helping  to prevent  crimes or  victims of  crimes from                                                                    
suffering additional offenses.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead discussed  a few  obvious  things about  pre-trial                                                                    
inmates.  The  most  obvious  was that  if  someone  was  in                                                                    
custody prior  to their  trial it was  because they  did not                                                                    
make bail. A  person had a constitutional right  to bail and                                                                    
to see  a judicial officer  in order  to set bail  within 24                                                                    
hours of  being arrested.  She reported  that more  and more                                                                    
people  could  not make  their  bail.  The Criminal  Justice                                                                    
Commission  was  specifically   studying  the  current  bail                                                                    
statute which  defined the criteria considered  when setting                                                                    
bail.  For  example,  the  judicial  officer  had  to  weigh                                                                    
whether the person  was going to appear  for their following                                                                    
court appearance  and whether releasing  the person  on bail                                                                    
would threaten the  public safety of victims or  others in a                                                                    
community.  The  bail  statute   provided  for  18  possible                                                                    
conditions  that could  be placed  on a  person released  on                                                                    
bail. The conditions  were determined at a  bail hearing and                                                                    
often  included   a  financial  component,  a   third  party                                                                    
custodian assignment (someone  to keep eyes and  ears on the                                                                    
defendant  at  all  times),  and an  option  to  order  24/7                                                                    
(sobriety testing  twice a  day to ensure  a person  was not                                                                    
returning  to drug  and alcohol  use).  These were  3 of  18                                                                    
possible  conditions a  judge could  impose on  a defendant.                                                                    
The  Criminal Justice  Commission  subgroup  was looking  at                                                                    
what  conditions were  appropriate in  light of  the current                                                                    
knowledge,  whether the  conditions were  based on  evidence                                                                    
that worked.  She added that  an important part of  the bail                                                                    
statute was that in 2010 a  presumption was added that for a                                                                    
large  category of  crimes no  conditions could  protect the                                                                    
public.  In a  bail hearing  the presumption  was that  if a                                                                    
person was  charged with  an unclassified  crime, a  Class A                                                                    
felony,  a   sex  crime,  a   domestic  violence   crime,  a                                                                    
misdemeanor,  a  felony,  or  any  crime  against  a  person                                                                    
(crimes  in 1141)  the presumption  was  that no  conditions                                                                    
could  adequately  protect  the  public.  This  presented  a                                                                    
burden in bail hearings. It  was a rebuttable presumption in                                                                    
which  the defense  could say  in a  particular case  that a                                                                    
specific condition  would protect the public.  She indicated                                                                    
that she  had presented an  outline within which  people had                                                                    
worked  to determine  the  appropriate bail,  if  any, in  a                                                                    
particular case.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead discussed  slide 15,  "Increased  Percent of  Non-                                                                    
Violent  Offenders."  She  explained that  most  non-violent                                                                    
offenders committed Class C felonies,  such as drug offenses                                                                    
rather  than   crimes  against  people.  Class   C  felonies                                                                    
included  drug   offenses  such  as  selling   or  being  in                                                                    
possession of  a controlled  substance, writing  bad checks,                                                                    
or  thefts   of  $750   or  more.   She  suggested   that  a                                                                    
consideration  was whether  to  fill  Alaska's prisons  with                                                                    
non-violent offenders,  who currently made up  64 percent of                                                                    
the prison population, or whether  there was a better way to                                                                    
deal with them.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:04:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez  turned  to  slide  16,  "Public  Opinion  on                                                                    
Jailing  Non-violent Offenders  in  Expensive Prison  Beds."                                                                    
She spoke  of the Pew  PSPP conducting a  nation-wide public                                                                    
polling  that  asked  citizens  their  opinion  about  using                                                                    
expensive  prison   beds  for  non-violent   offenders.  Pew                                                                    
retained Public  Opinion Strategies  and The  Mellman Group,                                                                    
entities of which were the gold standard of public polling.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez scrolled  to  slide  17, "Reformation  Trumps                                                                    
Incarceration For  Non-Violent Offenders." She  relayed that                                                                    
pollsters  found that  the overwhelming  public opinion  was                                                                    
that  reformation  trumped   incarceration  for  non-violent                                                                    
offenders.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez advanced  to  slide 18,  "Prison  Is For  the                                                                    
Violent." The  pollsters also found that  the public opinion                                                                    
was that prison was for violent offenders.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez  revealed  slide   19,  "Key  Public  Opinion                                                                    
Takeaways:"                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     A national  public opinion survey conducted  in January                                                                    
     2012, along with similar  surveys in Georgia, Missouri,                                                                    
     and Oregon, found those  attitudes persist and revealed                                                                    
     opinions on specific policy solutions.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     KEY TAKEAWAYS:                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
        1. American voters believe too many people are in                                                                       
          prison and the nation spends too much on                                                                              
          imprisonment.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
        2. Voters overwhelmingly support a variety of policy                                                                    
          changes that shift non-violent offenders from                                                                         
          prison   to   more   effective,   less   expensive                                                                    
          alternatives.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
        3. Support for sentencing and corrections reform                                                                        
          (including reduced prison terms) is strong across                                                                     
          political parties, regions, age, gender, and                                                                          
          racial/ethnic groups.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez found  it interesting to know  the thoughts of                                                                    
the public.  She turned  the presentation  back over  to Ms.                                                                    
Mead.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Mead  turned to slide  20, "Increased Average  Length of                                                                    
Stay." She  reported that another factor  driving the prison                                                                    
growth was an  increased length of stay,  also being studied                                                                    
by a  subgroup of  the Criminal  Justice Commission.  One of                                                                    
the obvious  circumstances was that  the sentences  were too                                                                    
long  explaining  why people  stayed  in  prison for  longer                                                                    
periods of  time. One of  the precise charges given  to that                                                                    
subgroup was to look  at the statutory presumptive sentences                                                                    
that  accompanied each  crime. Judges  were provided  with a                                                                    
range in  which they must  order the sentence for  a certain                                                                    
crime. However, for  example, if someone was  charged with a                                                                    
Class  C felony  misconduct  involving drugs  in the  fourth                                                                    
degree  the  sentencing  ranged  from  1  to  3  years.  She                                                                    
suggested that there should be  some evidence showing that 3                                                                    
years was  more effective  than 1  year or  that 1  year was                                                                    
just as effective. Pew would  help the state delve into such                                                                    
questions as well as the  commission that was working on the                                                                    
same issues.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:06:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.   Mead   displayed   slide  21,   "Increased   Probation                                                                    
Violations."                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
   · In 2003, 1,602 jail admissions for probation                                                                               
     violations.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
   · By 2013, that number had grown to 2,995.                                                                                   
        · More than 54% of the 8000 probationers had a PTRP                                                                     
          filled against them                                                                                                   
        · 72% of PTRPs alleged technical violations                                                                             
        · 28% of PTRPs alleged commission of a new crime                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead  discussed  increased  probation  violations.  She                                                                    
reported  that  the  court  system  had  seen  that  it  was                                                                    
difficult  for people  to get  on probation  without bumping                                                                    
into problems. She highlighted that  more than 54 percent of                                                                    
people  on  probation had  a  petition  to revoke  probation                                                                    
(PTR)  filed  against them  and  72  percent of  those  were                                                                    
technical violations.  She elaborated  that an  offender had                                                                    
to  file several  conditions and  that probation  could vary                                                                    
from 3  years or  5 years  or more. A  person might  have to                                                                    
report somewhere  several times  a week  to do  a urinalysis                                                                    
test  and   follow  the  instructions  of   one's  probation                                                                    
officer.  She conveyed  that 72  percent of  the people  had                                                                    
something  filed  against  them. She  provided  examples  of                                                                    
probation   mistakes  such   as  not   showing  up   for  an                                                                    
appointment  or  having a  positive  drug  test result.  She                                                                    
reasoned  that  these  sort  of  mistakes  might  be  better                                                                    
handled with  something other  than additional  prison time.                                                                    
She   made  clear   that  it   was  different   for  someone                                                                    
reoffending  while on  probation versus  making a  technical                                                                    
violation.  She  reiterated  that  the  ramifications  of  a                                                                    
technical  violation  were  being  studied as  well  as  the                                                                    
alternatives to additional prison time.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:08:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez  discussed  slide  22, "What  We  Know  About                                                                    
Alaskans Who Recidivate."                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   · The more serious the underlying  offense, the lower the                                                                    
     recidivism rate.                                                                                                           
        · Misdemeanants had significantly higher recidivism                                                                     
          rates than felons                                                                                                     
        · Class C felons had higher rates than other felons                                                                     
   · High  rates among  offenders  who  are youthful,  male,                                                                    
     have lengthy or more serious prior criminal histories,                                                                     
     and are Native and African American.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   · Offenders convicted  of violent & property  crimes most                                                                    
     likely to be reconvicted of a new offense of the same                                                                      
     type.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez  purported   that  having  information  about                                                                    
recidivated  Alaskans  would  allow   the  state  to  target                                                                    
particular  subgroups  of  individuals  who  recidivated  at                                                                    
higher rates than others. However,  the state needed to know                                                                    
more  about  what drove  recidivism.  She  believed that  an                                                                    
entity  like  the  Pew  PSPP could  help  to  discover  more                                                                    
information.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez turned to slide 23, "The Texas Experience."                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   · 2007: Texas  DOC projected 17,000 prison  bed shortfall                                                                    
     over five years.                                                                                                           
   · Recommended  construction  of  4,000   new  beds  at  >                                                                    
     $900,000,000.                                                                                                              
   · Senate  President: "No  more prisons.  We can't  afford                                                                    
     them."                                                                                                                     
   · Solution:  Reformative  programs   as  alternatives  to                                                                    
     incarceration.                                                                                                             
   · Decision:   Invest   $241,000,000   in   evidence-based                                                                    
     strategies to reduce recidivism.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez  indicated that  Texas was  reputed to  be the                                                                    
most  notoriously tough  state  on  criminals. She  reported                                                                    
that in 2007 Texas' DOC  was projecting a 17 thousand prison                                                                    
bed  shortfall over  a  period of  5  years. The  department                                                                    
recommended constructing  4 thousand  new prison  beds which                                                                    
the  senate  president  refused  to  support.  Instead,  the                                                                    
governor  announced that  Texas  would  commit to  investing                                                                    
$241  million on  alternatives  to  incarceration, a  gamble                                                                    
which turned out to be a good investment.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:11:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez continued with slide 24, "Evidence-Based                                                                          
Investment Strategy."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
   · Drug courts                                                                                                                
   · Intermediate sanction facilities for probationers who                                                                      
     violate conditions of probation                                                                                            
   · Residential treatment programs for probationers who                                                                        
     can't stay clean & sober                                                                                                   
   · In prison residential treatment programs (like our                                                                         
     RSSAT)                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez reviewed the list of different areas in which                                                                     
Texas invested.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:11:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez read the list on slide 25, "Evidence-Based                                                                        
Strategies For Probationers."                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
   · Community-based Substance Abuse Treatment                                                                                  
   · Incentives to Encourage Probation Compliance                                                                               
   · PACE type, Swift Certain & Proportionate Sanctions for                                                                     
     certain Probation Violations                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez reviewed slide 26, "Texas Results."                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
   · Since Texas enacted these new approaches:                                                                                  
        · Recidivism rates dropped 25%                                                                                          
        · Crime rate dropped 18%, lowest since 1968                                                                             
        · Imprisonment rate dropped 10%                                                                                         
        · Avoided nearly $3 billion in prison costs                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez stated that Texas had actually closed                                                                             
prisons.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:12:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez looked at another state that was worth noting                                                                     
in slide 27, "South Dakota."                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
   · 2013, prison population had grown dramatically to 3600                                                                     
        · Imprisonment rate growing faster than national                                                                        
          average and crime rate falling slowly.                                                                                
        · Majority    of    incarcerated   offenders    were                                                                    
          nonviolent                                                                                                            
       · High number of parole/probation revocations                                                                            
        · High recidivism rate: 4 in 10 returned within in                                                                      
          3 years of release                                                                                                    
   · Projected to grow 25 percent through 2022                                                                                  
   · This growth would require 2 new prisons and a total                                                                        
     expenditure of $224,000,000                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez  explained that she was  bringing South Dakota                                                                    
to the committee's  attention because it was  a state unlike                                                                    
Texas that had a very  small prison population. She reported                                                                    
that in 2013 the prison  population grew to 3600, about half                                                                    
the  number  of  prisoners  in   Alaska.  South  Dakota  was                                                                    
incarcerating   predominantly   non-violent  offenders   and                                                                    
probation violators, and had a  high rate of recidivism. The                                                                    
state's prison  population was expected  to grow  25 percent                                                                    
by the end of 2022  requiring the construction of additional                                                                    
prisons costing $224 million. South  Dakota could not afford                                                                    
the expenditure.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:12:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez continued  with slide  28,  "PSPP SO.  Dakota                                                                    
Findings."                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
   · In 2012, 61 percent in prison for nonviolent offenses.                                                                     
        · 81% of newly admitted prisoners were nonviolent                                                                       
        · 53% were drug and alcohol offenders,                                                                                  
   · Planned investment strategy over 10 years will save                                                                        
     $207 million of  which $53 million will  be invested in                                                                    
     new evidence-based strategies.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:13:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez  moved on  to slide 29,  "What Leaders  In So.                                                                    
Dakota Said."                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     "Our state faces a clear  choice. Down one path, we can                                                                    
     continue  to build  prisons  and  allow corrections  to                                                                    
     consume  an  ever-increasing proportion  of  taxpayers'                                                                    
     dollars. The  alternative is to follow  the path blazed                                                                    
     by almost two  dozen states across the  country. A path                                                                    
     that makes  us safer and  one that will save  our state                                                                    
     millions of  dollars." -Gov. Dennis Daugaard,  State of                                                                    
     the State address, Jan. 8, 2013                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez reported  that the  state enacted  an omnibus                                                                    
bill that  when the governor  signed it he discussed  how it                                                                    
would make  citizens safer  and save  the state  millions of                                                                    
dollars.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:13:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez read slide 30, "What Leaders In So. Dakota                                                                        
Said."                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     "We have been  putting a lot of people in  prison … but                                                                    
     we  have   now  recognized  that  we   haven't  changed                                                                    
     behaviors of those  prisoners. Most of them  get out of                                                                    
     prison  eventually  and  a very  high  proportion  goes                                                                    
     back,  because  the  main change  that  took  place  in                                                                    
     prison is that they became better criminals."                                                                              
     --Sen. Craig Tieszen, floor testimony, Jan. 24, 2013                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez read Senator Craig Tieszen's statement.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:13:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez read slide 31, "South Dakota Solutions."                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
   · Passed SB 70 to reduce growth by 716 beds and slow                                                                         
     corrections budget growth by:                                                                                              
        · averting construction of two prisons, saving                                                                          
          state taxpayers $207 million in construction and                                                                      
          operating costs through 2022; and                                                                                     
        · redirects $8 million from current budget to                                                                           
          programs and policies proven to reduce recidivism                                                                     
          and improve offender accountability.                                                                                  
   · An ongoing annual investment of 4.9 million in these                                                                       
     programs is expected.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:14:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez turned to slide 32, "Reformative Programs In                                                                      
Alaska."                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
   · 2007: the Commissioner inherited an ADOC with NO                                                                           
     programs                                                                                                                   
   · With legislative support, reinstatement of programs                                                                        
     began                                                                                                                      
        · Substance Abuse Treatment                                                                                             
        · Educational/Vocational Programs                                                                                       
        · Cognitive Behavioral Treatment                                                                                        
   · FY 2014: ONLY 2.9% of DOC's operating budget goes to                                                                       
     reformative programs                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez steered the conversation  back to Alaska after                                                                    
examining  solutions   from  other  states.  In   2007,  the                                                                    
commissioner of  DOC inherited a  department with  no reform                                                                    
programs  other than  one federally  funded substance  abuse                                                                    
treatment  program. The  department  was  able to  reinstate                                                                    
programs  with  legislative  support   some  of  which  were                                                                    
substance  abuse, educational  and vocational  programs, and                                                                    
cognitive  behavioral treatment.  She  talked briefly  about                                                                    
cognitive behavioral treatment because,  when looking at the                                                                    
research, it provided  more value per dollar  than any other                                                                    
reformative program. Cognitive  behavioral treatment changed                                                                    
the  mindset of  the individual  who committed  the criminal                                                                    
behavior.  She  relayed  that many  young  people  were  not                                                                    
learning  what  they  needed  to   learn  and  had  criminal                                                                    
thinking attitudes. She concluded  that without changing the                                                                    
criminal thinking  attitude, the offender would  not change.                                                                    
In FY  14 2.9  percent of DOC's  budget went  to reformative                                                                    
programs  which  proved to  be  a  positive investment  with                                                                    
positive outcomes.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:15:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez reviewed the chart  on slide 33, "Outcome From                                                                    
Investment: Recidivism  Reduction." She pointed out  that in                                                                    
FY 07  recidivism was  at its highest  at 66.03  percent and                                                                    
dropped to 63.19  percent in FY 11. She  believed Alaska was                                                                    
moving in the right direction.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:15:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez read slide 34, "ADOC Runs Quality Programs."                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
   · 2.9% of ADOC operating budget for reformative programs                                                                     
     is low compared to American Correctional Association                                                                       
     finding that, on average, other state prisons devote                                                                       
     4.4% of budgets to programming.                                                                                            
   · Dec. 2014, Leg. Audit very complementary of the ADOC                                                                       
     programs in terms quality, array & motivating inmates                                                                      
     to attend.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:15:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez reviewed  slide 35,  "WA  State Institute  Of                                                                    
Public Policy Finds."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
   · The   cost-benefit   of   custodial   substance   abuse                                                                    
     treatment programs have a 100% chance of the benefits                                                                      
     exceeding the costs.                                                                                                       
   · The cost-benefit of both educational and vocational                                                                        
     custodial programs have a 100% chance of the benefits                                                                      
     exceeding the costs.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez  turned the  spotlight to  Commissioner Taylor                                                                    
for review of DOC.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
RON TAYLOR, COMMISSIONER,  DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, talked                                                                    
about slide 36, "AK Department Of Corrections."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
   · Alaska Prisoner Reentry Framework                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Taylor  informed   the  committee   that  the                                                                    
department   had  been   working  on   a  prisoner   reentry                                                                    
initiative for  the past several  years. The  initiative was                                                                    
based  on  three  phases   developed  through  the  National                                                                    
Institute  of Corrections  by a  former  colleague that  had                                                                    
worked in  the department 20 years  previously. He explained                                                                    
that the program would help  transition a person from prison                                                                    
back  into  the  community.  The three  phases  included  an                                                                    
institutional  phase, a  transition phase,  and a  community                                                                    
phase.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Taylor explained  the institutional  phase. He                                                                    
pointed out  that a  risk needs  assessment was  critical to                                                                    
identifying  problems  that  persons presented  when  coming                                                                    
into Alaska's  institutions. He relayed that  SB 64 [Omnibus                                                                    
Crime-Corrections-Recidivism bill introduced  in 2013] would                                                                    
require that  anyone who  was sentenced to  30 days  or more                                                                    
would have  a risk  needs assessment done  by DOC.  The risk                                                                    
needs assessments  would be used  to develop  programing and                                                                    
also  to help  with transition.  He  offered that  it was  a                                                                    
critical part  of the release  preparation. He  claimed that                                                                    
the  department  released  over   13  thousand  people  from                                                                    
Alaska's institutions throughout the course of a year.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Taylor  moved  on to  discuss  the  transition                                                                    
phase of  Alaska's prisoner  reentry framework.  He reported                                                                    
that 75 percent  of prisoners would be  released without any                                                                    
kind  of probation  or parole  supervision. In  other words,                                                                    
prisoners  would  be  returning to  communities  where  they                                                                    
would  likely  have  some  support.  However,  many  of  the                                                                    
communities were  ill-equipped to  take care  of them  or to                                                                    
understand  their  needs.   Department  of  Corrections  was                                                                    
working  with community  stake holders  to identify  ways to                                                                    
develop in-reach  into the institutions in  order to connect                                                                    
those  persons being  released prior  to their  release. The                                                                    
department  was  also  making   sure  that  it  was  sharing                                                                    
information  on programing  needs  and on  areas of  concern                                                                    
with prisoners  being released. In addition,  the department                                                                    
was restructuring the way that  people were released as part                                                                    
of the  transitional phase  whether through  halfway houses,                                                                    
electronic monitoring,  or the  parole board. In  each case,                                                                    
the  release process  needed simplification  to ensure  that                                                                    
employees in the department were  not spending an inordinate                                                                    
amount of  time processing  paperwork. Rather, he  wanted to                                                                    
see staff spending  more of their time  meeting with inmates                                                                    
and understanding their true needs.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Taylor moved  on to discuss the  third phase of                                                                    
prisoner reentry,  the community  phase. He  elaborated that                                                                    
the  third  phase  dealt   with  community  supervision  and                                                                    
looking  at probation  and parole  violations. He  expressed                                                                    
the importance  of better  understanding why  prisoners were                                                                    
violating their probation and whether  they should return to                                                                    
a  hard   bed  or  whether  other   alternatives  should  be                                                                    
considered. He suggested  that alternatives included helping                                                                    
released  prisoners  maintain  housing, stay  employed,  and                                                                    
other  things  that  have  proven to  help  in  making  them                                                                    
successful in their community.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Taylor  spoke of a  discharge phase  that would                                                                    
make  communities  understand  that   they  had  a  role  in                                                                    
citizens returning to their  communities. He stressed proper                                                                    
follow-up  and providing  aftercare to  prisoners once  they                                                                    
were  released  into  communities. He  summarized  that  the                                                                    
department  had  been  working on  getting  a  comprehensive                                                                    
strategic  plan in  place and  would continue  to work  with                                                                    
other  departments   listed  in  the   recidivism  reduction                                                                    
workgroup as well as with community stakeholders.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:20:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
VALERIE  DAVIDSON, COMMISSIONER,  DEPARTMENT  OF HEALTH  AND                                                                    
SOCIAL  SERVICES,  expressed  her support  and  advanced  to                                                                    
slide 37, "Div Of Health & Social Services."                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
   · Division of Juvenile Justice                                                                                               
        · Community Services                                                                                                    
        · New Directions                                                                                                        
   · Sobriety 24/7                                                                                                              
   · Therapeutic Courts                                                                                                         
   · Community Based Treatment Programs                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Davidson expressed  the department's excitement                                                                    
about being a part of  the multi-department effort to invest                                                                    
in the health  of Alaskans; building the  health of Alaskans                                                                    
rather  than building  additional  prisons. She  highlighted                                                                    
some  of  the  opportunities  that DHSS  had  undertaken  to                                                                    
highlight some  programs to reduce recidivism.  She spoke of                                                                    
the  Division  of  Juvenile  Justice  and  its  reliance  on                                                                    
community-based  services. She  stressed  the importance  of                                                                    
working with  everyone in the community  including the local                                                                    
government,  the tribe,  and the  school district  to ensure                                                                    
that when young people returned  to their community they had                                                                    
the support needed to be successful.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Davidson explained that  there were 8 different                                                                    
categories  of evidence-based  practices of  intervention to                                                                    
reduce juvenile  crime. She  stated that  she would  only be                                                                    
highlighting  4 or  5  of  them. She  began  with access  to                                                                    
mental health  services and recognized  that trauma-informed                                                                    
care  was   critical  to  ensuring  that   youth  made  good                                                                    
decisions and  changed their  behavior. Next,  she mentioned                                                                    
substance  abuse  screening,  education,  and  intervention,                                                                    
mental health  services, and aggression  replacement therapy                                                                    
or  training.   She  acknowledged  that  there   were  other                                                                    
opportunities that could be implemented.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Davidson  relayed   that  one   of  the   new                                                                    
directions of  the Division  of Justice  was to  implement a                                                                    
program  called "Seven  Challenges." The  program was  a new                                                                    
evidence-based treatment  program in a  secure institutional                                                                    
treatment   facility   for   youth  with   substance   abuse                                                                    
disorders. She pointed  out that the department  was also in                                                                    
the process  of converting  the Ketchikan  Juvenile facility                                                                    
to a  state-wide treatment facility.  She argued  that being                                                                    
able  to  dedicate  a   facility  that  provided  state-wide                                                                    
service would  make a significant  improvement. She  went on                                                                    
to  identify other  programs the  department had  undertaken                                                                    
including  Sobriety   24-7  in   response  to  SB   64.  She                                                                    
elaborated that  the 24-7 sobriety monitoring  program was a                                                                    
smart   justice   evidence-based    program   that   allowed                                                                    
participants  to  be  able to  remain  in  their  community,                                                                    
continue  working, live  with their  families, and  continue                                                                    
their education while ensuring public  safety. If a person's                                                                    
crime  was   alcohol-related  they  would  be   required  to                                                                    
participate in alcohol  testing twice a day  and random drug                                                                    
testing  2-3 times  per week.  The goal  was to  ensure that                                                                    
individuals  could remain  a part  of their  community while                                                                    
ensuring public  safety. The program  began in  the previous                                                                    
summer  in July  2014.  As  of December,  31,  2014 the  218                                                                    
participants  had  almost  12  thousand  successful  alcohol                                                                    
breath tests  administered. Of the tests  administered there                                                                    
were  only  26  failed  tests,  less  than  1  percent.  She                                                                    
continued  to provide  statistics. She  relayed that  of the                                                                    
approximately   1400  successful   drug   tests  that   were                                                                    
administered there  were only 16  failed drug tests,  only 1                                                                    
percent.  She  furthered that  64  of  the participants  had                                                                    
completed  the  program   without  violations.  The  program                                                                    
showed tremendous promise.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Davidson mentioned  therapeutic courts and that                                                                    
the alternative justice model worked  very well. There was a                                                                    
collaborative  court  team  made  up of  a  judge,  district                                                                    
attorney,  defense  council, probation  officers,  substance                                                                    
abuse and mental health treatment  providers who worked with                                                                    
participants  to get  what they  needed.  She reported  that                                                                    
there were  currently 14 therapeutic  courts in  Alaska; six                                                                    
in  Anchorage,  one  in  Bethel,   two  in  Juneau,  one  in                                                                    
Ketchikan, two in Palmer, and two in Fairbanks.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Davidson moved  on  to  talk about  community-                                                                    
based  treatment  programs.   She  credited  the  department                                                                    
through  the Division  of  Behavioral  Health for  providing                                                                    
funding   for  community-based   substance  abuse   programs                                                                    
through  grants.  In  2014,  25  million  was  provided  for                                                                    
treatments  including detox,  opioid treatment,  residential                                                                    
treatment, and  outpatient services. She added  that many of                                                                    
the  grants were  provided because  the individuals  did not                                                                    
currently   qualify  for   Medicaid.  She   emphasized  that                                                                    
Medicaid   expansion  for   childless   adults  within   the                                                                    
applicable income  categories would address  substance abuse                                                                    
and  alcohol   treatment  needs.  For  people   on  existing                                                                    
Medicaid  the  department   administered  an  additional  12                                                                    
million  for  substance   treatment  through  Medicaid.  She                                                                    
concluded that  DHSS was excited  to be  a part of  the team                                                                    
and felt that  it was a tremendous opportunity  to build the                                                                    
health of Alaskans rather than building more prisons.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez  commented  about the  Division  of  Juvenile                                                                    
Justice. She pointed  out that finance members  had a nicely                                                                    
bound recidivism reduction  plan in front of  them. The work                                                                    
that had been conducted by  the Division of Juvenile Justice                                                                    
was addressed in  the plan. She explained  that she included                                                                    
it in the  plan because she felt it served  as a significant                                                                    
example  and model  for the  adult criminal  justice system.                                                                    
She  noted the  number one  strategic approach  the division                                                                    
made with  juvenile justice. The division  realized that its                                                                    
data collections system was terrible.  The division was able                                                                    
to receive federal grant money  and other money to implement                                                                    
a very effective data collection  system. The collected data                                                                    
allowed the  division to perform the  data analysis required                                                                    
to help it better understand the needs of its population.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez  continued   by  elaborating  that  following                                                                    
analysis, the  division developed strategic plans  that were                                                                    
discussed by  the commissioner  to address  the needs.  As a                                                                    
result,  the  number  of  juvenile  detentions  was  reduced                                                                    
dramatically.  She  opined  that the  Division  of  Juvenile                                                                    
Justice served  as a model  for the criminal  justice system                                                                    
concerning  adults.  She added  that  Jeff  Jessee would  be                                                                    
talking  more  about  the  state's   need  for  better  data                                                                    
collection in the adult system.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
BRYAN  BUTCHER,   CHIEF  EXECUTIVE  OFFICER   AND  EXECUTIVE                                                                    
DIRECTOR, ALASKA HOUSING  FINANCE CORPORATION, DEPARTMENT OF                                                                    
REVENUE, began  his portion of  the presentation  by turning                                                                    
to slide 38, "Alaska Housing Finance Corp."                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
  · Tenant Based Assistance Program -Partnership with DOC                                                                       
        · Reduces 66% re-incarceration rate to 33%                                                                              
        · Reduces prison population growth rate at $7.5k                                                                        
          cost per person. Prison costs $58k / year /                                                                           
          person                                                                                                                
   · Fund Prisoner Re-entry Services through HAP and SNHG                                                                       
     capital programs                                                                                                           
        · Partners for Progress Re-Entry Center, New Life                                                                       
          Development Supportive Housing                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Butcher  suggested that  at  first  blush it  might  be                                                                    
difficult  to see  the  correlation  between Alaska  Housing                                                                    
Finance  Corporation (AHFC)  and DOC.  He relayed  that AHFC                                                                    
chaired the governor's Alaska Council  on the Homeless. Most                                                                    
of the agencies in the committee  room sat on the council. A                                                                    
few  other agencies  and some  public members  sat on  it as                                                                    
well. He told of speaking with  DOC five years prior about a                                                                    
problem. The problem was that when  a person came out of the                                                                    
correctional system they did not  have any family, money, or                                                                    
a place to go upon  release. They were essentially homeless.                                                                    
He  suggested that  someone that  was released  yet homeless                                                                    
was  far more  likely to  recidivate ending  up back  in the                                                                    
system than  someone that  had a  place to  live; a  base to                                                                    
transition  into  the  following  stage of  their  life.  He                                                                    
reported that  AHFC had been  able to find $660  thousand in                                                                    
federal  funds  per  year to  put  together  a  tenant-based                                                                    
assistance program working with  DOC to determine candidates                                                                    
to receive a  voucher similar to the  state's public housing                                                                    
voucher.  The  public  housing   voucher  worked  such  that                                                                    
candidates  found a  private  apartment  funded through  the                                                                    
voucher program up  to a maximum of two years.  It was meant                                                                    
to transition people out of the  system and into the rest of                                                                    
their  lives.  He reported  a  remarkable  reduction in  re-                                                                    
incarceration  over  the   previous  five-year  period.  The                                                                    
average, nationally  and in Alaska, had  bounced between the                                                                    
low  60's to  the mid  60's in  terms of  recidivism. Alaska                                                                    
Housing  Finance Corporation  (AHFC) had  seen a  33 percent                                                                    
recidivism rate  amongst the  approximately 250  people that                                                                    
participated in the program thus  far. The cost to AHFC with                                                                    
federal  funds equaled  about $7500  per  year. The  average                                                                    
prison cost per  person was about $58 thousand  per year. He                                                                    
concluded  that  it made  more  sense  to reduce  recidivism                                                                    
rates at  a lower cost than  for criminals to return  to the                                                                    
state prison system at a higher cost.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Butcher  continued  to discuss  the  awards  that  AHFC                                                                    
received  for  the  program,  national  housing  awards  for                                                                    
innovation.  He   told  the  committee  that   he  had  been                                                                    
approached by  other states that conveyed  their surprise in                                                                    
AHFC being able to work  with DOC. He emphasized the benefit                                                                    
of  Alaska's DOC  looking long-term  and  helping to  reduce                                                                    
recidivism  rates. Alaska  Housing Finance  Corporation also                                                                    
helped  to  fund  prisoner   reentry  services  through  its                                                                    
Homeless Assistance  Program and  its Special  Needs Housing                                                                    
Grant capital  programs. The Partners for  Progress Re-entry                                                                    
Center  and  the  New Life  Development  Supportive  Housing                                                                    
worked  with Alaskans  transitioning  from the  correctional                                                                    
system  into  housing  and the  workplace.  A  criminal  who                                                                    
experienced a successful transition  would be less likely to                                                                    
re-offend and be placed back into the correctional system.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:33:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JOE  THOMAS, DEPUTY  COMMISSIONER, DEPARTMENT  OF LABOR  AND                                                                    
WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT (DOLWD), advanced  to slide 39, "Labor                                                                    
& Workforce Development Collaborations."                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
   · WorkKeys & NCRC certification in GCCC & Hiland                                                                             
     Mountain women's prison                                                                                                    
   · Pre-Release program at various facilities                                                                                  
   · Employment after Incarceration Workshops at AK Job                                                                         
     Centers                                                                                                                    
   · Operating Engineers and Ironworkers Pre-Apprenticeship                                                                     
     pilot program at Hiland and Palmer                                                                                         
   · Minimum custody inmates working in fishing processing                                                                      
     plants                                                                                                                     
   · Job Centers working directly with field probation                                                                          
     officers                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Deputy Commissioner  Thomas noted  that although  there were                                                                    
differing situations for each  prisoner transitioning out of                                                                    
prison he believed they would  be well-served by having some                                                                    
sort of  certification or  training that  would put  them to                                                                    
work.  He added  that  ideally prisoners  would  have a  job                                                                    
secured before leaving jail. He  pointed out that prisoners,                                                                    
particularly  felons,  were  somewhat difficult  to  employ.                                                                    
Some industries  did not employ  convicted felons.  He spoke                                                                    
of the challenge  of providing prisoners with  training in a                                                                    
particular  skill  or  in searching  for  a  job.  Acquiring                                                                    
proper  training in  prison was  necessary for  prisoners to                                                                    
successfully transition  out of jail and  to avoid returning                                                                    
to drug addiction and old occupations once released.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner Thomas  discussed key elements.  The department                                                                    
evaluated prisoners before sending  them into the workforce.                                                                    
It was  the department's role to  make sure it did  not send                                                                    
people  out  that  would  steal   or  rob  from  patrons  or                                                                    
businesses. In  the case of  those prisoners  being released                                                                    
early,  there  had been  an  opportunity  for them  to  take                                                                    
introductory  programs for  various  crafts  and trades.  He                                                                    
reported  that at  Hiland Correctional  Institute for  Women                                                                    
[Hiland  Mountain Correctional  Center],  several women  had                                                                    
been  put to  work  within the  iron  workers' union.  These                                                                    
women  increased  their  job   skills  and  were  given  the                                                                    
opportunity to  learn something  that could  be used  in the                                                                    
future.  Through the  WorkKeys  program participants  earned                                                                    
their  national  career  readiness  certification  preparing                                                                    
people  for work  and giving  them a  better feel  for their                                                                    
work interests.  He claimed that  most trades  required some                                                                    
basic knowledge in trigonometry  or geometry. Many employers                                                                    
typically required  aptitude in  a certain areas.  The first                                                                    
few months after being released  were extremely important to                                                                    
the   success  of   reintegration   to  society.   Otherwise                                                                    
recidivism was  likely. He wanted  the state to  be relieved                                                                    
of  the cost  of  $55 thousand  per  year for  incarceration                                                                    
costs and having an employer gain an employee.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Thomas discussed  a variety  of barriers  that                                                                    
needed addressing.  He mentioned issues around  traveling to                                                                    
work,  the stigmatism  of coming  out  of prison,  employers                                                                    
being  informed about  a prisoner's  training. He  mentioned                                                                    
Adult  Basic  Education  and assisting  prisoners  prior  to                                                                    
their  release  in  taking   their  GED  [General  Education                                                                    
Development] test,  a prerequisite for employment.  He noted                                                                    
pre-apprenticeship training and the  availability of help at                                                                    
the  job centers.  He highlighted  the challenge  of getting                                                                    
into  the  workforce  with a  stigma  that  follows  someone                                                                    
released from  jail. He also  spoke about the  importance of                                                                    
learning about  soft skills such as  grooming, dressing, and                                                                    
communications when  applying for a job.  He reiterated that                                                                    
not having  a driver's license, a  GED, or a skill  set were                                                                    
all  challenges. He  stressed the  importance of  addressing                                                                    
these challenges  prior to prisoner release.  The department                                                                    
had  been able  to transition  folks  into jobs  out of  the                                                                    
prison  system. He  noted conversations  with the  Southeast                                                                    
seafood processors. He asked for any questions.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   Jessee  advanced   to   slide   40,  "DOLWD   Employer                                                                    
Incentives."                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
   · Work Opportunity Tax Credit (for employers)                                                                                
   · Fidelity Bonding Program to address employee bonding                                                                       
     to overcome barriers for the former offender                                                                               
     population                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Jessee  revealed slide  41,  "What  We Are  Doing  That                                                                    
Works."                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
   · ADOC institutional & community based reformative                                                                           
     programs                                                                                                                   
   · The Alaska Criminal Justice Commission's work                                                                              
   · The Partner's Reentry Center                                                                                               
   · PACE, Sobriety 24/7, Therapeutic Courts                                                                                    
   · ADOC partnership with AHFC & DOLWD                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jesse reported  that the state was  doing several things                                                                    
to reduce  recidivism that worked  thanks to the  efforts of                                                                    
DOC,  the  Criminal  Justice Commission,  and  the  Partners                                                                    
Reentry Center.  He noted that  the reentry  center combined                                                                    
and tailored  housing, employment, and support  for recovery                                                                    
to  fit  each  returning  citizen.  He  mentioned  Probation                                                                    
Accountability and Certain  Enforcement (PACE), Sobriety 24-                                                                    
7, Therapeutic  Courts, and DOC's partnership  with AHFC and                                                                    
DOLWD.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:40:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  continued to slide  42, "Next Steps  With Fiscal                                                                    
Component."                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
  · Maintain current funding on ADOC reformative programs                                                                       
   · Support ADOC Alaska Prisoner Reentry Initiative                                                                            
   · Create a new ADOC position --Reentry Coordinator                                                                           
   · Support the ADOC efforts to work collaboratively with                                                                      
     the community Reentry Coalitions                                                                                           
        · Support the Partner's Reentry Center in Anchorage                                                                     
   · Expand community based substance abuse treatment                                                                           
   · Development community based cognitive behavioral                                                                           
     treatment                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  stated that  there would  be a  fiscal component                                                                    
involved in  maintaining DOC's reformative programs  such as                                                                    
the department's  reentry initiative. He  suggested creating                                                                    
a  position for  a reentry  coordinator to  keep a  focus on                                                                    
reentry.  He   also  favored  supporting   the  department's                                                                    
efforts in  working with the reentry  coalitions, especially                                                                    
the  Partners  Reentry  Center in  Anchorage.  The  Partners                                                                    
Reentry   Center    had   been   supported    with   capital                                                                    
appropriations the  previous two years. He  stated the state                                                                    
needed  to find  a way  to expand  community-based substance                                                                    
abuse treatment. He  suggested that if people  could not get                                                                    
sober and  maintain sobriety, their  chances of  staying out                                                                    
of   prison  declined   significantly.  He   encouraged  the                                                                    
development  of more  cognitive  behavioral  treatment in  a                                                                    
community.  He added,  "If you  don't change  their criminal                                                                    
thinking,  you are  not going  to change  the criminal."  He                                                                    
also mentioned  the importance of  making sure to  spend the                                                                    
base  funding on  data collection  and analysis  through the                                                                    
justice  center at  the university.  He opined  that if  the                                                                    
state did  not collect  data and assess  the results  of the                                                                    
strategies  it  invested in,  then  it  would not  be  worth                                                                    
making  the  investment.  He stressed  the  significance  of                                                                    
being  able to  measure the  success  of a  strategy and  to                                                                    
determine  whether  a  strategy  needed  to  be  adapted  or                                                                    
changed.  He emphatically  stated  that the  data piece  was                                                                    
critical.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:44:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee scrolled to slide  43, "Next Steps With No Fiscal                                                                    
Component."                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
  · AK Criminal Justice Commission currently working on:                                                                        
        · current bail conditions                                                                                               
        · deferred sentencing & pretrial diversion                                                                              
        · limited licenses for committed therapeutic court                                                                      
          participants & others who have demonstrated long-                                                                     
          term sobriety & lawfulness                                                                                            
        · study barrier crimes                                                                                                  
   · Enact legislation to provide "good time" credits to                                                                        
     motivated   probationers   complying   with   probation                                                                    
     conditions                                                                                                                 
   · Enact legislation providing "good time" credit to                                                                          
     people on Electronic Monitoring                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Jessee reported  that there  were steps  that could  be                                                                    
implemented  in the  short-run with  no  fiscal impacts.  He                                                                    
commented  that the  Criminal Justice  Commission was  doing                                                                    
its work.  He spoke of  legislation that could be  passed to                                                                    
incentivize people to do the  right thing such as motivating                                                                    
probationers to  comply with probation conditions  by giving                                                                    
them good time or providing  good time credit to people with                                                                    
electronic monitoring.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez interjected  that there  was also  one aspect                                                                    
that the  Criminal Justice Commission  had been  working on;                                                                    
the issue  of differed  sentencing and  pre-trial diversion.                                                                    
She relayed that 40 percent  of DOC's current population was                                                                    
comprised of  pre-trial offenders,  people who had  not been                                                                    
convicted of  a crime. She  continued that under  the notion                                                                    
of differed sentencing an offender  was basically being told                                                                    
that if they  did A, B, C, and D  including drug and alcohol                                                                    
treatment, then they  would appear in front of  a judge that                                                                    
would take into account  that person's sincere, demonstrated                                                                    
efforts  at achieving  rehabilitation. She  noted that  pre-                                                                    
trial diversion  was another avenue  that many  other states                                                                    
were investigating.  She clarified  that she  was discussing                                                                    
strategies  that could  potentially help  to address  the 40                                                                    
percent population  that otherwise occupied a  prison bed at                                                                    
the cost of $158 per day.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   Jessee   discussed   the   final   slide   44,   "Plan                                                                    
Implementation."                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
   · Identify strategies needed to match the # of hard                                                                          
     prison beds with appropriate offender population                                                                           
   · Develop an implementation plan that identifies:                                                                            
        · strategy & timeline for implementation                                                                                
        · cost                                                                                                                  
        · number served                                                                                                         
        · estimated impact on recidivism                                                                                        
   · Greatly postpone construction of new costly prison                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Jesse concluded  that the  group had  done what  it had                                                                    
been asked to do. The  group got together, collaborated, and                                                                    
developed a plan. He added  that the group had completed the                                                                    
legislative  intent  assigned  by  the  legislature  in  the                                                                    
previous  session. He  purported  that the  state  was at  a                                                                    
crossroads. The ball was in  the legislature's court. It was                                                                    
up  to the  body to  decide the  next step  forward. If  the                                                                    
state wanted to continue on the  path that it had been on of                                                                    
not  addressing the  issues, then  the state  would have  to                                                                    
deal  with  the  prison population  by  building  additional                                                                    
prisons  or sending  criminals  outside.  He suggested  that                                                                    
maybe the legislature  wanted the group to  continue to work                                                                    
at matching  the prison  bed population  to the  people that                                                                    
needed   incarceration.  He   asked   the  legislature   for                                                                    
direction concerning the next step  which he believed was to                                                                    
develop an  implementation plan that laid  out the specifics                                                                    
about how to get to where the state wanted to go.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:45:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  relayed his experience in  working with the                                                                    
group  over  the  previous  summer. One  of  the  things  he                                                                    
learned that  was not included  in the presentation  was how                                                                    
the system  worked; how  real life worked  with many  of the                                                                    
people  the state  had to  deal with.  He talked  about bail                                                                    
being a hurdle for prisoners.  Prisoners that were unable to                                                                    
make bail  set by a  judge remained in  jail at the  cost of                                                                    
$158 per day,  $58 thousand per year. He  reiterated that 40                                                                    
percent  of  the  6300  inmates  currently  in  corrections,                                                                    
equaling approximately 2400  inmates, awaited sentencing. He                                                                    
pointed out  that 2.9  percent of the  money that  went into                                                                    
corrections actually was  designated for treatment programs.                                                                    
He  continued  that  80  to  90 percent  of  the  people  in                                                                    
corrections  were   there  with  drug   and  alcohol-related                                                                    
problems. He  expressed his  frustration with  the disparity                                                                    
of funding set aside for  treatment. He reported that he had                                                                    
asked about treatment in corrections.  Many of the treatment                                                                    
programs lasted  for 90  days, yet many  of the  people that                                                                    
went  into jail  were  not  sentenced as  long  as 90  days,                                                                    
therefore  ineligible  for treatment.  He  did  not want  to                                                                    
elaborate on  all of the repercussions  of being intoxicated                                                                    
on  drugs  and  alcohol.   He  mentioned  drug  testing.  He                                                                    
reported  that there  were  programs  or hardware  available                                                                    
that  the state  could invest  in for  testing. He  recalled                                                                    
Representative Gattis trying to  help community members with                                                                    
getting  to  and  from  their  urine  or  breathalyzer  test                                                                    
appointments  twice  daily.  He  suggested  that  there  was                                                                    
technology  which  allowed people  to  breathe  into a  cell                                                                    
phone  or  any  device  with  visual  capabilities  and  the                                                                    
chemical  markers   would  be  read.  Such   technology  was                                                                    
inexpensive, more  convenient, and allowed people  to remain                                                                    
at work making compliance attainable.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  mentioned serious  problems with  the state                                                                    
budget and emphasized that the  plan could not have happened                                                                    
at a  better time.  He restated  that the  correction system                                                                    
was at  101 percent capacity  currently. He wondered  if the                                                                    
state  was going  to continue  doing the  same thing  it was                                                                    
currently  doing. He  maintained that  there was  a plan  in                                                                    
front  of the  committee on  how to  deal with  capacity. He                                                                    
conveyed  that  the  cost of  treatment  programs  were  $12                                                                    
hundred to $16 hundred per  person, yet the state was paying                                                                    
$158  per  day.  He  asserted  that  the  drug  and  alcohol                                                                    
problems needed  to be resolved.  He wanted to  complete the                                                                    
implementation of  the plan before the  committee. He stated                                                                    
that  he  had challenged  the  group  to do  a  cost-benefit                                                                    
analysis. The  state would have  to prove that the  money it                                                                    
invested  in the  plan would  save  the state  money in  the                                                                    
long-run. It would also make  the lives of Alaskans, family,                                                                    
friends,  and neighbors  much better.  He offered  that with                                                                    
the reductions in the budget many  jobs would be lost in the                                                                    
current  year.  Drugs  and alcohol  problems  were  epidemic                                                                    
particularly  in  rural  Alaska. He  mentioned  suicide.  He                                                                    
wanted to reemphasize the goal  of reducing the state budget                                                                    
overall.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:50:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Thompson asked  Deputy Commissioner  Thomas if  he                                                                    
had  looked at  the  positive results  and positive  stories                                                                    
from youths that had been  through youth courts of their own                                                                    
peers.  He wondered  if he  had heard  stories about  youths                                                                    
turning  their lives  around avoiding  the juvenile  justice                                                                    
system.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez  responded  that   when  she  worked  on  the                                                                    
recidivism reduction plan she  had a number of conversations                                                                    
with  Director  Forest,  the director  of  the  Division  of                                                                    
Juvenile   Justice.  However,   she   had   not  talked   to                                                                    
individuals who worked  at the youth court.  The youth court                                                                    
was a  great example  of peer  incentivized change.  She was                                                                    
aware of  many adult treatment  programs that used  the same                                                                    
sort  of peer  supported incentivized  change approach.  She                                                                    
indicated she would  be happy to do research  on whether the                                                                    
youth  court model  was effective  in  working with  adults,                                                                    
particularly  some of  the  younger  adults re-offending  at                                                                    
significantly high rates.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:52:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked if Ms. Gutierrez  had looked at                                                                    
Alaska's  prisons and  how Alaska's  prisoners were  treated                                                                    
versus those  in the  Lower 48. She  had heard  from inmates                                                                    
that had been  brought back to the state  from other states.                                                                    
The inmates claimed that conditions  were much worse outside                                                                    
of Alaska and did not want to return to the Lower 48.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman asked if Alaska's prisons were too soft.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Taylor responded  that he  did not  think they                                                                    
had  examined how  soft Alaska's  prisons  were compared  to                                                                    
other States.  He suggested that when  people were thousands                                                                    
of miles  away from home  they would likely be  motivated to                                                                    
remain in  state in order to  have access to people.  He did                                                                    
not believe that Colorado and  Arizona were egregious places                                                                    
for people to serve  time. Colorado's facility was virtually                                                                    
new on par with Alaska's  Goose Creek facility. He felt that                                                                    
distance was a greater issue than the treatment of inmates.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:53:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked if a savings  would result from                                                                    
the state  closing its Goose  Creek facility,  sending long-                                                                    
term offenders south, and using  part of the savings for the                                                                    
group  the commissioner  was talking  about.  She wanted  to                                                                    
make sure the state  was investigating all potential savings                                                                    
options.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner  Taylor  assured   Representative  Wilson  that                                                                    
everything was on  the table. He added that  with the charge                                                                    
of  the  governor  to  reduce  the  department's  budget  25                                                                    
percent,  all facilities  would be  looked at.  Programming,                                                                    
probation, and  medical coverage were areas  that would also                                                                    
be examined.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:55:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman remarked  that  the  report indicated  that                                                                    
Goose  Creek  Correctional  Center was  currently  the  most                                                                    
efficient  in  the  state.  One  of  the  main  reasons  for                                                                    
building the  facility was to  reduce recidivism  because of                                                                    
inmates having  access to their families,  an important part                                                                    
of  returning   to  society.  He   mentioned  Representative                                                                    
Munoz's comments  on the availability  of telecommunications                                                                    
and video teleconferencing with family members.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:55:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler appreciated  the legislators who directed                                                                    
the creation  of the plan and  the people that put  the plan                                                                    
together. He  referred to slide  26 and mentioned  the smart                                                                    
justice efforts  in Texas that  reduced recidivism  rates by                                                                    
25 percent. He  wanted to know Texas'  recidivism rate after                                                                    
the reduction of 25 percent.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Gutierrez was  not sure what Texas'  recidivism rate was                                                                    
in 2007. According to the  material provided by Pew PSPP the                                                                    
drop was 25  percent. She stated she would  provide him with                                                                    
Texas' recidivism rate  in 2007 and in the  current year for                                                                    
comparison.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Saddler  posed  the question,  "The  implication                                                                    
being,  are they  low-hanging fruit  or real  tough nuts  to                                                                    
crack?"                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez added  that the  strategy  that produced  the                                                                    
best results was creating  therapeutic alternatives for drug                                                                    
and  alcohol offenders.  They created  a  Driving Under  the                                                                    
Influence (DUI)  prison, community-based  treatment programs                                                                    
for  people  on   probation,  prison  residential  treatment                                                                    
programs   similar  to   the  Residential   Substance  Abuse                                                                    
Treatment (RSAT) program.  The therapeutic alternatives were                                                                    
all  treatment-based targeting  the treatment  needs of  the                                                                    
individual.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:57:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  wondered about the  scientific evidence-                                                                    
based results  of the  effectiveness of  treatment programs.                                                                    
He  also asked  if there  were any  limitations on  how many                                                                    
times a prisoner could participate in a treatment program.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:58:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  responded that there  was information  about the                                                                    
effectiveness  of  programs.  For   example,  the  State  of                                                                    
Washington   had  conducted   a   thorough  examination   of                                                                    
evidence-based  practices   not  only  to   determine  their                                                                    
effectiveness but  also to track  the return  on investment.                                                                    
He relayed  that programs that  targeted youth had  a better                                                                    
lifetime return  on investment because every  youth that was                                                                    
deterred  from a  criminal career  had  many years  to be  a                                                                    
productive   citizen.   There   was   informative   evidence                                                                    
available that  was useful because there  were programs that                                                                    
were liked  by participants but  not very effective  such as                                                                    
Scared Straight.  Youths were taken into  prisons to observe                                                                    
the horrors of incarceration,  but the program proved itself                                                                    
to  be less  effective. He  reported  that the  fear of  the                                                                    
unknown  contributed to  program  success.  Once people  saw                                                                    
that prisoners were  not hanging by chains from  the wall it                                                                    
was not the deterrent that it was thought it would be.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  continued that as far  as the number of  times a                                                                    
person could  seek treatment depended on  the individual. In                                                                    
looking at  the chronic homeless inebriate  population, many                                                                    
of  the  Housing  First  people at  Karluk  Manor  had  been                                                                    
through treatment up  to 14 times. He suggested  that it was                                                                    
a  myth that  chronic  homeless chose  to  drink, because  a                                                                    
person   did    not   go   through   treatment    14   times                                                                    
unsuccessfully.  In   answer  to   Representative  Saddler's                                                                    
question,  he  responded that  there  was  no limit  on  the                                                                    
number of times a person  could go to treatment. The state's                                                                    
goal was  to improve  the approach  for each  individual. He                                                                    
also  pointed out  that although  people asked  the question                                                                    
about the number of times  the state would pay for substance                                                                    
abuse treatment, people did not  ask the same question about                                                                    
diabetics who  routinely relapsed  by going off  their diet,                                                                    
not exercising, or not following their doctor's orders.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:00:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman added  that when he was the  chairman of the                                                                    
Department   of   Health   and   Social   Services   finance                                                                    
subcommittee  in the  budget  the  behavioral health  grants                                                                    
cost approximately  $200 million  per year for  2 to  3 year                                                                    
grants. He  saw that individuals had  been through treatment                                                                    
a number of  times before staying sober; 12 to  13 times for                                                                    
some individuals. He  opined that the problem  in Alaska was                                                                    
that  all  of  the available  treatment  programs  differed.                                                                    
There  was no  systematic  methodology in  the treatment  of                                                                    
behavioral health  problems. He  claimed that the  state was                                                                    
primarily  dealing  with  a transient  clientele  that  took                                                                    
advantage of family, friends, and  neighbors moving to other                                                                    
places and  taking advantage  of more  people over  time. He                                                                    
argued that  there was  no systematic  program and  that the                                                                    
state was  spending the  people's money  without any  say in                                                                    
the  treatment  approach. He  explained  that  he asked  the                                                                    
health   commission   to   provide  the   legislature   with                                                                    
information about  successful treatments. He wanted  to know                                                                    
what   treatment  programs   worked  for   cocaine,  heroin,                                                                    
methamphetamines,  and  alcohol  so  that  the  state  could                                                                    
invest in those programs.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman relayed  that the  providers that  received                                                                    
grant monies reported that there  was a tremendous amount of                                                                    
paperwork.   He  furthered   that   the  largest   Fairbanks                                                                    
treatment  facility reported  that 70  percent of  the funds                                                                    
received were  spent on administrative fees.  He opined that                                                                    
the  state  spent more  time  making  sure money  was  spent                                                                    
appropriately rather  than getting the money  on the street.                                                                    
He  believed  in accountability,  but  wondered  what to  do                                                                    
about high administrative costs.  In the previous session he                                                                    
reported talking  with Mr. Jessee about  turning grants into                                                                    
contracts and  having the state  dictate what  programs were                                                                    
used with the help of the health commission.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:03:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  acknowledged the general  principle that                                                                    
the earlier a  younger person was treated  the better chance                                                                    
that  person had  to  live a  longer life.  He  asked to  be                                                                    
directed to  the supporting data.  He also  suggested asking                                                                    
both diabetics  and substance abusers  the reasons  they did                                                                    
not  follow their  treatment  programs,  as the  information                                                                    
would be  helpful in  a cost-benefit  analysis. He  added it                                                                    
would be  more beneficial than  not to ask the  question. He                                                                    
furthered it  was a fair  question to ask whether  the state                                                                    
should  treat one  person 15  times or  treat 15  people one                                                                    
time.  He  wanted to  know  about  the current  cost-benefit                                                                    
analysis.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  remarked that he  would look into the  answer to                                                                    
Representative Saddler's  question and  report back.  He was                                                                    
aware  of being  able to  provide a  reference to  the cost-                                                                    
benefit analyses from the State of Washington.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:04:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gattis  wanted  to   know  the  court  costs                                                                    
associated with a prisoner. She  understood that the cost of                                                                    
a bed  per day for  an inmate  in prison was  $158. However,                                                                    
the state did not have  costs for court, law enforcement, or                                                                    
damages incurred by citizens related  to the inmate's crime.                                                                    
She thought the  state incurred a larger cost  than $158 per                                                                    
day.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  informed the committee  that the  McDowell group                                                                    
was hired  to look at the  cost of alcohol abuse  in Alaska.                                                                    
He shared that  it was a cost of $1.2  billion to the state,                                                                    
approximately  $560  million  of  that  accounted  for  lost                                                                    
productivity. He  continued that  about $650 million  of the                                                                    
state's money  was being  spent on  the issues  of excessive                                                                    
alcohol  consumption.  He  added that  the  state  generated                                                                    
about $40 million in taxes.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:05:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez added  to Mr.  Jesse's answer.  She indicated                                                                    
that  when she  started  with  a plan  the  first thing  she                                                                    
wanted  to do  was  to  determine how  much  of the  court's                                                                    
budget  was  devoted  to  criminal  cases  encompassing  the                                                                    
Department of Law (LAW), The  Office of Public Advocacy, the                                                                    
Public  Defender's Office,  Police departments,  and others.                                                                    
She realized that she did  not have the ability or authority                                                                    
to collect  the information.  She thought  it would  be very                                                                    
beneficial to  policy makers to  know the sum total  cost of                                                                    
the criminal justice system.  She agreed with Representative                                                                    
Gattis that it did not equal $158 per day per bed.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:06:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon  appreciated   the  work  product  on                                                                    
behalf  of  the  workgroup.  He   made  a  comparative  fish                                                                    
reference. He  suggested that the  state was  potentially at                                                                    
the edge  of a paradigm shift;  if done right and  given the                                                                    
proper amount of resources Alaska  could see results similar                                                                    
to  Texas or  some other  states. He  commented that  of the                                                                    
major policy  initiatives the House Finance  Committee could                                                                    
undertake, the  plan could produce  an incredible  amount of                                                                    
savings, something on par with  Medicaid reform. He spoke of                                                                    
having some  authority because  he had  been working  on the                                                                    
DOC  budget  for  several years  and  Department  of  Public                                                                    
Safety's  budget for  the previous  two years.  He witnessed                                                                    
the  ping-ponging of  the dollar  that traveled  through the                                                                    
criminal justice  institutions in  the state.  He speculated                                                                    
that if  there was  a part  two to  the plan  he recommended                                                                    
that there  be an emphasis  on the tribal side.  He reviewed                                                                    
some statistics  including the figure  of 40 percent  of the                                                                    
prison  population being  young Alaska  Native males.  These                                                                    
prisoners return to their communities  after a minor offence                                                                    
likely involving alcohol they  reoffend, reoffend again, and                                                                    
become felons. He supported  working with Alaska's villages,                                                                    
tribal   courts,   circle  sentencing,   and   incorporating                                                                    
cultural sensitivity  into the reentry process  and prior to                                                                    
offending.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon recalled  a kid  in Togiak  two years                                                                    
prior who  encountered a stray  dog eating at the  fish rack                                                                    
and shot  the dog. He reported  that the kid had  received a                                                                    
call from  the child's mom  claiming she did not  know where                                                                    
her  son was  at. The  young man  was brought  to McLaughlin                                                                    
Youth  Center where  he  sat  for six  weeks  in the  summer                                                                    
months. As a legislator,  Representative Edgmon had tried to                                                                    
contact agencies  but did not  get any response.  He finally                                                                    
figured out the  kid's location and established  that he was                                                                    
okay. HE  offered that  it took  over six  weeks to  get him                                                                    
back to  the village  of Togiak. Luckily  the kid,  an honor                                                                    
student at Mount Edgecombe, returned  to graduate. The other                                                                    
9  of   10  kids   that  offended  would   have  potentially                                                                    
reoffended  and  returned  to the  correctional  system.  He                                                                    
pointed  out  that  it  was  a  circular  pattern  that  the                                                                    
legislature was attempting to address  with the efforts that                                                                    
had  been  made.  He  reiterated  his  appreciation  of  the                                                                    
presentation and reemphasized a  part two that would include                                                                    
a  tribal element  in order  to target  young Alaska  Native                                                                    
males who were reoffending  (probably the steepest number on                                                                    
a per  capita basis in the  US) and returning to  the system                                                                    
without getting needed treatment.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Commissioner   Taylor   responded  thanking   Representative                                                                    
Edgmon for  bringing up  a tribal  emphasis. He  spoke about                                                                    
reentry efforts in the rural  areas. He noted the efforts on                                                                    
behalf of  the department  to reach  out to  tribal entities                                                                    
and  would continue  to reach  out. He  highlighted doing  a                                                                    
better job of  insuring that the partnerships  had access to                                                                    
DOC.  He reported  that the  department was  working on  its                                                                    
partnerships  with  the   prisoner  re-entry  initiative  by                                                                    
including the  tribes and giving  them a voice.  He surmised                                                                    
that  without a  voice  at the  table  the department  would                                                                    
continue to  see failure that  it had already seen.  He made                                                                    
it clear that the department  had been actively working with                                                                    
Alaska  Native  Justice Center  in  Bristol  Bay to  improve                                                                    
accessibility and  assured the  committee he  would continue                                                                    
his efforts whole-heartedly.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Edgmon thanked  Commissioner Taylor  for his                                                                    
comments  and expressed  his appreciation  to the  committee                                                                    
for designating an entire meeting  to hear the presentation.                                                                    
He  was aware  that  the subject  did  not directly  involve                                                                    
dollars and  a budget. However,  he highlighted that  it did                                                                    
involve setting the  state in a policy  direction that would                                                                    
save what he thought would  be a significant amount of money                                                                    
down the road.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:11:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Pruitt  told of  an experience in  college in                                                                    
which his friend  had a job that he disagreed  with then and                                                                    
continued to agree  with currently. He asked  his friend why                                                                    
he did  it. His  friend responded by  informing him  that he                                                                    
made $1000  per night. His  friend ended up a  felon serving                                                                    
time  in  a  federal  prison   in  Seattle.  He  had  always                                                                    
remembered  his friend  and his  conversation  with him.  He                                                                    
relayed that  his friend had  found something that  he could                                                                    
not get  away from. He  conveyed that  it did not  take much                                                                    
time  for  his  friend  to  return to  prison  once  he  was                                                                    
released.  He opined  that part  of the  barriers that  were                                                                    
placed  on  criminals were,  in  some  cases, instituted  by                                                                    
legislators. He  continued to explain that  legislators felt                                                                    
that if  they were not  hard enough  on crime they  were not                                                                    
doing  their job  correctly. He  did not  like the  hard and                                                                    
soft discourse.  He expounded that  it was time to  be smart                                                                    
on  crime rather  than hard  or soft  on crime.  One of  the                                                                    
things  he   was  interested  in   knowing  about   was  the                                                                    
recidivism  aspect. He  continued to  explain that  the fact                                                                    
that  legislators placed  barriers  on offenders  reentering                                                                    
their  communities such  as  not being  allowed  to work  in                                                                    
certain positions or  limiting the number of  years a person                                                                    
could work in  a position. He surmised  that legislators had                                                                    
randomly   imposed  certain   restrictions   that  did   not                                                                    
necessarily match the crime  committed. Therefore, there was                                                                    
a  cost  associated with  recidivism  and  a potential  cost                                                                    
associated with some sort of  social program they might have                                                                    
to   participate  in   because   they   could  not   achieve                                                                    
employment.  He  had not  heard  in  the day's  presentation                                                                    
about  what  the state  could  do  to  change and  place  in                                                                    
statute  the correct  mechanisms  for those  people who  had                                                                    
come out  of prison to  ensure that the legislature  was not                                                                    
placing undue barriers for them.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:14:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez credited  Representative Pruitt  for bringing                                                                    
up a  significant and  valid point;  collateral consequences                                                                    
to crime. The  good news was that prior to  2013, Alaska was                                                                    
unaware  how many  collateral consequences  or barriers  the                                                                    
state had  erected as a  result of criminal  conviction. She                                                                    
reported that  the American  Bar Association  recognized the                                                                    
problem existed  in every state. The  association received a                                                                    
grant  that funded  hard-working young  lawyers to  identify                                                                    
the collateral consequence statutes  in regulations in every                                                                    
state.  Alaska's  statutes  and  regulations  were  reviewed                                                                    
early  in the  process due  to the  legislative support  for                                                                    
looking  at  the  state's  practices.   They  were  able  to                                                                    
identify  1625 statutes  and regulations  that provided  for                                                                    
some kind of  barrier or collateral consequence  as a result                                                                    
of  criminal conviction.  She highlighted  that  746 of  the                                                                    
barriers  pertained  to  employment,   many  of  which  were                                                                    
rationally  related  to  the  promotion  of  public  safety.                                                                    
However,  she emphasized  that  many of  them  were not  and                                                                    
referred to page 22 of  the Recidivism Reduction Plan (slide                                                                    
26 - or the spiral bond  document in file - the report). She                                                                    
offered that many  people thought it was in order  to have a                                                                    
committee made up of prosecutors,  policy makers, and others                                                                    
evaluate  every one  of the  provisions  and decide  whether                                                                    
they  were rationally  related to  the  promotion of  public                                                                    
safety. She stressed that without  looking at the provisions                                                                    
carefully to avoid making it  impossible for prisoners being                                                                    
released that  did want to  work and support  their families                                                                    
to obtain employment.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Jessee  added that the other  possibility the commission                                                                    
and the  Criminal Justice working  group were going  to look                                                                    
at   was    using   individualized   waivers    in   certain                                                                    
circumstances. The problem with  the current system was that                                                                    
an employer had  to offer a person a position,  hold it open                                                                    
while that  person applied  for a waiver,  and wait  to find                                                                    
out whether  the waiver  was approved.  He surmised  that an                                                                    
employer would have to be  pretty committed, firstly to take                                                                    
a  chance on  hiring  someone with  a  criminal record,  and                                                                    
secondly to wait on a  waiver. He argued that employment was                                                                    
critical to lowering recidivism.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:17:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Pruitt  appreciated Mr. Jesse's  comments. He                                                                    
asked if  there was something  more the state needed  to do,                                                                    
for example, setting  up an additional group to  look at the                                                                    
issues. He  wondered if the  commission was  handling things                                                                    
moving forward.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:18:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead informed  the  committee that  it  was a  specific                                                                    
charge to  the Criminal Justice  Commission and there  was a                                                                    
specific  workgroup, a  subgroup, called,  "the Barriers  to                                                                    
Reentry  and Collateral  Consequences  of Crimes  Subgroup."                                                                    
The subgroup  was currently meeting  once per month  and had                                                                    
the study that Ms.  Gutierrez referenced listing 746 crimes.                                                                    
They  were  working  on  the  study  and  intended  to  make                                                                    
recommendations potentially within a  year, although she was                                                                    
unclear about the timeframe.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:18:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Pruitt  suggested   there  were   different                                                                    
subgroups  charged  with the  completion  of  a task  within                                                                    
three  years.  He  wondered  if   the  commission  would  be                                                                    
reporting back  intermittently to  the legislature or  if it                                                                    
would  wait to  come  back at  the end  of  three years.  He                                                                    
suggested  that because  of the  fiscal crisis  it would  be                                                                    
better to hear back sooner  rather than later so that issues                                                                    
could be addressed quickly.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Mead  indicated  that  their  plan  was  to  come  back                                                                    
annually  with recommendations.  She  thought  the last  set                                                                    
would be the largest.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:19:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg  relayed  a  personal  experience                                                                    
shadowing a  judge in Fairbanks  in the  therapeutic courts.                                                                    
He  reported that  predominately middle-aged  women attended                                                                    
and  were  happy  to  have  gone  through  the  program.  He                                                                    
wondered about a baseline of  the entire picture. There were                                                                    
many  different  components including  housing,  employment,                                                                    
and collateral consequences.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:21:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Gutierrez responded  that  if the  PEW  was invited  to                                                                    
Alaska  it would  perform a  comprehensive data  analysis on                                                                    
the factors  driving Alaska's prison population  growth. She                                                                    
remarked that four factors had  been outlined in the current                                                                    
meeting. There  would likely be additional  factors that the                                                                    
state simply  did not  know about  due to  the comprehensive                                                                    
collection of  data that was really  required. She continued                                                                    
to explain  that the Alaska Criminal  Justice Commission was                                                                    
anxious  to have  PEW come  in  to advance  the state  light                                                                    
years ahead on  the work that was required  to be completed.                                                                    
She opined  that it was  a huge  advantage for the  state to                                                                    
have PEW's  people come do  the work,  as the state  did not                                                                    
have the proper manpower. The PEW  offered to do the work at                                                                    
no cost  to the state.  Department of Corrections  and other                                                                    
departments  would likely  give up  man hours  to work  with                                                                    
PEW. She  suggested that  in regards to  some of  the issues                                                                    
that were  brought up such  as housing,  therapeutic courts,                                                                    
and community-based approaches  for reducing recidivism, the                                                                    
next step  would be  to design  an implementation  plan. She                                                                    
wanted  to  be able  to  inform  the legislature  about  its                                                                    
choices  including timeframes,  cost  estimates, numbers  of                                                                    
people going to be  served, expected outcomes, and potential                                                                    
savings for the state. She  explained that the state had not                                                                    
taken  this next  step because  it was  not the  mandate and                                                                    
because  it  was  the  finance  committee's  prerogative  to                                                                    
decide on the next step.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:24:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg  suggested  sending  them  [PEW's                                                                    
people]  to communities  he had  previously represented  and                                                                    
communities in Representative Edgmon's  district to see what                                                                    
Alaska was like.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:25:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gara expressed a lack  of hope that the state                                                                    
would  avoid  building  another prison.  He  suggested  that                                                                    
trying  to  prevent people  who  had  committed crimes  from                                                                    
committing additional  crimes could  be compared  to bailing                                                                    
water out  of a boat  that was taking  on water at  the same                                                                    
time. He  had not heard  much in the presentation  about the                                                                    
people who  had never committed  a crime who would  commit a                                                                    
crime.  He relayed  that there  was a  huge waiting  list of                                                                    
people  unable to  get into  affordable  housing. He  voiced                                                                    
that the  state had a  pile-up program for prisoners  to get                                                                    
into  housing,  but  the  innocent   people  who  had  never                                                                    
committed a crime  before and could not  get into affordable                                                                    
housing  could be  expected  to become  part  of the  prison                                                                    
population. He spoke of a  large population of neglected and                                                                    
abused children  who had  never committed  a crime  in their                                                                    
lives. He  shared that 23  percent of Alaska's  foster youth                                                                    
would end up in jail.  These were people who never committed                                                                    
a crime that  were not being addressed because  they had not                                                                    
yet committed a crime. He  posed the question about what the                                                                    
state  has  done  to  address the  foster  youth  group.  He                                                                    
answered that five years previously  the governor had called                                                                    
for a  study to determine  how short on resources  the state                                                                    
was for  the particular group.  He noted that the  state had                                                                    
not implemented that  study and in five years  the number of                                                                    
foster youth had grown from  1700 to 2400. He continued that                                                                    
on  a per-person  basis the  state was  providing fewer  and                                                                    
fewer resources  to the  group of kids  of which  24 percent                                                                    
would  end up  in jail.  He concluded  by saying  that water                                                                    
could be bailed  out of a boat by  reducing recidivism which                                                                    
he supported,  but water  was also being  taken on  the boat                                                                    
with the innocent  who have yet to commit a  crime. He added                                                                    
that very little other than  substance abuse treatment would                                                                    
help. He wanted to hear more  about what the state was going                                                                    
to  do for  those  individuals who  have  never committed  a                                                                    
crime. He indicated he was speaking out of frustration.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Neuman  understood Representative  Gara's concerns,                                                                    
but emphasized that the charge of  the group was to focus on                                                                    
people  that were  already in  the  correctional system.  He                                                                    
commented that  the state had  added additional  funding and                                                                    
done what it  could to address the many needs  of the state.                                                                    
He suggested Representative Gara  speak to the Commissioners                                                                    
to help individuals. He was  unclear what the group could do                                                                    
about addressing  those who had  not yet committed  a crime.                                                                    
He acknowledged that  the group would take  his concern into                                                                    
account.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Gara restated  that  the bulk  of the  funds                                                                    
that went  into the  foster care  system were  court ordered                                                                    
which included an increase in  the daily reimbursement rate.                                                                    
In his opinion,  it was not the best use  of money. In terms                                                                    
of staff for foster youth  on a per-child basis, he observed                                                                    
had shrunk according to a study  that said the state did not                                                                    
have the resources  for the kids in the first  place. He saw                                                                    
the  plan  as   a  sinking  boat  unless   both  sides  were                                                                    
addressed.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:28:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Saddler  wanted to  give voice  to the  people of                                                                    
Alaska  that did  not commit  crimes but  paid the  cost for                                                                    
crimes who  might be asking  themselves why they had  to pay                                                                    
for people  who said they  would reoffend or return  to jail                                                                    
without  job  training,  a second  or  fifteenth  chance  at                                                                    
treatment, or  educational assistance. He wanted  to know at                                                                    
what  point personal  responsibility  for  crimes came  into                                                                    
play.  He hoped  the work  that  the group  did provided  an                                                                    
answer  to  those  people  who did  not  commit  crimes.  He                                                                    
relayed  that he  heard the  question from  his constituents                                                                    
and hoped to get an answer.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Neuman  thanked all  the  people  involved in  the                                                                    
program.   He    acknowledged   attendees    including   the                                                                    
commissioners of  DOC and DHSS,  the deputy  commissioner of                                                                    
DOLWD, and  the CEO  of the Alaska  Mental Health  and Trust                                                                    
Authority. He relayed that Mr.  Jesses had gone to his board                                                                    
with a  request for  $82 thousand to  hire Ms.  Gutierrez to                                                                    
write  the report.  The report  did  not cost  the State  of                                                                    
Alaska any  money. He  also acknowledged  other participants                                                                    
including the  CEO and  the executive  director of  AHFC. He                                                                    
commended the entity  to secure housing for  266 people per-                                                                    
year for housing  for up to two months.  He acknowledged the                                                                    
Alaska  Court System,  the Alaska  State Troopers,  DPS, and                                                                    
the University of Alaska. He  expounded that outreach to the                                                                    
University  proved  helpful.  It   was  asked  to  implement                                                                    
programs  in  behavioral  health to  cultivate  professional                                                                    
providers  that could  work in  the correctional  system. He                                                                    
provided   additional   outreach  information.   He   really                                                                    
appreciated the efforts of the  combined group. He concluded                                                                    
that the answer  to the question of whether  to move forward                                                                    
with  the plan  was, "yes."  He  did not  believe there  was                                                                    
another choice.  He briefly spoke  of budget  reductions and                                                                    
the  challenges of  the  fiscal crisis.  He  talked about  a                                                                    
discussion he had had with Commissioner Taylor about what                                                                       
DOC and DHSS were going to do. He thanked everyone for                                                                          
their time and attention.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:33:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 3:33 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
Recidivism Reduction Plan-2015.pdf HFIN 2/18/2015 1:30:00 PM
HFIN Recidivism Reduction Plan Overview
HFIN RRP Presentation FINAL.pdf HFIN 2/18/2015 1:30:00 PM