Legislature(2015 - 2016)BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)

02/25/2015 12:00 PM Senate JUDICIARY

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12:03:24 PM Start
12:03:45 PM Crime Summit
05:06:54 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled: TELECONFERENCED
-- Invited and Public Testimony --
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
              SENATE JUDICIARY STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                           12:03 p.m.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Lesil McGuire, Chair                                                                                                    
Senator John Coghill, Vice Chair                                                                                                
Senator Mia Costello                                                                                                            
Senator Bill Wielechowski                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator Peter Micciche                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
OTHER LEGISLATORS PRESENT                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                              
Senator Johnny Ellis                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Crime Summit                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CARMEN GUTIERREZ, Owner                                                                                                         
Justice Improvement Solutions                                                                                                   
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided an introduction and brief overview                                                               
of the Recidivism Reduction Plan.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
JUSTICE ALEX BRYNER, Commissioner                                                                                               
Alaska Criminal Justice Commission                                                                                              
POSITION STATEMENT: Discussed the work of the Alaska Criminal                                                                 
Justice Commission.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
RON TAYLOR, Commissioner                                                                                                        
Department of Corrections                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:   Discussed  recidivism reduction  and reentry                                                            
efforts DOC is undertaking.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SUSANNE DI PIETRO, Executive Director                                                                                           
Alaska Judicial Council                                                                                                         
Alaska Court System                                                                                                             
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:   Discussed  the work  of the Alaska  Judicial                                                            
Council.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Gary VanLandingham, Director                                                                                                    
Pew-MacArthur Results First Initiative                                                                                          
Pew Charitable Trusts                                                                                                           
Washington, D.C.                                                                                                                
POSITION  STATEMENT:   Described the  Pew-MacArthur Results  First                                                            
Initiative                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
KAREN FORREST, Deputy Director                                                                                                  
Administration/Programs                                                                                                         
Division of Juvenile Justice                                                                                                    
Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS)                                                                                 
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  Discussed DJJ activities and programs.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
AL WALL, Director                                                                                                               
Division of Behavioral Health                                                                                                   
Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS)                                                                                 
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Discussed the apprenticeship program.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
RICK SVOBODNY, Deputy Attorney General                                                                                          
Criminal Division                                                                                                               
Department of Law (DOL)                                                                                                         
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION   STATEMENT:     Discussed   the   Department  of   Law's                                                            
perspective  of  recidivism  and pre-trial  services  and  offered                                                              
suggestions.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KAREN LOEFFLER, United States Attorney                                                                                          
District of Alaska                                                                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   Discussed  the federal  government role  in                                                            
crime  reduction in  Alaska and  what  it is  doing with  outreach                                                              
prevention and smart on crime.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MYRON FANNING, Deputy Chief of Police                                                                                           
Anchorage Police Department                                                                                                     
Municipality of Anchorage                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Discussed four programs designed to reduce                                                               
recidivism.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
TONY PIPER, Program Manager                                                                                                     
ASAP Statewide and 24/7 Sobriety                                                                                                
Division of Behavioral Health                                                                                                   
Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS)                                                                                 
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Discussed the 24/7 Sobriety Program.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DENNIS JOHNSON, Director                                                                                                        
Alaska Pretrial Services                                                                                                        
Kenai, Alaska                                                                                                                   
POSITION STATEMENT: Presented information about electronic                                                                    
monitoring.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
JANET MCCABE, Partners for Progress                                                                                             
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Described the Partners Reentry Center in                                                                  
Anchorage.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DENISE MORRIS, President and CEO                                                                                                
Alaska Native Justice Center                                                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Discussed ANJC programs and initiatives to                                                                
reduce recidivism.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
NICOLE BORROMEO, General Counsel                                                                                                
Alaska Federation of Natives                                                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Discussed AFN interest in and efforts to                                                                  
reduce recidivism.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MARIE STEWMAN, Director of Planning and Grants                                                                                  
Southcentral Foundation                                                                                                         
Family Wellness Warriors Initiative                                                                                             
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Discussed SCF efforts to reduce recidivism.                                                              
                                                                                                                                
QUINLAN STEINER, Director                                                                                                       
Public Defender Agency                                                                                                          
Department of Administration (DOA)                                                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Discussed the need for a long-term strategy                                                              
to measure the effectiveness of a program.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
NANCY MEADE, General Counsel                                                                                                    
Administrative Staff                                                                                                            
Alaska Court System                                                                                                             
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    Discussed   the  Court  System's  integral                                                            
partnerships,  the  important  work   yet  to  be  done,  and  the                                                              
questions  that  still need  answers  so  that more  programs  and                                                              
steps can be taken.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
JEFF JESSEE, Chief Executive Officer                                                                                            
Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority                                                                                            
Department of Revenue (DOR)                                                                                                     
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:   Discussed  the critical  need for  a central                                                            
data repository  and analytical  capacity that does  not currently                                                              
exist in the criminal justice system.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
12:03:24 PM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR  LESIL   MCGUIRE  called   the  Senate  Judiciary   Standing                                                            
Committee meeting  to order at 12:03  p.m. Present at the  call to                                                              
order were Senators Ellis and Chair McGuire.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
^Crime Summit                                                                                                                   
                          Crime Summit                                                                                      
12:03:45 PM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  announced the  opening  of  the Crime  Summit  and                                                              
discussion  on  ways state  dollars  can  be  put into  the  penal                                                              
system that results in better outcomes for human beings.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR ELLIS thanked  the chair for her leadership  and her staff                                                              
for  organizing the  summit. Noting  that the  process began  last                                                              
year, he  said there is much  more to do on  recidivism reduction,                                                              
justice reinvestment,  and right on crime. The  state can't afford                                                              
to build another  prison, because of the human  lives involved and                                                              
the state's budget.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE said  in 2003, it caught members  attention when the                                                              
Alaska   Criminal   Justice   Council   recommended   re-examining                                                              
probation  and pretrial  strategies, strengthening  rehabilitative                                                              
programming to reduce  recidivism, looking at new  and restorative                                                              
justice   possibilities,   providing  more   community   diversion                                                              
opportunities   so  that   people  actually   heal  and   recover,                                                              
improving  mental health  practices, and  re-examining the  dollar                                                              
amounts applied to property crimes.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
By 2007, Alaska  had five times the prison population  that it had                                                              
in 1981 and  spending had doubled.  SB 64 was a step  forward, but                                                              
today the  Department of Corrections  is operating at  101 percent                                                              
of its  capacity and  in the last  decade spending on  corrections                                                              
increased by more than 86.6 percent.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
She said  today she  is looking  at how  people who make  mistakes                                                              
can  receive  help  while  incarcerated   to  hopefully  stop  the                                                              
revolving cycle of  getting out and then returning  to prison. She                                                              
wants to look  at why people make  mistakes - do they  have mental                                                              
illness  or an  addiction?  What  happens within  the  corrections                                                              
system, who comprises  the population, and what do  people do when                                                              
they get  out? She  said the  co-chairs of  the Finance  Committee                                                              
don't know how to absorb the costs of this particular budget.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE said  two  weeks  ago the  committee  had a  mental                                                              
health lunch  and learn  offering information  about drug  therapy                                                              
using  Vivitrol  that treats  opiate  and alcohol  addiction.  Now                                                              
they  want  to look  at  what  other  places  have done  and  best                                                              
practices to  adopt, because what  has been done is  too expensive                                                              
and doesn't lead to the results people want.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
12:12:12 PM                                                                                                                   
CARMEN   GUTIERREZ,   Owner,   Justice    Improvement   Solutions,                                                              
Anchorage,  Alaska,  said  she  is on  contract  with  the  Alaska                                                              
Mental Health  Authority  to write the  2015 Recidivism  Reduction                                                              
Plan. She  highlighted her background  as an attorney for  over 25                                                              
years and  service as a deputy  commissioner to the  Department of                                                              
Corrections.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
She said the  Recidivism Reduction Plan comes from  House Bill 266                                                              
that passed  last year.  Intent language  directed the  Department                                                              
of  Corrections  (DOC),  the Department  of  Labor  and  Workforce                                                              
Development  (DOLWD),  Alaska  Housing  Finance  Corporation,  the                                                              
Department of  Health and Social  Services (DHSS), and  the Alaska                                                              
Mental Health Trust  Authority to work together  gathering data on                                                              
substance  abuse,  mental  health,  employment,  housing  services                                                              
needed,  and   current  services   being  provided   to  returning                                                              
citizens.  They  were  to  propose  effectiveness  and  efficiency                                                              
measures  and develop  a plan  for  those who  are being  released                                                              
from correctional  institutions  that collaboratively  address the                                                              
needs  of those returning  citizens.  The goal  was to assist  the                                                              
main departments  to improve treatment  and outcomes  for recently                                                              
released inmates.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
She  reviewed  the  reasons  there  is  concern  about  recidivism                                                              
reduction  in  Alaska.  In  January,  DOC  was  operating  at  101                                                              
percent of its  general capacity (not maximum). It  cost the state                                                              
$250  million  to  build  Goose Creek  and  the  annual  operating                                                              
budget is  $50 million per  year. The problem  is that  the prison                                                              
population continues  to grow 3  percent per year. The  Pew Public                                                              
Safety Project publication  notes that Alaska has  the 3rd fastest                                                              
growing  prison population  in  the U.S.,  second  to Wyoming  and                                                              
Iowa.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GUTIERREZ  said  the  3  percent   growth  rate  exceeds  the                                                              
population growth  by four fold,  despite crime rate  decreases in                                                              
Alaska. According  to FBI  statistics, property  crime rates  have                                                              
dropped 40 percent and violent crime has dropped 9 percent.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
12:16:43 PM                                                                                                                   
She noted  that in 2007  and in 2008,  states that faced  the same                                                              
significant  budget  deficits that  Alaska  is facing  decided  it                                                              
wasn't realistic to  think they could build themselves  out of the                                                              
problem by building more prisons.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Today,  DOC incarcerates  more than  6,300 individuals,  including                                                              
electronic  monitoring (EM)  and  halfway houses.  According to  a                                                              
recent Judicial  Council  study, over 255,000  Alaskans have  been                                                              
convicted  of an  offense  since  1980 and  95  percent have  been                                                              
released into  Alaska communities.  In 2014, 377  convicted felons                                                              
were released  into Alaska  communities each  month. Of  those, 63                                                              
percent, or  238 people, recidivated  in 2011. At $158  per inmate                                                              
per day  that cost is  $37,762 per day. That  is just the  cost of                                                              
corrections; it  doesn't include  courts, police, prosecutors  and                                                              
defense attorneys, or the cost of new victims.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
12:19:33 PM                                                                                                                   
MS.  GUTIERREZ said  Alaska is  at  a crossroads.  It will  either                                                              
have to spend  $300 million to build  a new prison or  recommit to                                                              
send inmates out  of state or invest in  cost-effective strategies                                                              
that target  the actual factors  that are driving  Alaska's prison                                                              
population growth.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
How are  those strategies determined?  Ms. Gutierrez said  the Pew                                                              
Public   Safety   Performance  Project   offers   free   technical                                                              
assistance  in  identifying  factors   driving  prison  population                                                              
growth and  helps come up  with targeted evidence-based  solutions                                                              
to  address  those drivers,  not  to  be  soft  on crime,  but  to                                                              
meaningfully  hold   offenders  accountable  and   improve  public                                                              
safety in the process.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
12:21:20 PM                                                                                                                   
MS.  GUTIERREZ   discussed  the  factors  driving   rising  prison                                                              
population growth.  The first is that the number  of pre-trial and                                                              
un-sentenced inmates  has increased from 27 percent  in 2002 to 40                                                              
percent in 2014.  This means that prisons are  largely filled with                                                              
individuals unable  to post bail  who are awaiting the  outcome of                                                              
their  case.  It is  also  significant  that  the number  of  non-                                                              
violent  offenders  has  increased  from  48 percent  in  2002  64                                                              
percent  today. She  highlighted  that the  public  overwhelmingly                                                              
believes  that reformation  trumps  incarceration for  non-violent                                                              
offenders. Prison is  for the violent. Another driver  is that the                                                              
increased average  stay has more  than doubled from 2002  to 2014.                                                              
Also, the  number of  probation violations  has increased  and has                                                              
become the second reason for felony incarceration in the state.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
12:24:24 PM                                                                                                                   
MS.   GUTIERREZ  discussed   a  potential   solution  citing   the                                                              
experience in  Texas. The state  most notorious for being  hard on                                                              
criminals decided  it could  not afford to  spend $900  million to                                                              
fill the  projected 17,000 prison  bed shortfall over  five years.                                                              
As  an  alternative, they  identified  reformative  programs  that                                                              
targeted  the prison  drivers  and  invested $241,000  million  in                                                              
evidence-based  strategies to reduce  recidivism. There  were drug                                                              
courts,  intermediate sanction  facilities, residential  treatment                                                              
programs,  prison treatment  programs,  community based  substance                                                              
abuse  treatment programs  for  probationers and  a  PACE form  of                                                              
probation. The recidivism  rate dropped 25 percent;  crime dropped                                                              
18 percent,  the imprisonment  rate dropped  10 percent,  and they                                                              
have avoided nearly $3 billion in prison costs.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
12:26:23 PM                                                                                                                   
She said that in  2007 the only reformative program  in Alaska was                                                              
a federally-funded  substance  abuse treatment  program. With  the                                                              
legislature's    support,    programs    on    substance    abuse,                                                              
educational/vocational  and  cognitive behavioral  treatment  were                                                              
instated  over   time.  These  are   the  three   "gold  standard"                                                              
reformative programs  that have proven to address  recidivism. But                                                              
as of 2014, only  2.9 percent of the DOC operating  budget went to                                                              
these programs. Recidivism  was at 66.03 percent in  2007 and then                                                              
it started to  drop coincidentally with the implementation  of the                                                              
programs.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GUTIERREZ said  the recent  DOC  audit indicates  that it  is                                                              
running  very   high-quality  and   effective  institutional   and                                                              
community   based  reformative   programs.  The  Alaska   Criminal                                                              
Justice  Commission's  work,  reentry  programs  operated  by  the                                                              
Alaska  Native Justice  Center in  the  Partner's Reentry  Center,                                                              
PACE, Sobriety  24/7 and therapeutic  courts are working,  and the                                                              
DOC has  a fabulous relationship  with the Alaska  Housing Finance                                                              
Corporation   and   the   Department  of   Labor   and   Workforce                                                              
Development (DOLWD).                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS. GUTIERREZ  stated that what  isn't working is that  Alaska has                                                              
no  systematic method  to  collect  and analyze  criminal  justice                                                              
data  (addressed on  page 39  of the  Recidivism Reduction  Plan).                                                              
This is what  the state needs and  what Pew would talk  about in a                                                              
little while.  Other than ad hoc  studies that are mostly  done by                                                              
the  Judicial Council  and University  of  Alaska Anchorage  (UAA)                                                              
Justice Center,  there is no way  to report to the  legislature on                                                              
the  effectiveness of  their  programs or  the  trajectory of  the                                                              
prison population other  than from the masterful work  done by the                                                              
DOC data analyst.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
12:29:57 PM                                                                                                                   
MS  GUTIERREZ concluded  her comments  saying the  state needs  an                                                              
effective  reentry program  that includes  a reentry  coordinator.                                                              
To  improve  reentry  outcomes,  community-based  reentry  efforts                                                              
need support and  community-based substance abuse  treatment needs                                                              
to be  expanded. She said  the report notes  that it costs  $105 a                                                              
day to  provide treatment  in the community.  Clearly, there  is a                                                              
significant   savings  to   help   people  in   their  homes   and                                                              
communities as opposed  to uprooting them because  they violated a                                                              
condition  of probation,  because  they couldn't  stay sober.  She                                                              
said the next step  is to hear from the legislature  about whether                                                              
it  wants  to   move  toward  evidence  based   strategies  as  an                                                              
alternative  to  incarceration.  There  is no  reason  why  Alaska                                                              
should have  anything other than  better outcomes than  those were                                                              
achieved by Texas.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
12:32:35 PM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR ELLIS  thanked Ms. Gutierrez  for her ongoing  efforts and                                                              
recalled  a  previous  budget  cutting   exercise  by  the  Senate                                                              
Finance  Committee.  They thought  that  getting  rid  of all  the                                                              
substance abuse  programs in  the prisons was  going to be  a wise                                                              
financial investment  for the State of Alaska, and  it was exactly                                                              
the opposite.  It was an "epic fail  in terms of judgement  in our                                                              
state budgeting."                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
He  asked  her to  recap  the  cost difference  between  hard  bed                                                              
incarceration  ($158)  and  the average  cost  of  community-based                                                              
substance abuse and mental health treatment services.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. GUTIERREZ  said the  cost of  community-based services  varies                                                              
widely  throughout the  state and  depending on  the program,  but                                                              
according the Division  of Behavioral Health the cost  is $105 per                                                              
day  in an  urban community.  It  is higher  in rural  communities                                                              
that are  attempting to  serve women with  children. She  said the                                                              
good news  is that community-based  treatment is not  only cheaper                                                              
but it  is also addressing  people's issues  in their  actual day-                                                              
to-day  life circumstances.  The  Washington  Institute of  Public                                                              
Policy has  found that the  benefits of  the program are  going to                                                              
exceed the cost by 100 percent.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS.  GUTIERREZ  said   she  didn't  know  the   cost  of  treating                                                              
individuals  in custody,  but the  acute psychiatric  beds at  the                                                              
DOC are  extraordinarily  expensive. Moreover,  there are  only 44                                                              
acute  beds  available   in  DOC  and  168  sub-acute   beds.  The                                                              
department has a  more limited capacity for serving  mental health                                                              
needs than any other provider in Alaska.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
She  said  she didn't  know  the  cost  of running  the  Anchorage                                                              
Community  Mental Health  Program  but it  is much  less than  the                                                              
cost of  running the acute psychiatric  beds at DOC.  She stressed                                                              
that the capacity  is in the community. She mentioned  the two DOC                                                              
reentry programs  - the  Identify Institutional Discharge  Program                                                              
(IIDP) and the  ADAP Plus Insurance Continuation  (APIC) Program -                                                              
that are very  successful and provide significant  cost savings to                                                              
Alaskans.  The recent  Alaska  Mental Health  Trust  Authority/DOC                                                              
study shows that  trust beneficiaries recidivate at  a much higher                                                              
rate  than  do non-trust  beneficiaries,  and  their cost  to  the                                                              
state is  significantly higher  in custody than  when they  are in                                                              
the community.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
12:38:54 PM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR MCGUIRE  recognized Justice Bryner  and thanked him  for his                                                              
work.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
12:39:31 PM                                                                                                                   
JUSTICE  ALEX BRYNER,  Alaska  Criminal Justice  Commission,  said                                                              
that the commission  is a powerful group and discussed  what it is                                                              
doing and  what has  been working.  He reviewed the  commissioners                                                              
and  their   experience  in   alternative  sentencing   and  early                                                              
initiatives  that  worked  that   didn't  rely  on  incarceration,                                                              
although  none were  evidence based.  The  fact that  some of  the                                                              
initiatives are still around means they do work.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He noted that over  30 states had undergone reform  like Texas and                                                              
overall  the evidence  shows practices  that work  and those  that                                                              
don't work.  It corroborates  the fact  that incarceration,  alone                                                              
as the main effort  to handle criminal problems,  spurs the growth                                                              
of recidivism.  The bottom  line is to  ensure public  safety, but                                                              
the question  is how to  do that while  at the same  time reducing                                                              
the vast prison cost.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
JUSTICE  BRYNER  said the  commission  is  made  up of  top  level                                                              
members  of the  executive branch,  people  who know  how to  make                                                              
things  work. Alaska  has the  resources to  make these  evidence-                                                              
based  programs  work  and  we  know how  much  can  be  saved  by                                                              
assisting  reentry,  he said.  A  lot  of released  prisoners  are                                                              
charged  with  participating  in  a community  program,  but  they                                                              
don't do  it because they can't  afford to participate  after just                                                              
being released. They go back to prison.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Every  state has  to tailor  its efforts  based on  evidence-based                                                              
practices in  other states,  but Alaska is  unique because  of its                                                              
large size and  small population. Also, releasing a  person from a                                                              
village into  a large  urban area like  Anchorage sets  the person                                                              
up  for  likely  failure. The  statistical  development  of  those                                                              
programs is a very  significant factor and a big  cost and now the                                                              
Pew  Commission  specializes  in   preparing  them.  They  have  a                                                              
tremendous  amount  of proven  information  about  what will  work                                                              
that can  be adjusted state by  state. The Pew Commission  does it                                                              
all for free  and essentially ends up leaving  the Alaska database                                                              
in the hands of  Alaskans who will keep it up from  that point on.                                                              
"So,  how can we  afford not  to pay  for that  service when  it's                                                              
free?"                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
He  highlighted  that the  Pew  Foundation  was available  at  the                                                              
inception  of the  commission's  work  but because  of  a lack  of                                                              
communication  and misunderstanding  they  couldn't  get what  was                                                              
necessary  to bring  the Pew  Commission  in. Simply  a letter  of                                                              
intent   is   needed   from  each   branch   of   government   and                                                              
unfortunately  that wasn't  forthcoming  last  year. He  expressed                                                              
hope  that  it  would  with  the   new  governor.  Yesterday,  the                                                              
Criminal  Justice  Commission  considered   the  issue  and  voted                                                              
unanimously  to recommend  to the legislature,  the Judiciary  and                                                              
the Executive  branches to  do what is  necessary to  request help                                                              
from the Pew Commission.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
12:53:35 PM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said the Senate would  work with the other  body to                                                              
ensure that the letter is prepared by the Speaker and President.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
JUSTICE BRYNER offered  to answer questions and  briefly discussed                                                              
the work on sentencing, probation and parole inconsistencies.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said the committee  would like to have  him discuss                                                              
the report at another time.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
12:56:23 PM                                                                                                                   
At ease from 12:56 to 12:58 p.m.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
12:58:23 PM                                                                                                                   
RON TAYLOR,  Commissioner, Department  of Corrections,  Anchorage,                                                              
Alaska, said he  will focus on the work that's  done internally at                                                              
DOC. Ms.  Gutierrez  captured the  work that  is going on  outside                                                              
the department  with sister  agencies. It is  good for  the public                                                              
to  understand  that a  lot  of  the work  related  to  recidivism                                                              
reduction and  reentry is already  being done  and it has  taken a                                                              
great deal  of effort. He displayed  the DOC mission  statement as                                                              
a  reminder  that   it  is  more  than  confinement.   It  is  the                                                              
reformative  programs piece  that Ms. Gutierrez  discussed.  It is                                                              
also  how  to   do  a  better  job  of  successfully   and  safely                                                              
transitioning people from the institutions into the communities.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR  reviewed the data from the  unified system of                                                              
prisons.  He  said about  37,100  offenders  are booked  into  DOC                                                              
facilities. This  represents over  22,000 individuals. As  of June                                                              
30, 2004,  6,200 persons were either  in one of  the institutions,                                                              
at  a halfway  house or  on electronic  monitoring. Another  6,000                                                              
some were  on probation or  parole. Addressing current  trends, he                                                              
focused  on  older inmates  and  the  rising medical  costs.  That                                                              
population  continues to  grow at  an  even faster  rate than  the                                                              
young population.  Not only are  they staying longer,  but they're                                                              
getting older.  This results in  increased medical  costs, because                                                              
DOC  provides all  their medical  care while  they're in  custody.                                                              
The  most troubling  data point  to  him personally  is the  over-                                                              
representation   of   minority    populations.   Right   now   the                                                              
commissioner, the  deputy commissioner, and an acting  director of                                                              
institutions are  African Americans. Someone recently  pointed out                                                              
that considering  the statistics,  one of the  three should  be in                                                              
prison.  That hits  very close  to home  and he  knows that's  the                                                              
same  for the  Alaska Native  community.  What this  says is  that                                                              
something is  wrong. We have  to do a  better job of  reaching the                                                              
young men and  women inside the institutions and  making sure that                                                              
they stay out.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
He discussed  the FY14  annual and daily  costs of having  someone                                                              
in  a  hard  prison  bed  versus  community  residential  centers,                                                              
electronic  monitoring, and  probation and  parole. It costs  $142                                                              
per  day for  a hard  bed; just  under $90  per day  in a  halfway                                                              
house; $23  for electronic  monitoring; and  probation and  parole                                                              
costs about $7.50  per day. The breakdown of the  hard bed cost is                                                              
$103 for  institutional confinement,  $22  for healthcare,  $8 for                                                              
statewide administrative  direct costs, $5 for support,  and about                                                              
$4.17  for reformative  programs.  Proportionally, the  programing                                                              
costs are a very small part.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:04:34 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  TAYLOR said  the reentry  process  is about  getting                                                              
people ready  when they  come into  the institution, helping  them                                                              
transition out,  and doing  the job to  keep them out.  This model                                                              
involves seven phases  and is based on transitioning  from prisons                                                              
to  the community  model. He  noted  that a  former DOC  colleague                                                              
helped  develop  this  model  when  he  worked  for  the  National                                                              
Institute   of  Corrections.   He  said   it's  interesting   that                                                              
recidivism rates are  in line with bookings. The  curve of booking                                                              
rates and  recidivism are about  the same  going back to  2003. In                                                              
2010  there was  a high of  42,000 and  now it's  down to  37,000.                                                              
Bookings have  dropped below the 2005  numbers yet there  is now a                                                              
higher percentage  of those that are un-sentenced  than sentenced.                                                              
That is  startling. The  question is whether  more should  be done                                                              
in the  pretrial phase so  they aren't  booked into the  jails and                                                              
prison.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:06:58 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  TAYLOR   said  that  in  the  first   phase  of  the                                                              
assessment  and  classification,  DOC  has  done  a  good  job  of                                                              
looking at  the persons  coming through the  system and  trying to                                                              
determine their risks  and needs and strengths. The  risks are not                                                              
only  in terms  of  security  for housing  but  also  the risk  to                                                              
reoffend. The  needs, strengths,  and motivations are  assessed to                                                              
help  them  be  successful  inside the  institution  and  as  they                                                              
transition to the community.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The  classifications  were changed  because  DOC  is risk  averse.                                                              
They looked at the  number of people that are over  classified and                                                              
then  made  sure  they  were  housed   with  similarly  classified                                                              
persons.  A greater  emphasis was  then placed  on the  behavioral                                                              
and programming pieces.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  TAYLOR  said the  LSI-R  is the  primary  assessment                                                              
tool  that  they  use.  Turning   to  the  LSI-R  as  the  primary                                                              
instrument  is a recent  phenomenon inside  the institution.  They                                                              
had  been  using  four or  five  different  screening  assessments                                                              
while  they  were inside  the  institution,  but he  learned  that                                                              
limited  staff was  being overworked.  So he  decided to focus  on                                                              
moderate  and high  risk people  in  rural areas  and what  issues                                                              
need to be  addressed to help  them be successful when  they leave                                                              
the institution.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Making  appropriate  referrals is  essential  once  the needs  are                                                              
known. The  department's performance review  was noted for  one of                                                              
the  most robust  and  comprehensive  programming  in the  nation,                                                              
which  is really saying  something  - going from  2007 when  there                                                              
was  very little  to no  programming inside  the institution.  The                                                              
legislature  gave  DOC guidance  on  focusing on  programming  and                                                              
they put that into practice.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Transitioning:                                                                                                                  
He  was  embarrassed   to  say  the  final  management   plan  was                                                              
developed  inside the  walls by  institutional probation  officers                                                              
and  wasn't shared  with the  field.  So, stakeholders,  probation                                                              
and  parole  officers  weren't   getting  anything  to  help  them                                                              
continue  to  work  that  was  being  done  inside.  So,  the  new                                                              
management plan  is the guide for  the inmate; it captures  all of                                                              
the programming  that  the person  has been involved  in,  all the                                                              
assessments that have  been done with their results.  It will help                                                              
transition that person  into the community whether  to a community                                                              
provider or to probation and parole.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
The community  image is  going to  be the  biggest focus.  He said                                                              
DOC needs  time  to implement  some of  the things  it has put  in                                                              
place. But  as outcomes are reported  people want you to  do more.                                                              
So,  please let  the  department put  in place  what  it has  been                                                              
asked to  do in terms  of pace, risk  assessment, and in  terms of                                                              
the  huge prisoner  reentry  initiative that  is  being worked  on                                                              
right now that  involves getting the community  to recognize their                                                              
part in  it, more  than just  housing and  employment, looking  at                                                              
identification  and  benefits,  and  tapping  into  the  available                                                              
Alaska Native/American Indian resources.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He  added  that the  department  had  done  an incredible  job  of                                                              
outreach to the  Alaska Native Justice Center and  the Bristol Bay                                                              
Health  Corporation,  but  more  needs  to be  done.  Including  a                                                              
better understanding  of available  resources that are  already in                                                              
the communities.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  TAYLOR said  the third  phase of  the transition  is                                                              
inmate  release  preparation.  People  from  the  institution  are                                                              
released  to the CRC  (halfway houses),  electronic monitoring  or                                                              
some  other community  placement,  and then  probation and  parole                                                              
are  discharge.   DOC  is  working  with  probation   officers  to                                                              
streamline that process.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He said  about 13,000 people  are released  a year, but  less than                                                              
25 percent  actually get  released to  probation and parole.  Over                                                              
half are being  discharged without any supervision,  any reporting                                                              
requirements  or  structure  whatsoever.  Another 22  percent  are                                                              
released to  informal probation; nothing  happens to them  if they                                                              
stay  out  of trouble  over  a  certain  period of  time,  whereas                                                              
probation and  parole is active  supervision. This all  means that                                                              
75 percent  of persons  being released from  the system  will have                                                              
no active supervisions  whatsoever. That is why it  is so critical                                                              
to ensure  that all partners  are coming to  the table to  work on                                                              
this.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
In  November DOC  kicked off  of its  prisoner reentry  initiative                                                              
and invited  stakeholders  and community  coalitions to the  table                                                              
to start  seeing the  real challenge. "We  want our  Alaska Native                                                              
communities, our  African American  communities coming  inside our                                                              
institutions  to help us  deal with  people and transition  people                                                              
prior  to  their  release,  so   that  we're  connecting  them  to                                                              
services and  resources well before  they are being  released from                                                              
institutions,  and   that  they   understand  that  they   have  a                                                              
responsibility."  Should they go  home connected to  resources and                                                              
a supportive environment, or just get dropped off?                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:16:57 PM                                                                                                                    
He said  probation and parole  caseloads have increased  by almost                                                              
40  percent,  and since  2002  the  Alaska Native  population  has                                                              
grown by almost  30 percent and non-Natives by  almost 40 percent.                                                              
The same is  true for probation  and parolees that are  age 45 and                                                              
older.  The trend  inside  the institutions  is  occurring in  the                                                              
field.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER   TAYLOR  said   probation   and  parole   violations                                                              
continue  to be near  the top  of those  persons coming  back into                                                              
the institution. In  fact, he was concerned that  they are getting                                                              
people to just  waive their parole and not necessarily  go through                                                              
a formalized  process.  They would  rather do  their time  in jail                                                              
than  stay out  in the  community.  Something is  wrong with  that                                                              
picture if that is the message they are sending.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He  was grateful  for the  work done  on probation  and parole  in                                                              
terms  of  changing  supervision   strategy  from  monitoring  and                                                              
surveillance,  but   looking  at  how  to  do  a   better  job  of                                                              
collaborating with their partners and focusing on success.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
This shift has  to also occur inside the institutions,  but moving                                                              
from an  enforcement or secure  confinement to allowing  people to                                                              
come in to  work with them  and focusing everyone on  success will                                                              
be  a big  job.  The job  of  every person  in  the Department  of                                                              
Corrections should  be when that  person comes into the  door, our                                                              
job does not end  until they are discharged completely  out of the                                                              
system.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Future efforts should  be focused on graduated  sanctions, so that                                                              
the  number of  people coming  back on  technical violations  that                                                              
really  should  not  be  in  the  system  are  in  an  alternative                                                              
sanction or  alternative placement and  being linked to  the level                                                              
of risk they pose to reoffend and to the community.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:19:44 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  TAYLOR  said  DOC  will  continue  to  work  towards                                                              
reducing  recidivism and  continue to  use every  effort with  the                                                              
prisoner reentry  initiative to bring  all partners to  the table.                                                              
They want to  work in line with  what is already working  and what                                                              
is culturally relevant for their community.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE thanked him for his presentation.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:21:40 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR COGHILL asked him to discuss the pretrial population.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR  said that population  needs more  scrutiny at                                                              
every level.  He said  we need to  look at bail  and some  sort of                                                              
risk  assessment  to  get  an  idea   if  a  person  will  pose  a                                                              
significant   enough  risk   to   warrant  placing   them  in   an                                                              
alternative  place,   or  to  keep   them  in  the   community  on                                                              
electronic  monitoring   or  something  else.   DOC,  legislators,                                                              
judges,  the public  defender agency,  and the  Department of  Law                                                              
all need to get involved and address that issue comprehensively.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL said  he'll ask  the Department  of Law the  same                                                              
question  because someone  may be presumed  innocent until  proven                                                              
guilty but they're still in jail.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:24:26 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR COSTELLO and Senator Wielechowski joined the committee.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL observed  that the members clearly  heard that new                                                              
reforms can be  instituted slowly, but the body  is under pressure                                                              
to find ways to keep the public safe and not overfill prisons.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:26:12 PM                                                                                                                    
SUSANNE  DI PIETRO,  Executive Director,  Alaska Judicial  Council                                                              
(AJC),  Alaska Court  System, Anchorage,  Alaska,  said AJC  takes                                                              
its responsibility  seriously  and has conducted  many studies  to                                                              
improve  the administration  of justice  and make  reports to  the                                                              
legislature.  The   criminal  justice   arena  is  now   the  most                                                              
important issue they are working on.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS. DI PIETRO said  in 2007 the AJC released  the first Recidivism                                                              
Report  in Alaska  looking  at a  sample of  people  who had  been                                                              
charged  with a felony  in 1999.  They followed  these people  for                                                              
three  years and  found  that about  66  percent were  rearrested,                                                              
remanded, or convicted  of another crime. This  means they weren't                                                              
reformed by their contact with the criminal justice system.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
To its  credit, the state  took that number  as a wakeup  call and                                                              
the  legislature formed  and funded  the  Alaska Criminal  Justice                                                              
Working  Group, an  interagency  group of  executive and  judicial                                                              
branch  leaders who  come together  once a  month or  so and  talk                                                              
about  operational issues  and  efficiencies  within the  criminal                                                              
justice  system.  The legislature  also  strengthened  therapeutic                                                              
courts and  funded through the  Institute for Social  and Economic                                                              
Research (ISER)  a report  called "The Cost  of Crime  in Alaska."                                                              
That report was  first presented at a Crime Summit  in 2009 and it                                                              
is  the report  that is  cited in  the  Recidivism Reduction  Plan                                                              
that Ms. Gutierrez authored.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
In 2011, Ms. Di  Pietro said, the AJC released  a follow-up report                                                              
that  looked  at not  only  felons  but also  misdemeanors.  Since                                                              
there  are more misdemeanants  than  felons, they  had to  look at                                                              
about 20,000  records of  people who had  been released  back into                                                              
the community in  2008 and 2009. They found that  during the first                                                              
year after  return  to the community  about 27  percent of  felons                                                              
and 35  percent of misdemeanants  were rearrested.  Interesting to                                                              
think that  the ones  who committed the  less serious  crimes were                                                              
actually  the ones  who were recidivating  at  a higher level.  At                                                              
the end  of two years  following return  to the community  the gap                                                              
had widened  with 39 percent of  the felons and 48 percent  of the                                                              
misdemeanants  rearrested. Most  re-arresting  happens within  the                                                              
first six  months or a  year after release.  So, it  really starts                                                              
to look as though  catching those people when they  first come out                                                              
is the best chance of moving the recidivism rate down.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:30:29 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. DI  PIETRO discussed  the types  of offense  saying that  sex,                                                              
driving,  and drug  offenders  had surprisingly  lower  recidivism                                                              
rates  than those  convicted of  violent  non-sexual offenses  and                                                              
property or  other types  of offenses.  One way to  look at  it is                                                              
that maybe  something  is being  done with sex  offenders  that is                                                              
helping.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:31:22 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI   asked  what   people  are  doing   to  get                                                              
rearrested.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  DI PIETRO  replied their  definition of  recidivism is  quite                                                              
expansive.  It's re-arrest,  which  may lead  to nothing;  remand,                                                              
which is  where you  go back to  jail but you  may not  stay there                                                              
very  long; or  reconviction.  It's actually  the  people who  are                                                              
coming back  on technical probation  violations, not ones  who are                                                              
coming  back  on  new  crimes. For  people  who  committed  a  new                                                              
offense,  it's  whether  they  committed   the  same  offense  but                                                              
whether they committed  any new offense. She offered  to follow up                                                              
with more information.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI  said he'd  like  that, because  he  thought                                                              
there were  some issues with parole  and probation and  how people                                                              
are dealt with when they are out.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO asked if funding is a problem.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. DI  PIETRO confirmed  that finding funding  for research  is a                                                              
struggle.  They  have  used  grants  and  RSAs  from  other  state                                                              
agencies that  have an  interest in the  research being  done. The                                                              
sentencing study is  being done with existing resources  and it is                                                              
moving depressingly  slowly. She highlighted that  research is the                                                              
most  valuable  resource  the  council   can  offer  state  policy                                                              
makers.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
The  council  studies also  found  more  attention is  needed  for                                                              
young  offenders  (less  than  35 years  old),  those  with  prior                                                              
criminal records  and racial disparities. She elaborated  that the                                                              
council had examined  sentencing practices for evidence  of racial                                                              
disparities,  but one  of those  studies had  not been  done in  a                                                              
while.  But  generally,  people  come into  the  criminal  justice                                                              
system  at disproportionately  high  rates  of racial  minorities,                                                              
particularly  Native  American  and African  American.  They  come                                                              
through  the system,  but  there  are not  significant  sentencing                                                              
disparities  for  them  with  a couple  of  exceptions.  They  are                                                              
called  unjustified disparities  because they  can't be  explained                                                              
by any legally  recognizable means. However, they  discovered that                                                              
many other  things have  a bigger impact  on sentence  length than                                                              
race. For example, whether you were incarcerated pretrial.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. DI  PIETRO said the  news is not  all grim. The  Mental Health                                                              
Trust  Authority with  the  DOC  released a  report  in 2014  that                                                              
found  recidivism  had  gone  down about  9  percent  among  trust                                                              
beneficiaries; they  also used a slightly different  definition of                                                              
recidivism  than the  Judicial Council  had. The  build up  in the                                                              
DOC programing  that the  commissioner just  spoke about  could be                                                              
the reason  for the  drop. Those programs  were being  built right                                                              
before the  rate dropped. It is  known, but can't be  proven, that                                                              
on a  national level substance  abuse treatment and  certain kinds                                                              
of   robust   evidence-based  programming   that   occurs   within                                                              
institutions can decrease recidivism.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:38:12 PM                                                                                                                    
Therapeutic Courts  also reduce recidivism, more  particularly for                                                              
misdemeanants than  felons if they complete the  programs. It also                                                              
turns out the  people convicted of less serious  felonies are more                                                              
likely  to  recidivate  than  those   convicted  of  more  serious                                                              
felonies.  The obvious  thought is  to focus  on the most  serious                                                              
offenders, but she  thought they should focus on  the less serious                                                              
offenders,  the  ones slipping  through  the cracks.  Along  those                                                              
lines,  the Division  of  Behavioral Health  is  working with  the                                                              
Alaska  Court  System  on  the  Misdemeanant  Access  to  Recovery                                                              
Program.  The AJC  has been  engaged  to evaluate  the results  of                                                              
that program.  It looks  at people who  have two DUI  convictions,                                                              
but are  out of compliance  with some  of their requirements  and,                                                              
therefore, thought  to be at  risk of a  felony offense.  The idea                                                              
is to  assess and  provide appropriate  substance abuse  treatment                                                              
for them.  Then see  if that  helps decrease  the recidivism  rate                                                              
for that type of offender.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  DI  PIETRO  closed  by  saying   that  the  Judicial  Council                                                              
welcomes the opportunity to be of assistance in any way.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:40:49 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  COGHILL  thanked  her and  said  there  is an  access  to                                                              
justice  question  with a  kid  in Nenana  who  can't  drive to  a                                                              
specialty  court  whereas  someone  in Fairbanks  using  a  public                                                              
system can  get there. There  is also a  question in  Anchorage of                                                              
the willing  participants being  greater than  the ability  of the                                                              
courts  to  perform.  He  asked  who  gets  left  behind  in  this                                                              
particular arena.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  DI PIETRO  said  the Criminal  Justice  Working Group  hadn't                                                              
looked at  that although there is  a therapeutic court  in Bethel,                                                              
which  serves  people from  the  YK  Delta. The  Criminal  Justice                                                              
Commission  is  looking  quite seriously  at  those  services  for                                                              
people who don't live in hub communities.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:43:53 PM                                                                                                                    
GARY   VANLANDINGHAM,   Director,  Pew-MacArthur   Results   First                                                              
Initiative,  Pew Charitable  Trusts,  Washington, D.C.,  discussed                                                              
two initiatives.  The Results  First initiative  is a  partnership                                                              
between the Pew  Charitable Trust and MacArthur  Foundation; their                                                              
job is to help  states make better choices recognizing  that there                                                              
is a  lot of evidence  out there about  what works.  The challenge                                                              
is  getting that  information  into  a usable  and  understandable                                                              
format.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Results First  builds the  capacity within  states to  access that                                                              
information and  not only look at  what the good programs  are but                                                              
what would  happen if  they were  done in  Alaska; things  done in                                                              
the Lower 48  don't always work well here. This  initiative builds                                                              
tools that  states can use  to look at  what makes the  most sense                                                              
to fund,  using a  return on investment  approach like  businesses                                                              
do.                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  VANLANDINGHAM said  the policy  challenge  is that  everybody                                                              
wants  to do  the right  thing, to  invest in  programs that  will                                                              
have the  biggest impact on  the citizens of  the state and  to do                                                              
things that work,  and when times are tough to  cut programs which                                                              
aren't particularly  effective and  to preserve the  programs that                                                              
are  the best  performers. The  question  then is  which ones  are                                                              
which, because  no state has  the comprehensive information  about                                                              
all  the programs  it  administers,  how much  is  being spent  on                                                              
them, what  the performance rates are,  and to be able  to compare                                                              
those  programs.  Without  that  information it's  tough  to  make                                                              
strategic  budget  choices.  States have  traditionally  done  the                                                              
easy thing,  which is cut across  the board and hope  agencies can                                                              
figure it out because they are closer to the situation.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:47:41 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  VANLANDINGHAM  said  the  solution  is  to  bring  systematic                                                              
evidence into  the system on an  ongoing basis. The  Results First                                                              
approach finds all  of the national research and builds  it into a                                                              
decision  model that  states can  use  to inform  the process.  It                                                              
focuses on programs  that are out there, what  their effectiveness                                                              
is and then asks  if they are worth putting money  into. Are there                                                              
other  alternatives that  would  be a  better  investment for  the                                                              
state? The  goal is to equip  lawmakers to make the  best spending                                                              
choices they  can and  to achieve policy  goals by spending  money                                                              
that is already in the system.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
First  they ask  what  is being  funded  now and  come  up with  a                                                              
program inventory,  a budget and  the percent of the  budget going                                                              
towards  those  programs.  This  is  useful  information,  but  it                                                              
doesn't tell  what the  best programs are.  By using  the national                                                              
research  base,  they  can  look  at what  is  known  about  those                                                              
programs  by  building sort  of  clearing  house and  putting  the                                                              
research  in  one  spot.  The database  ranks  the  highest  rated                                                              
programs  in green;  yellow programs  are  promising; programs  in                                                              
grey are  ones that  sounded good  but didn't  work. Red  programs                                                              
sounded  good,  but actually  tended  to  make things  worse  when                                                              
implemented. Staff  can be directed to evaluate  programs or track                                                              
outcomes, things  that would  put beginning  programs on  the same                                                              
competitive basis for funding as other programs.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:52:40 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  VANLANDINGHAM  explained  how  the  approach  works  applying                                                              
Alaska  specific  data to  the  national  research base  of  about                                                              
30,000  evaluations. He  displayed a  slide showing  meta-analysis                                                              
of  Washington  State's  Functional Family  Therapy  Program  that                                                              
serves  deep end  juvenile justice  offenders. Traditionally  when                                                              
kids start getting  into serious trouble, they're  taken away from                                                              
the community  and put in a secure  facility for a long  period of                                                              
time.  They   are  provided  intensive  services   -  educational,                                                              
counseling,  drug treatment  -  to turn  their  life around.  When                                                              
they've  reached that  point, they  will be released  back  to the                                                              
community.  All  states  do  this,  but  there  are  a  couple  of                                                              
challenges;  first, it  is really  expensive  ($60,000 to  200,000                                                              
per  client per  year) and,  second,  it doesn't  work that  well.                                                              
After about  six months  the kids  are back  in trouble  again and                                                              
back  into  the  system.  On  an  investment  basis,  it  is  very                                                              
expensive and doesn't have the best outcomes.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  VANLANDINGHAM discussed  other  options.  He said  Functional                                                              
Family Therapy  is an  alternative that  many states are  starting                                                              
to  experiment  with; it  keeps  the  kids  in the  community  and                                                              
provides  intensive services  to the  youth and  their family.  If                                                              
parents  can  be  taught  how to  discipline  their  teenager,  it                                                              
doesn't  have  to  be  done  for  them;  research  indicates  that                                                              
recidivism rates are reduced by 22 percent compared to the norm.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He displayed Washington  specific costs and savings  which equated                                                              
to $29,000  in benefits for  the criminal justice  system, because                                                              
kids aren't  coming back into the  system. The cost  of arresting,                                                              
prosecuting,  and defending  the  youth is  saved as  well as  the                                                              
cost  to  the  community  for the  cost  of  the  crime.  National                                                              
research has good  information on the costs of  different types of                                                              
crime.  For example,  a  robbery traditionally  has  an impact  of                                                              
$250  to society;  higher level  crimes  have a  higher cost.  The                                                              
$29,000  represents both  the cost  to  taxpayers as  well as  the                                                              
cost to society for that recidivism reduction.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. VANLANDINGHAM  said it's a fact  that kids who stay  in school                                                              
have better  employment outcomes  and become taxpayers  instead of                                                              
tax  consumers.  And kids  who  go  through  this program  in  the                                                              
community tend  to have  better educational  outcomes and  tend to                                                              
graduate  from  high  school  more  than  kids  who  don't.  About                                                              
$10,000 comes into  society because the program  is more effective                                                              
at helping  kids complete  their education  in the community  than                                                              
sending them off to a residential commitment bed.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Also,  public health  costs tend  to go  down. The  kids are  less                                                              
likely  to get  into  trouble and  show  up in  the  ERs and  more                                                              
likely to  become employed and have  their own health  insurance -                                                              
$300  on average.  But  if  the benefits  are  added  up, that  22                                                              
percent  equates to  $37,000 for  an investment  of about  $3,300.                                                              
Looking   at  this  on   a  taxpayer   return  investment   ratio,                                                              
Washington State  is getting  $11 for every  $1 that it  puts into                                                              
this program. It's a pretty good buy.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:57:25 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  VANLANDINGHAM  said  it  is  good  to know  that  is  a  good                                                              
program,  but it  is  more important  to do  this  on a  portfolio                                                              
basis asking  what the  investment choices  are and comparing  the                                                              
return  on  investment  for  adult  and  juvenile  programs.  They                                                              
typically  find there  is  not a  strong  correlation between  how                                                              
much a  program costs  and what  it delivers,  but by  viewing the                                                              
analysis,  some things  can be  identified  as best  buys -  adult                                                              
programs,  cognitive behavioral  therapy programs  don't have  the                                                              
biggest  benefit for  clients but  on  a dollar  for dollar  basis                                                              
about  $25  for  every  $1 that  Washington  State  put  into  the                                                              
program.  On   the  juvenile   programs,  aggressive   replacement                                                              
therapy  helps kids  deal with  stress positively  rather than  by                                                              
criminal offending. It has a $37 return on investment.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
By contrast, "Scared  Straight" is a program that  sounds good and                                                              
has its  own TV show,  but research  shows it's very  ineffective.                                                              
Kids  going  through  the  program   are  more  likely  to  commit                                                              
offenses  and more  likely to  commit more  serious offenses  than                                                              
kids that are left  alone. Sending them to prison for  a day to be                                                              
yelled at  doesn't really scare them  to stay on the  straight and                                                              
narrow.  Rather,   it  tends  to   be  a  university   for  crime.                                                              
Washington  State lost  about  $200 for  every  youth put  through                                                              
this program before it was dropped.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:59:20 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  VANLANDINGHAM stated  that Results  First is  four years  old                                                              
and is  working in both  red and blue  states across  the country.                                                              
At the end of  the day everyone agrees that tax  dollars should be                                                              
spent on things that work.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He  provided  examples   from  Mississippi  and   New  Mexico.  In                                                              
Mississippi the  legislature has  really adopted Results  First as                                                              
the  way  they want  to  start  doing business.  They  focused  on                                                              
criminal justice  and started  to build  this approach  into other                                                              
policy  areas. First,  they  established  a statutory  policy  for                                                              
standards  of   evidence  and   directed  agencies   to  inventory                                                              
programs  and match  them against  the evidence  base and  to come                                                              
back to  the legislature  with the  analysis. They are  completing                                                              
the return on  investment analysis to the criminal  justice system                                                              
and this  session they  are focused on  replacing a  program which                                                              
they found  isn't getting what  they want  to do and  putting that                                                              
money towards something  that will have better  outcomes for their                                                              
citizens.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
New  Mexico  implemented  the  model   in  all  the  policy  areas                                                              
including criminal  justice, substance abuse, mental  health, drug                                                              
programs,  early  childhood  education  programs,  and  prevention                                                              
programs. That  state is starting to  build into areas  such as K-                                                              
12  education  and  Medicaid.  Over   the  last  two  years,  that                                                              
legislature  has  directed  about  $50  million  towards  evidence                                                              
based  programs   that  their  analysis   shows  will   have  good                                                              
outcomes.  They have  also looked  at the cost  of doing  nothing,                                                              
and determined  that the inmates  that they  let out of  prison in                                                              
2012  will cost  the  state over  $300 million  over  the next  12                                                              
years if  they don't do anything  differently. Policy  makers have                                                              
started  thinking  about  having  more  money in  the  future  for                                                              
things  they care about  and turning  some of  those cost  drivers                                                              
around by investing in programs that work.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:02:32 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. VANLANDINGHAM  said the Public  Safety Performance  Project is                                                              
another  initiative  of  Pew  that  is a  sister  project  to  the                                                              
Justice  Reinvestment Initiative  (JRI).  The  difference is  that                                                              
the  Justice Reinvestment  Initiative  process  really works  with                                                              
states to  identify the  policy drivers  that are contributing  to                                                              
growth  in  the criminal  justice  population  and its  costs.  It                                                              
typically  looks at  sentencing, community  control programs,  and                                                              
then helps  create a package of  reforms that would  be considered                                                              
by the legislature next year.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Results  First   is  more  of   an  investment  advice   portfolio                                                              
approach. They would  work with Finance and Budget  staff to build                                                              
these  models  with  the  idea  that  this  would  be  an  ongoing                                                              
resource going forward as part of the budget element process.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:03:44 PM                                                                                                                    
He explained that  Results First is a partnership  between Pew and                                                              
MacArthur and  a state. They look  for three things from  a state.                                                              
The first is  a commitment to being open to  evidence-based policy                                                              
making and a  letter of invitation from the  legislative presiding                                                              
officers and  the governor  to move forward.  The second is  to be                                                              
able to  provide the  necessary data,  which they have  determined                                                              
is doable  for the state. Third  is a willingness to  dedicate the                                                              
resources to doing this.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
There  is no cost  for the  services; Results  First provides  the                                                              
econometric  models and  databases and  technical assistance,  but                                                              
it requires some  bandwidth. Folks who supply the  data would have                                                              
to be  told it is  a priority. A  policy working group  would need                                                              
to  be appointed  to  shepherd through  the  process; the  current                                                              
stakeholders  would  be very  good  for  this. The  University  of                                                              
Alaska  has volunteered  to house  this  in Anchorage  and get  it                                                              
going.  States  have  been  doing  unique  things  that  are  very                                                              
innovative  and that information  is being  shared. Results  First                                                              
would  provide   the  software   free  of  charge   and  technical                                                              
assistance to  help staff learn  how to  analyze the data  and put                                                              
it into the  model. They provide ongoing technical  assistance and                                                              
will continue building these tools out into other policy areas.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:07:02 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR MCGUIRE asked what happened last year.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. VANLANDINGHAM  said  there was  an election  coming up  and it                                                              
got caught up in that process.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL  said  Governor   Walker  supports  this  and  he                                                              
believes  legislative  leadership will  support  it,  as well.  He                                                              
then asked what unique challenges he sees with gathering data.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  VANLANDINGHAM  responded  that  every  state  struggles  with                                                              
bandwidth. But it  is an educational process. It takes  a while to                                                              
get people thinking about it.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL  said Alaska  geography "kicks  the feet  out from                                                              
under  us" on  a  lot of  issues,  especially  with bandwidth  and                                                              
transportation. He  expressed gratitude for the work  already done                                                              
in  other  states  and  then  articulated   potential  challenges.                                                              
Litigation is  part of the American  culture and mediation  is one                                                              
of the things that "just has to work better."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE expressed support for moving forward.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL  said the Judicial  Council attended  a conference                                                              
in California and gathered a lot of valuable data.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:14:05 PM                                                                                                                    
KAREN   FORREST,  Deputy   Director  of   Administration/Programs,                                                              
Division  of Juvenile  Justice,  Department of  Health and  Social                                                              
Services  (DHSS), Juneau,  Alaska,  said with  corrections  facing                                                              
the rising  population, she was here  to share what is  being done                                                              
in  juvenile  justice in  the  hopes  that  it can  enlighten  and                                                              
provide  some  opportunities  for learning  their  challenges  and                                                              
successes that might help in the adult system, as well.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
The successes  over the last 12  years from the time  they started                                                              
their system  improvement effort  are ones  that all Alaskans  can                                                              
share  in,  because  it's  been   a  collaborative  effort  across                                                              
communities, partner  agencies, and  the support of  the Judiciary                                                              
Committee.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FORREST said  they  began the  system  improvement effort  in                                                              
2002,  recognizing   that   having  the   data  was  critical   to                                                              
understanding  how  to  move  forward.  They  created  a  Juvenile                                                              
Offender   Management    Information   System   that    has   been                                                              
foundational to their success.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
When that  system was  implemented, they  learned that  Alaska has                                                              
one of  the highest  secure confinement  rates  in the nation  for                                                              
juveniles.   So,  they   implemented   the  detention   assessment                                                              
instrument,  an  objective screening  tool  that  went along  with                                                              
probation officers'  judgement to reinterpret and  determine which                                                              
youths needed  to be securely confined  and which could  be served                                                              
in  the community.  In  doing  that,  they worked  with  community                                                              
partners  to build  alternatives to  detention, and  began to  use                                                              
electronic  monitoring  and  provided  grants  to  communities  to                                                              
provide non-secure  shelter  beds. They also  implemented  a risk-                                                              
need  screening  assessment,  similar  to  adult  corrections,  to                                                              
begin to  understand the  reoffending risk.  This is important  if                                                              
you  take a  low  risk  offender and  put  him through  the  court                                                              
process, the  outcome can be worse.  The intervention needs  to be                                                              
targeted to the risk to reoffend.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FORREST said  they  also heard  the  Washington Institute  of                                                              
Public  Policy  share  some  information   around  the  aggression                                                              
replacement training  and took it  to heart. They  investigated it                                                              
and   it   has   been  implemented   in   the   long-term   secure                                                              
institutions. It has a favorable cost benefit ratio.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
She  said they  worked  hard over  the last  12  years to  address                                                              
behavioral  health   needs  of  youth  in  the   juvenile  justice                                                              
population. Being able  to determine whether or not  a youth has a                                                              
mental health or  a substance abuse problem has taken  quite a lot                                                              
in  terms of  implementing screening  tools,  collecting the  data                                                              
and beginning  to develop  targeted interventions  for them.  With                                                              
help  from the  legislature  and Trust  Authority  they went  from                                                              
having  one  mental  health  clinician  position  in  2002  to  14                                                              
positions  across  their 8  facilities.  They are  also  screening                                                              
youth almost throughout  the system. A high rate of  youths in the                                                              
system have mental  health and substance abuse  needs and programs                                                              
are being  developed to address those  not just in a  facility but                                                              
in the community with community partners.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:20:47 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR COGHILL  asked if risk  assessment is transferable  to the                                                              
adult  system  because  of  the  confidentiality  nature  of  most                                                              
hearings.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FORREST  confirmed  that  it is  transferable  to  the  adult                                                              
system.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL said  he thought some of their  success comes from                                                              
the fact that the LSI-R is done earlier.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. FORREST  replied  yes; they  use a screening  version  of that                                                              
tool with all youths  that come into the system.  About 25 percent                                                              
of the youths  go through the  formal court process and  then they                                                              
use the full  assessment for them. They inform  the disposition of                                                              
the case.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
She  shared that  they  interviewed former  DJJ  clients who  were                                                              
currently in  DOC facilities and  asked what they could  have done                                                              
differently to  help them  avoid where they  are now.  The results                                                              
were very  clear; they  said it  would have  made a difference  to                                                              
get help with  their substance abuse problems and  help learning a                                                              
skill so they could find a job.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL   asked  if  there   is  outreach   to  workforce                                                              
development and if it's taken root since that survey.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. FORREST answered  yes and yes; they are focused  on five areas                                                              
of improvement:  reducing the general recidivism  numbers, working                                                              
with   Alaska  Native   youth,   improving   outcomes  for   youth                                                              
behavioral  health needs,  focusing  on employment  outcomes,  and                                                              
focusing  on  educational  outcomes.  Youth  in  the  system  show                                                              
significant improvement  in math and/or reading skills.  They have                                                              
been  working the  DOLWD  the last  couple  of  years through  the                                                              
Workforce  Investment  Act  Project  and  working  with  community                                                              
businesses. For  example, developing  jobs where youth  will leave                                                              
the  facility  during  the day  and  work  and  come back  in  the                                                              
evening.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL  said  substance  abuse  would  be  an  immediate                                                              
barrier to  entering the  workforce. He  asked how the  retraining                                                              
programs have worked and if it is too voluntary.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. FORREST said  most youths are already in the  community and if                                                              
they  are not  in school,  job skills  need to  be developed  that                                                              
will  help  them  be  successful.  Substance  abuse  treatment  is                                                              
really  key,   she  said,   and  they  are   in  the   process  of                                                              
implementing   a  program  in   long-term  institutions   that  is                                                              
transferable  and  applicable  in detention  and  community  based                                                              
settings. They wanted  something that could be  expanded and built                                                              
upon. The state  has a lot of  different programs and  it would be                                                              
helpful if the good ones could be identified and replicated.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:28:53 PM                                                                                                                    
AL WALL,  Director, Division of  Behavioral Health,  Department of                                                              
Health and  Social Services (DHSS),  Juneau, Alaska, said  the DOC                                                              
apprenticeship program  in the adult population is  successful and                                                              
they are  discussing how substance  abuse treatment can  be linked                                                              
better  to the participants  of  that program  so that it  follows                                                              
them while they are in the program and after they leave.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. FORREST  said the  juvenile crime rate  in Alaska  has dropped                                                              
by  56  percent  in 12  years  along  with  a small  drop  in  the                                                              
population  of juveniles  which averages  out to  51 percent.  The                                                              
average daily population  of facilities has dropped  by 33 percent                                                              
in  that  same amount  of  time.  Lessons  have been  learned  and                                                              
information can  be shared that may  be helpful as the  state goes                                                              
forward in the adult system.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
One  of the  challenges in  the adult  system is  the same  Alaska                                                              
Native youth  are overrepresented  throughout different  points in                                                              
the  system.  DJJ   is  looking  for  any  new   opportunities  to                                                              
collaborate  with tribal  entities  and other  rural providers  to                                                              
strength those parts of the system.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
She said recidivism  rate for youths released from  deep end long-                                                              
term  secure programs  was  about  60 percent  for  FY2014 and  45                                                              
percent for  those released from  formal probation  services. This                                                              
says that those  in the very deep end have the  highest likelihood                                                              
of  reoffending. This  is  what one  would  expect and  if it  was                                                              
different she would be concerned.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
On any given day  DJJ serves about 1,000 youth and  only about 165                                                              
are in an institution; the bulk of youth are in the communities.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:32:19 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. WALL said  part of the responsibility of  Behavioral Health is                                                              
to provide  the reentry  population with  efficient and  effective                                                              
treatment at the  lowest cost possible to provide  them with every                                                              
opportunity  to   succeed  as  they   go  out  into   the  general                                                              
population.  The Sobriety  24/7 Program  is new  but it is  having                                                              
tremendous  results. He  reviewed  two programs  that have  worked                                                              
well: therapeutic courts and community based treatment plans.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Fourteen  Therapeutic   Courts  are   running  in  six   different                                                              
communities and Kenai  is currently building one.  The models have                                                              
been so  successful  that a tribal  court has  been talking  about                                                              
starting   one.  Community-based   treatment   programs  are   the                                                              
backbone  of treatment  for the  mentally ill  or substance  abuse                                                              
population, and a  very high percentage of the  reentry population                                                              
falls into  this category.  Much of  the treatment being  provided                                                              
after  a  person  is  released   from  prison  is  done  at  these                                                              
community  behavioral   health  centers.  Because   the  treatment                                                              
occurs in their  own community with the supports  around them, the                                                              
youths  have an  opportunity for  employment  and education;  they                                                              
have  the support  of family  or  friends to  keep them  straight.                                                              
Statistics show they have been very successful.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
A couple  other programs  are the  Misdemeanor Access  to Recovery                                                              
Program and the Partners for Progress.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL thanked  Ms.  Forrester and  Mr.  Wall for  their                                                              
work.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. WALL said he would pass the compliment on to the providers.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:37:06 PM                                                                                                                    
RICK  SVOBODNY,   Deputy  Attorney  General,   Criminal  Division,                                                              
Department  of Law  (DOL), Juneau,  Alaska,  said prosecutors  are                                                              
opposed  to recidivism  and would  like the  rate to  be zero.  He                                                              
offered some important  considerations for the committee  to think                                                              
about;  pre-trial  services  was   the  first.  He  explained  the                                                              
average time  to a felony  trial in Anchorage  was over  600 days,                                                              
whereas criminal  rules suggest it  should be 120 days.  The delay                                                              
of years  is a big  problem for institutions.  It would  be better                                                              
to move  those people out of  pre-trial where they  aren't getting                                                              
the  correctional  services that  have  been described  for  those                                                              
people who have been sentenced.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
He said  Ms. Di Pietro  said there was  a disparity  in sentencing                                                              
for  those who  were held  in custody  pretrial  and the  sentence                                                              
that  they  received post-trial.  That  sounds  bad, but  it's  an                                                              
indication  that  the  system  is working.  He  explained  that  a                                                              
judge's  decision to  set bail  is set  by rule  and statute.  The                                                              
rule says  the court is to  make a determination  about conditions                                                              
of  release based  on  1)  whether the  person  a  flight risk  or                                                              
likely not  to appear for  court, and 2)  whether the person  is a                                                              
danger to  the community.  So, it  actually indicates  that judges                                                              
are making good decisions in the beginning about bail.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
He explained  the statutory  provision that  deals with  bail. The                                                              
judge looks at  whether the person is employed,  whether they have                                                              
family ties,  and whether  they have  prior convictions.  It's not                                                              
called  an assessment  tool, but  that is  what it  is. He  voiced                                                              
support  for having  a more  evidence based  assessment tool  that                                                              
could be  given independently either  by corrections or  the court                                                              
system. That is how the federal courts deal with it.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  SVOBODNY suggested  another  consideration is  to expand  the                                                              
ability  of corrections/probation  officers to  include some  type                                                              
of supervision  pretrial. He explained that  electronic monitoring                                                              
(EM) doesn't stop  criminal behavior; it just indicates  where the                                                              
person  is at  a particular  time. A  good share  of the  pretrial                                                              
programs   are  privately   run   and  have   no  standards,   and                                                              
prosecutors are  skeptical of several  of the entities  that offer                                                              
the  service.   So,  corrections   should  have  the   ability  in                                                              
regulations  to  set  standards  for  electronic  monitoring  that                                                              
would make people  feel safer in making decisions  about releasing                                                              
people on EM.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  SVOBODNY turned  to mental  health issues,  describing it  as                                                              
the  biggest  block  in  the  system. It  used  to  be  that  most                                                              
misdemeanor  cases  were resolved  within  a week  or  two of  the                                                              
person  being charged  with an  offense. There  were local  mental                                                              
health programs  that defense council  could get their  clients in                                                              
to and the cases  were dismissed as long as the  person was in the                                                              
treatment program.  In the 1970s  the state chose a  mental health                                                              
model that promised  to decrease the Alaska  Psychiatric Institute                                                              
(API)  in  favor  of  funding  local  treatment  programs.  Mental                                                              
health  lands were  sold,  the trust  model  was  funded, and  the                                                              
resources were  supposed to be put  in the community.  The problem                                                              
is  that  community  mental  health   really  never  evolved.  For                                                              
example, Juneau  had two  mental health  programs that  would take                                                              
people involved  in the criminal  justice system and today  it has                                                              
zero.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
This has created  serious issues with prosecutors whose  job is to                                                              
protect the  public. They're going  to bring people to  trial even                                                              
when  they know  they  have cognitive  issues  that  will make  it                                                              
difficult to understand  a trial. He cited the  example of someone                                                              
raping  a little  girl in  the village  for the  third time.  Each                                                              
time the  court finds  the person  not competent, that  competency                                                              
can't  be  restored,   and  they're  let  go.   He  stressed  that                                                              
something  has  to be  done  with  people  who are  not  competent                                                              
either to  stand trial or weren't  competent at the time  of trial                                                              
while meeting the prosecutor's goal to protect the public.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:51:37 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. SVOBODNY said  a "final rock in the road"  is data collection.                                                              
No one  disagrees that  it needs  to be  done and  it needs  to be                                                              
shared.  This  could be  an  easy  fix  for the  legislature  that                                                              
doesn't  cost  money.  Title  18   has  a  provision  for  a  data                                                              
governance  committee housed  in the Department  of Public  Safety                                                              
(DPS). It wasn't  designed properly. It was designed  to bring all                                                              
the players to deal  with data that was "kind of  police data." It                                                              
needs  to be  "just data"  and  it needs  to  be a  body that  has                                                              
sufficient governance  authority to compel participation  from the                                                              
state agencies.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:55:48 PM                                                                                                                    
KAREN  LOEFFLER,  United  States  Attorney,  District  of  Alaska,                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska,  said she wanted  to address two  things: where                                                              
the federal  government fits in and  what it is trying  to do with                                                              
outreach  prevention  and  smart  on crime.  She  noted  that  the                                                              
packet has  a pie chart summary  of the types of cases  her office                                                              
does. It shows for  the last three years that 70  percent of their                                                              
work  is violent  and  drug related  crimes  (listed as  Organized                                                              
Crime  and  Drug   Enforcement  Task  Force  (OCDETF))   that  are                                                              
connected to  big organizations in  the Lower 48.  Law enforcement                                                              
agencies sign  on and it gives some  money to pay overtime  to the                                                              
state  and  locals  working  on   big  organizations.  The  people                                                              
committing these crimes fail the recidivism test.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
She said  she is very understaffed.  A verdict came  in yesterday,                                                              
and  she  typed  up  the  press  release  for  a  recent  case  to                                                              
illustrate  what the federal  court gets  when the state  programs                                                              
fail.  These were  individuals  of a  violent  drug related  gang;                                                              
they  were  convicted  of  kidnapping,  fire  arms  charges,  home                                                              
invasions, drug  trafficking, money laundering, sexual  torture of                                                              
one of  the victims over  a drug debt,  and HIPPA violations.  She                                                              
said  she wasn't  trying  to shock  the  committee,  but when  the                                                              
first  set of  programs  with the  state fails,  this  is who  her                                                              
office gets.  They do this  in partnership  with all of  their law                                                              
enforcement  partners:   DEA,  FBI,   the  Alcohol,   Tobacco  and                                                              
Firearms Anchorage  Police Department,  Valdez Police  Department,                                                              
Alaska  State Troopers,  the  Crime  Lab, the  postal  inspectors,                                                              
Homeland Security,  Providence Hospital, and Marshalls.  When they                                                              
do these cases,  one of the best  in the Alaska is that  they work                                                              
"very collaboratively with our partners."                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:01:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. LOEFFLER  said she just requested  funding for a  staff person                                                              
to partner with  state and private entities to  try to reintegrate                                                              
fairly  hardened criminals  into  society. "If  we  can turn  them                                                              
around,  we're  taking 100  crimes  off  the street."  Her  office                                                              
isn't as far  along as the state,  but she is trying to  work up a                                                              
reentry  court. She  explained  that some  of  the penalties  have                                                              
been  reduced in  18  USC  35.82 for  people  who  have long  drug                                                              
sentences.  In November  15, 2015  about  30-40 Alaska  defendants                                                              
will be  released into Alaska,  and she  wants things in  place to                                                              
provide services.  She expressed  hope that in  a year  they would                                                              
have more of a  program to reintegrate these people  and give them                                                              
a chance.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
She said  her office  does a lot  of sex trafficking  prosecutions                                                              
and  victim outreach.  Victims are  often young  Native women  who                                                              
are brought from  rural areas into Anchorage, picked  up by pimps,                                                              
and turned  onto drugs.  She said her  office is always  available                                                              
to  talk  about the  problem,  but  it  doesn't always  result  in                                                              
solutions.  They  are in  the  schools  talking about  the  heroin                                                              
problem. That type  of outreach is very important and  is taken on                                                              
in addition to other duties.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE thanked  Ms. Loeffler and asked her  to return later                                                              
to talk about sex trafficking.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. LOEFFLER  said it's a  passion of hers,  but she  can't advise                                                              
the legislature on law.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked if she would talk about marijuana.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS.  LOEFFLER replied  no, she  wouldn't talk  to the  legislature                                                              
directly about  marijuana, but she  would work with  the executive                                                              
branch. She  reiterated that she  can't advise the  legislature on                                                              
law.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  asked if the  federal government  intends to                                                              
prosecute people for marijuana.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. LOEFFLER  said her  office does  major cases involving  public                                                              
safety, but  the Cole  memorandum is  not a  law; it doesn't  bind                                                              
anybody  and doesn't  create  any rights.  If  the state  protects                                                              
public safety  that's one  thing and  if it  doesn't, she  has the                                                              
authority to  step in. She is focused  on cases like the  ones she                                                              
describing.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL  expressed  gratitude for  her  collaboration  on                                                              
child pornography issues.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
At ease from 3:10:41 p.m. to 3:20:42 p.m.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:20:42 PM                                                                                                                    
MYRON   FANNING,  Deputy   Chief  of   Police,  Anchorage   Police                                                              
Department, Municipality  of Anchorage,  briefed the  committee on                                                              
the  four major  programs  to  reduce  recidivism. These  are  the                                                              
Probation Accountability  and Certain Enforcement  (PACE) program,                                                              
the  24/7 Alcohol  and  Substance  Abuse Monitoring  Program,  the                                                              
Alaska Domestic  Violence and Sexual Assault  intervention Program                                                              
(ADVSAIP), and the  Crisis Intervention Team (CIT).  He noted that                                                              
the  MOA's  director  of  DHSS   was  online  to  answer  specific                                                              
questions  about  the  municipality's  very  effective  recidivism                                                              
reduction  program.  He  would  also discuss  APD's  CIT  and  its                                                              
recidivism reduction statistics.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He  explained that  the  PACE program  is  an intensive  probation                                                              
program  where  every  violation  is dealt  with  immediately  and                                                              
sanctions  are imposed.  APD  was  part of  the  pilot project  in                                                              
2010,  partnering with  agencies  throughout  the state.  Warrants                                                              
are  issued  for  any probation  violation  such  as  failed  drug                                                              
testing  or   missed  meetings  with  probation   officers.  APD's                                                              
primary role  is to make  the PACE warrants  a priority  and serve                                                              
them quickly.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. FANNING advised  that APD was part of the  24/7 pilot project.                                                              
In  that program  participants are  required to  provide daily  in                                                              
person alcohol  or drug  tests. APD's primary  role is  to respond                                                              
to the  testing facilities  and arrest  participants for  a failed                                                              
test.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
He  said   the  Alaska  Domestic   Violence  and   Sexual  Assault                                                              
Intervention   Program  (ADVSAIP)   is   an  extremely   effective                                                              
program.  It holds violent  offenders accountable  and provides  a                                                              
safety net  for the victim. This  program, which started  in 2006,                                                              
created the first  database in Alaska that provides  offender bail                                                              
conditions to any  police officer in the state  through the Alaska                                                              
Public Safety  Information Network  (APSIN). In Anchorage,  police                                                              
officers conduct  compliance checks and warrant services  for both                                                              
misdemeanor and  felony cases upon  request. The  program provides                                                              
emergency  funds to  victims for  rent, security,  transportation,                                                              
medical  care,  and  relocation.  The  ADVSAIP  partners  are  the                                                              
Anchorage Police  Department, the  State of Alaska,  the Anchorage                                                              
municipal  prosecutor,  the  Anchorage Department  of  Health  and                                                              
Human  Services, Standing  Together  Against  Rape (STAR),  Abused                                                              
Women's Aid  in Crisis,  and Victims for  Justice. He  displayed a                                                              
list of  the 38 communities  throughout the  state that  have been                                                              
assisted by  ADVSAIP. APD's role  in the program is  twofold. They                                                              
meet with  a municipal  prosecutor to  do an extensive  background                                                              
investigation on  possible participants  in an effort  to identify                                                              
those that  are likely  to reoffend. Those  cases are  turned over                                                              
to the compliance officers for close monitoring.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. FANNING  displayed a  bar graph  showing the effectiveness  of                                                              
ADVSAIP.   Between  2006   and  2012,  the   recidivism   rate  of                                                              
participants  in  the  program dropped  48.3  percent,  from  65.8                                                              
percent  in 2006  to 35.7  percent in  2012. He  also displayed  a                                                              
graph showing the  number of arrests for violations  of conditions                                                              
of  release  (VCOR)  between  2006  and  2012.  Arrests  for  VCOR                                                              
increased  393 percent throughout  the state.  The primary  reason                                                              
was  that  officers  knew  the  bail  conditions  because  of  the                                                              
database.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:27:00 PM                                                                                                                    
Over  the  same  2006-2012  time period,  the  average  number  of                                                              
domestic  violence  (DV)  arrest  warrants  served  per  month  in                                                              
Anchorage  increased  67.1  percent.   Because  of  the  real-time                                                              
information,  the number  of days  to  serve a  DV arrest  warrant                                                              
decreased from  62 days  to 10 days,  or 70.4 percent.  Compliance                                                              
increased  46  percent.   He  reviewed  the  FY2015   funding  for                                                              
ADVSAIP.  $850,000 or  45  percent of  the  funding was  requested                                                              
from the  Department  of Public  Safety and $1.033  million  or 55                                                              
percent is from  other sources. He noted that just  today he saw a                                                              
federal funding request  for this program in excess  of $1 million                                                              
for this year.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:28:00 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. FANNING discussed  the APD Crisis Intervention  Team (CIT). It                                                              
offers a  trained police  response that  focuses on  de-escalation                                                              
and resolution.  APD currently  has 90  sworn police officers  and                                                              
30 unsworn personnel  trained in CIT techniques.  This has reduced                                                              
the need  for patrol officers to  respond to chronic  mentally ill                                                              
offenders.   CIT  officers   coordinate   treatment  for   chronic                                                              
offenders in  an effort to divert  them from the  criminal justice                                                              
system  and  into  a  proper  program.  This  is  better  for  the                                                              
community.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:29:52 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. FANNING  described the Anchorage  Youth Court as  an extremely                                                              
effective  juvenile  diversion  program  for youths  in  grades  7                                                              
through 12.  Data from 2008 showed  that 89 percent of  the youths                                                              
that completed  their Youth  Court obligations  did not  reoffend.                                                              
It  is a  program that  is  run by  juveniles  for juveniles  with                                                              
adult oversight. The  cost per defendant is $457 with  $50 paid by                                                              
each  defendant.  The  program   involves  community  service  and                                                              
restitution.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:31:25 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR ELLIS  asked what  happens to low  income kids  that can't                                                              
afford the $50 fee to participate in Youth Court.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. FANNING  said he  believes the  fee can be  waived, but  if it                                                              
isn't he'll  work toward that  and suggest more  community service                                                              
as the offset.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:32:29 PM                                                                                                                    
TONY  PIPER,  Program  Manager,   Alcohol  Safety  Action  Program                                                              
(ASAP) Statewide  and 24/7  Sobriety Monitoring Program,  Division                                                              
of Behavioral  Health, Department  of Health  and Social  Services                                                              
(DHSS), Anchorage,  Alaska, provided an  update on the  pilot ASAP                                                              
Statewide  and the  24/7 Sobriety  Program. He  reported that  the                                                              
department partners  with a lot of the groups  present today. This                                                              
includes  APD  on the  24/7  program,  the Alaska  Native  Justice                                                              
Center on  substance abuse programs  in rural areas,  Partners for                                                              
Progress   for  help  with   reentry,  the   Wellness  Court   for                                                              
therapeutic  activities,   the  Mental   Health  Trust,   and  the                                                              
Department of Law.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. PIPER  said his focus  today is to  discuss the  24/7 Sobriety                                                              
Monitoring  Program,   which  was   implemented  after   the  last                                                              
legislative  session with  the passage  of Senate  Bill 64.  It is                                                              
one of  the Smart Justice  programs, an evidence-based  initiative                                                              
that is designed  to ensure public safety by  testing participants                                                              
twice  a day,  roughly 12  hours  apart, for  alcohol. People  who                                                              
come in for  drug testing call and  come in on a random  basis for                                                              
a  test.  If  a  participant  tests   positive,  the  sanction  is                                                              
immediate. Law  enforcement is called  and the person  is arrested                                                              
and probationers are immediately remanded.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He  explained the  process.  Attorneys, with  judicial  agreement,                                                              
refer  people  to the  program  that  likely will  benefit.  These                                                              
people are  either on release  conditions prior to  their hearings                                                              
or they  are under  probation conditions.  The program  could also                                                              
be used in Child  in Need of Aid (CINA) cases so  that parents can                                                              
be reunited  with their kids  under sober conditions.  For testing                                                              
they partner  with Alaska  Pretrial Services  in Anchorage.  There                                                              
are two  testing locations along  the bus route and  some in-house                                                              
testing devices  for people  that have  limited mobility  for some                                                              
reason. Since  inception  over 20,000 portable  breath tests  have                                                              
been administered  with just 21  failures. Twenty of  those people                                                              
were  reassigned  to  the  program and  compliance  has  been  100                                                              
percent  so far.  Over  2,300 drug  tests  have been  administered                                                              
with 26  failures. Twenty one of  those people were  reassigned to                                                              
the program and 16 have been successful to date.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
The cost  for alcohol  testing is  $2.50 per test  or $5  per day,                                                              
which  is paid  by the  participant. The  cost of  the drug  tests                                                              
range  from $10  to $50  depending on  the drug.  The division  is                                                              
preparing  to  open programs  in  Fairbanks  and then  Kenai.  The                                                              
intention  is to spread  it throughout  the state.  He closed  his                                                              
comments  briefly  highlighting  other potential  applications  of                                                              
the program such as license applications.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
At ease from 3:39:58 to 3:42:39 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:42:39 PM                                                                                                                    
DENNIS  JOHNSON,   Director,  Alaska  Pretrial   Services,  Kenai,                                                              
Alaska,  described  pretrial  release solutions.  He  displayed  a                                                              
visual  to illustrate  the key  to the  24/7 Program,  which is  a                                                              
swift and  immediate response to  test failures. He  described the                                                              
evidence based  pretrial electronic  monitoring and  stressed that                                                              
monitoring  needs to  be real time  and used  in combination  with                                                              
curfews,  help  with  housing,  and  reentry  for  employment.  He                                                              
recommended  incorporating  in  HB  15  some  type  of  credit  in                                                              
sentencing  for  participating in  the  24/7 Program  and  staying                                                              
drug and alcohol  free. It rewards the desired  behavior and saves                                                              
money. He opined  that incorporating electronic monitoring  with a                                                              
heightened  24/7   would  be  advantageous.  He   reiterated  that                                                              
elective  monitoring  needs  to   be  active  and  real  time.  He                                                              
displayed  a visual  to illustrate  the every  60 second  tracking                                                              
capabilities.  It is the  only evidence-based  system that's  used                                                              
by  the  federal  government  under   the  National  Sex  Offender                                                              
Registry  Act. Integrating  electronic  monitoring  into the  24/7                                                              
program  costs  $22-$28  per  day, which  is  about  the  national                                                              
average. It's an 82 percent reduction in hard bed costs.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JOHNSON highlighted  the  FY2013 grant-funded  pilot  program                                                              
that helped  people get  into jobs and  housing. The  program cost                                                              
was $250,000  and it resulted in  a $1.27 savings for  that fiscal                                                              
year.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
At ease from 3:54:07 p.m. to 3:55:39.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:55:39 PM                                                                                                                    
JANET   MCCABE,   Partners  for   Progress,   Anchorage,   Alaska,                                                              
explained  that  the  Partners Reentry  Center  was  initiated  by                                                              
community  nonprofits  and supported  by  state agencies.  It's  a                                                              
grassroots  approach  to reducing  recidivism  through  community-                                                              
based  collaborative   reentry  programs.  She   highlighted  that                                                              
recidivism  is twice  as  likely when  the  person reentering  the                                                              
community is  homeless. She  said that  in the community  setting,                                                              
closing   the  revolving   door   requires   three  keys:   stable                                                              
employment, safe housing, and positive social support.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. MCCABE  reviewed the role of  the Community Reentry  Center in                                                              
the  DOC  reentry   process.  Prior  to  release,   DOC  probation                                                              
officers arrange  housing with center staff and  provide essential                                                              
information  on individual  risks and needs.  The center  provides                                                              
employment assistance  for DOC halfway  house residents.  The goal                                                              
is  to  give  individual  support  so each  person  can  become  a                                                              
productive  member   of  the  community  and  begin   to  look  at                                                              
themselves that way.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
She said  the Anchorage Partners  Reentry Center opened  in August                                                              
2013  in collaboration  with the  Department  of Corrections,  the                                                              
Alaska   Native   Justice   Center,  Nine   Star   Education   and                                                              
Employment,   and   the   Department  of   Labor   and   Workforce                                                              
Development  (DOLWD). To  accommodate different  needs requires  a                                                              
variety  of temporary  housing  types, of  employment  assistance,                                                              
and  supporting  programs. Culturally  specialized  referrals  are                                                              
available.  She reviewed  the obligations  of participants,  which                                                              
includes getting  a job  and paying rent,  and the obligations  of                                                              
staff and  volunteers, which  is based  on respect. She  displayed                                                              
an extensive  list to illustrate  that the center has  developed a                                                              
broad network of partners and referral resources.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. MCCABE  said that  through weekly  case coordination  meetings                                                              
with  all  who  work  directly  with  participants,  services  are                                                              
tailored to fit  individual risks and needs. She  reported that in                                                              
January  the  center assisted  about  51  people each  workday.  A                                                              
proud  achievement is  that  more than  340  employers have  hired                                                              
program participants.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE thanked  Ms. McCabe for the work she'd  done of over                                                              
the years.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:06:26 PM                                                                                                                    
DENISE MORRIS,  President and CEO,  Alaska Native  Justice Center,                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska,  said that ANJC recognizes the  enormity of the                                                              
recidivism problem  and that it will take collaboration  to find a                                                              
solution.  She  related  that the  Alaska  Native  Justice  Center                                                              
(ANJC) receives  its tribal authority  through Cook  Inlet Region,                                                              
Incorporated  (CIRI). It  was established  in 1993  as the  direct                                                              
consequence  of  the  section  of  the  Alaska  Native  Commission                                                              
Report  that  dealt  with justice,  social,  economic,  and  other                                                              
issues.  The  report indicated  that  Alaska  Natives  represented                                                              
about 14 percent  of the population, but almost 50  percent of the                                                              
incarcerated population.  In its role as a catalyst  and convener,                                                              
ANJC  has been  working on  this  issue since  then. She  recalled                                                              
that in  1995 ANJC  and Sheldon Jackson  College hosted  the first                                                              
Justice Conference  and most of  the participants  are represented                                                              
today.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
ANJC has  been working  in reentry programs  since about  1996 and                                                              
has been providing  formal reentry services since  2005. They have                                                              
provided reentry  services to about  2,500 people.  The wraparound                                                              
services start  180 days  [pre-release] and  continue for  as long                                                              
as  the services  are  needed.  They  partner with  South  Central                                                              
Foundation  for  behavioral  health, medical  care,  dental  care,                                                              
optometry care,  and behavioral health; Cook Inlet  Tribal Council                                                              
for housing, job placement, and behavioral health.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORRIS  described the program  as a promising program  that is                                                              
also a best practice.  All the work has been done  with no funding                                                              
from the  state, but  the hope is  that there  will be  support as                                                              
federal dollars  shrink. She noted  that ANJC recently  received a                                                              
federal  grant  under the  Second  Chance  Act. The  services  are                                                              
available to anyone  that asks, not just Alaska  Natives. She said                                                              
the peer  to peer component  of the  program makes it  successful.                                                              
Participants are required  to check in with their  case manager on                                                              
a  weekly basis,  attend weekly  support  group learning  circles,                                                              
and  attend  weekly  peer  to  peer  meetings.  The  goal  is  for                                                              
individuals  to  come  full  circle.   Giving  back  40  hours  of                                                              
community work  service is a  requirement for graduation.  Program                                                              
graduates include  small business  owners that hire  and mentoring                                                              
the next  cohort. Some  graduates return  to volunteers.  They are                                                              
productive  members of the  community and  they're giving  back to                                                              
society. These programs save dollars and build lives.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORRIS   expressed  gratitude  to  Commissioner   Taylor  for                                                              
opening  DOC's  door  to  the Alaska  Native  Justice  Center  and                                                              
giving support whenever they were asked.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:13:42 PM                                                                                                                    
NICOLE BORROMEO,  General Counsel,  Alaska Federation  of Natives,                                                              
Anchorage,  Alaska,   said  AFN  is  the  largest   Alaska  Native                                                              
organization   in  the   state.   It  represents   165   federally                                                              
recognized  tribes,  141  village corporations,  all  12  regional                                                              
corporations,  and the  12 nonprofit  consortia  that contract  to                                                              
run  federal programs.  Their mission  is to  enhance and  promote                                                              
the cultural, economic,  and political voice of  the Alaska Native                                                              
community.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
She  said AFN  is interested  in recidivism  primarily because  of                                                              
the  significant  overrepresentation  of  Alaska  Natives  in  the                                                              
prison population.  Alaska Natives make up just 20  percent of the                                                              
state population  yet 40  percent of  the prison population.  This                                                              
is unacceptable  and AFN wants to  be a part of  the collaborative                                                              
effort to  develop an  effective and  efficient reentry  system to                                                              
solve the problem.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. BORROMEO  said the Alaska  Native community believes  that the                                                              
collaboration  is working.  Inviting the  Alaska Native  community                                                              
to  participate  in the  Crime  Summit  is  a  step in  the  right                                                              
direction.   Tribal  governments   and  organizations   should  be                                                              
utilized to develop  and implement programs on the  local level as                                                              
alternatives  to incarceration.  They have  capable entities  that                                                              
are willing  and able to do  so. The Alaska Native  Justice Center                                                              
is one.  In terms  of what's  not working,  we need  to take  this                                                              
beyond consultation  and move to  active collaboration,  she said.                                                              
It needs to  be an ongoing dialog.  We can't just have  one and be                                                              
done. This  will take "all hands  on deck" to solve  this problem.                                                              
We're prepared to be a participant and to help you do so.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. BORROMEO concluded  her comments highlighting  that nonprofits                                                              
in the Native community  have a proven track record  of working on                                                              
the problems  of recidivism and  reentry. She referred to  page 36                                                              
of the  2015 report  that details the  $600,000 allocation  to one                                                              
nonprofit, and suggested  that nonprofits in the  Native community                                                              
could benefit from those funds as well.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:17:39 PM                                                                                                                    
MARIE  STEWMAN,  Director  of Planning  and  Grants,  Southcentral                                                              
Foundation (SCF),  Family Wellness Warriors  Initiative, explained                                                              
that  SCF   is  an  Alaska   Native  rural  nonprofit   healthcare                                                              
corporation  that  serves  65,000   Alaska  Natives  and  American                                                              
Indians  throughout  the  state.   Their  mission  is  to  achieve                                                              
wellness  through  health  and  related  services.  The  corporate                                                              
objective  is  to reduce  the  rate  of domestic  violence,  child                                                              
abuse,   and   neglect.   This  objective   is   incorporated   in                                                              
Southcentral Foundation's 80 programs.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
The Family  Wellness Warriors  Initiative (FWWI)  is one  of those                                                              
programs. Working  within the  prison system  TWWI has  provided a                                                              
culturally  relevant  Transformational  Living  Community  at  the                                                              
Palmer  Correctional   facility  since   2004  and   the  Highland                                                              
Correctional facility  since 2012. A  SCF employee works  with TLC                                                              
inmates  in   the  prison,  and   provides  monthly   reports.  An                                                              
intensive  40-hour  training  is  offered  with  follow  up  after                                                              
release.  Graduates  of  the  program   receive  a  generous  care                                                              
package of behavioral and medical services.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. STEWMAN said  this reentry model includes  culturally relevant                                                              
programs.   The   Four  Directions   outpatient   program   offers                                                              
substance  abuse  and  mental health  counseling  and  the  Quyana                                                              
Clubhouse [blends  medical services  with Alaska Native  tradition                                                              
and  structure  for  adults  with  severe  and  persistent  mental                                                              
illness.] She said  the people that enter these  programs don't go                                                              
back into prison.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  STEWMAN said  the  Southcentral  Foundation  is finding  that                                                              
their  80  programs   are  working.  She  emphasized   that  these                                                              
programs and  the work  the Alaska Native  Justice Center  and the                                                              
Alaska Federation of Natives are doing is part of the solution.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORRIS added  that while the Alaska Justice  Commission report                                                              
has good recommendations,  the Alaska Native community  as a whole                                                              
is concerned  that  it mentions  just one program  as a  promising                                                              
practice and it  mentions just one program for  funding. There was                                                              
no  mention of  the  extensive  work that  has  been  done in  the                                                              
Alaska  Native   community  related  to  recidivism.   The  Native                                                              
community  wants to  be  a part  of the  collaboration  to find  a                                                              
solution  and  the   AFN  passed  a  resolution   supporting  ANJC                                                              
involvement in  this issue.  As a result  of this report,  the AFN                                                              
has  designated   that  reducing   recidivism  is  a   number  one                                                              
priority.  Right  now  they  are  participating  in  the  National                                                              
Congress of  the American Indian  soliciting national  support for                                                              
the issue.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  shared  a  story  from  a  constituent  about  his                                                              
growing concern that  discrimination in the justice  system is not                                                              
being addressed.  He suggested more training is  needed for parole                                                              
officers  and corrections  officers about  cultural awareness  and                                                              
perceptions  about  race.  He  also  advocated  to  have  in-house                                                              
programs for  Alaska Natives to  rebuild their identity.  He feels                                                              
that  young  Native men  in  prison  are more  susceptible  losing                                                              
their identity and they are more susceptible to rape.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR   COGHILL   discussed    the   importance   of   improving                                                              
communication,    dovetailing   tribal    authority   and    state                                                              
government,  providing  victim services,  and  maintaining  public                                                              
safety.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORRIS noted  that the Southcentral Foundation  and the Alaska                                                              
Native Justice  Center both provide comprehensive  victim services                                                              
programs,  including   legal  representation.  Responding   to  an                                                              
earlier question  from Senator Ellis  about what happens  to those                                                              
who  can't afford  a  program, she  relayed  that  ANJ offers  the                                                              
Prime  for Life  program  that is  entirely  free for  individuals                                                              
that have been detained for a minor consuming alcohol charge.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:31:43 PM                                                                                                                    
QUINLAN STEINER,  Director, Public Defender Agency,  Department of                                                              
Administration  (DOA),  Anchorage,  Alaska,  echoed  the  need  to                                                              
focus on programs  to reduce recidivism combined  with a long-term                                                              
strategy for  measuring their effectiveness.  He pointed  out that                                                              
certain   policies    and   strategies   have    increased   costs                                                              
substantially from  year to year  and haven't necessarily  had the                                                              
intended  effect. "It's  worth paying  attention  to the  policies                                                              
that result in  incarceration in the first place."  Over the years                                                              
the   state  has   increased  penalties   with  limited   judicial                                                              
discretion.  And there  is good  data that  shows that  increasing                                                              
penalties and  increased incarceration  is not actually  impacting                                                              
recidivism. It's  simply incarcerating  people for longer  periods                                                              
of time. It may  be counter intuitive but there is  good data that                                                              
shows  that short  periods of  incarceration  for individuals  who                                                              
are at low or  moderate risk of committing another  crime actually                                                              
increases  recidivism. There  are certain  crimes that are  listed                                                              
as  misdemeanors that  could easily  be dealt  with as  violations                                                              
and get the same effect at a significantly reduced cost.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Pretrial  incarceration is  a really  important  issue. There  are                                                              
longer  and  longer  periods  of   pretrial  incarceration.  We're                                                              
seeing a lot  of cases where people  are getting out right  at the                                                              
plea.  They are  unable to  get  out of  jail on  bail because  of                                                              
stacked  conditions, monetary  bail, third  party custodian,  24/7                                                              
which may  all individually  be good ideas  and good  programs but                                                              
when they're stacked  and prevent people from getting  out of jail                                                              
it  has an  effect that  undermines  their very  intent. There  is                                                              
good data that shows  that even a little bit of  incarceration can                                                              
increase recidivism rates.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
A lot of  the pretrial work that  can be done, we're  a little bit                                                              
inflexible   on,   he   said.  There's   programs   for   deferred                                                              
prosecution that  we could use or deferred sentencing  and provide                                                              
incentives  to participate  in programing  rather than spend  that                                                              
time in jail. Much  of that gets back to the  programs themselves.                                                              
They are insufficient  programming available that we  could use to                                                              
help  deal with  some of  the issues  that are  leading to  people                                                              
ending up in jail and driving up the cost.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  STEINER  said a  more  flexible  approach could  benefit  all                                                              
parts  of Alaska,  particularly rural  Alaska. Centralization  has                                                              
its benefits,  but one of  them is not flexibility.  Collaborating                                                              
with   communities  and   tribal   courts   and  other   community                                                              
organizations  that   can  assist  in  helping  clients   go  from                                                              
incarceration in  the justice system  to out is necessary  to make                                                              
advancements  in  some  of  the issues  we're  dealing  with  here                                                              
today, he said.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. STEINER  said the  justice system is  not simply  about moving                                                              
cases along.  There is strong  indication that procedural  justice                                                              
reduces recidivism.  There's an individual assessment  of the case                                                              
so  that  there  is  a fit  between  what  clients  understand  is                                                              
happening  and the  response their  getting from  the system  as a                                                              
whole.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
He said  that without addressing  these things we  have increasing                                                              
pretrial  incarceration,  increasing  percentages  of  individuals                                                              
who have  been convicted of nonviolent  offenses who are  in jail,                                                              
longer sentences  and increased costs. Though there  is indication                                                              
that  the  efforts   of  corrections  has  done   some  to  reduce                                                              
recidivism,  there   needs  to  be  a  longer   and  more  intense                                                              
strategy.  In this  climate  it  might not  be  popular, but  this                                                              
requires  attention  and  funding.  Those  programs  will  produce                                                              
benefits in  the long run,  not just in costs  to the system  as a                                                              
whole  but human  costs.  The latter  are  harder  to measure  but                                                              
they're significant.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  asked why  the numbers  of nonviolent offenders  in                                                              
Alaska prisons have increased.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  STEINER  replied  in  part  it's because  of  the  number  of                                                              
nonviolent  crimes that  have been  ratcheted up  to a felony  and                                                              
the habitual  offense strategies  where the third  offense becomes                                                              
a felony.  Those are  designed to  deal with  individuals  who are                                                              
getting into  trouble repeatedly, but  if there is no work  on the                                                              
front end at  that misdemeanor level, that strategy  just produces                                                              
longer incarceration.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  asked what  percentage of  the nonviolent  offender                                                              
population  has mental health  issues and  what percentage  has an                                                              
addiction to drug or alcohol.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. STEINER deferred to Mr. Jessee.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  said she'd  like more  information about  the large                                                              
nonviolent population,  including the  number of crimes  that were                                                              
committed under the influence of drugs or alcohol.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  STEINER  said  anecdotally  he can  say  that  a  significant                                                              
portion  of the  public defender  cases involve  drug and  alcohol                                                              
addiction and somebody with a mental health diagnosis.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE  asked   if  he  had  an  opinion   about  why  the                                                              
percentage of older inmates is increasing.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. STEINER replied he didn't know the answer.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:41:38 PM                                                                                                                    
NANCY MEADE, General  Counsel, Administrative Staff,  Alaska Court                                                              
System,  Anchorage, Alaska,  stated that  the Court  System is  an                                                              
integral  partner  with  many  of   groups  that  are  looking  at                                                              
programs that  have been  implemented, the  important work  yet to                                                              
be done,  and the questions that  still need answers so  that more                                                              
programs and steps  can be taken. She summarized some  of what the                                                              
committee  heard today.  As former-Justice  Bryner testified,  the                                                              
knowledgeable  and  experienced  Criminal  Justice  Commission  is                                                              
trying to  find answers to  some of the  questions that  have been                                                              
raised.  The   committee  also  heard  about   the  [Pew-MacArthur                                                              
Results  First Initiative]  and  the offer  to help  look at  case                                                              
files  and  data  to  identify   some  of  the  factors  that  are                                                              
confounding  people right  now. Some  of the  steps that group  is                                                              
taking  are probably  the  same steps  that  the legislature  will                                                              
want to take in the future, she said.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. MEADE  related that the  Court System  is an active  member of                                                              
the Criminal Justice  Working Group. She described this  as a step                                                              
toward interagency  cooperation, highlighting that  the Department                                                              
of  Corrections  (DOC),  the Department  of  Labor  and  Workforce                                                              
Development (DOLWD),  the District  Attorney's Office,  the Public                                                              
Defender  Agency,  and  the Court  System  work  cooperatively  to                                                              
address a  lot of  different criminal  justice issues.  That helps                                                              
the  conversation work  smoothly. She  also noted  that the  Court                                                              
System was  very involved  in the  Recidivism Reduction  Plan Work                                                              
Group that Ms. Gutierrez discussed.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MEADE  conveyed that  the  Court  System  has been  and  will                                                              
continue to  be very active  in the efforts  of all  the different                                                              
groups, and is  eager to implement any new smart  justice programs                                                              
the   legislature  chooses   to  adopt.   There  is   considerable                                                              
enthusiasm among  individuals within the  Court System to  get new                                                              
practices in  place with  regard to changes  in bail  or probation                                                              
or sentencing.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE   thanked  Ms.   Meade  for   the  work   she  does                                                              
interfacing with the Judiciary Committee.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE   asked  Mr.  Jessee  to  discuss   mental  health,                                                              
traumatic  brain  injury,  and   the  percentage  of  poverty  and                                                              
homelessness  of  inmates  within the  Department  of  Corrections                                                              
(DOC).                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:45:47 PM                                                                                                                    
JEFF JESSEE, Chief  Executive Officer, Alaska Mental  Health Trust                                                              
Authority  (AMHTA),   Department  of  Revenue   (DOR),  Anchorage,                                                              
Alaska,  reported   that  65  percent   of  the  inmates   in  the                                                              
Department  of  Corrections  are  AMHTA  beneficiaries,  and  54.8                                                              
percent have  co-occurring disorders.  These people  recidivate at                                                              
a  higher  rate than  other  inmates  and  spend longer  times  in                                                              
corrections.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  MCGUIRE asked  him to  follow up  with the  data sorted  by                                                              
male,   female,   single  mothers,   single   fathers,   education                                                              
brackets,  mental health  brackets,  addiction  brackets, and  any                                                              
other relevant factors.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JESSEE expressed  appreciation  for  the request  because  it                                                              
points out the  need for a central data repository  and analytical                                                              
capacity that  does not  currently exist  in the system.  Somebody                                                              
has to  collect the data  from the various  sources to  inform the                                                              
strategies to  make intelligent  decisions. He suggested  that the                                                              
Justice  Center  at the  university  could  assume that  role.  He                                                              
pointed  out  that people  have  been  working on  recidivism  for                                                              
years,  but  organizations  change  and  historical  knowledge  is                                                              
sometimes difficult to maintain.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He said a lot  of what happened last year in  House Finance was to                                                              
look  at  recidivism  in  the context  of  the  cost  of  building                                                              
another  prison or  recommitting  to send  people to  a prison  in                                                              
another  state.  The  committee   was  encouraged  to  expand  its                                                              
thinking on the  subject beyond state agencies,  to include things                                                              
like housing,  employment, and support  for recovery.  He observed                                                              
that  the  body wasn't  really  aware  of  how those  things  were                                                              
connected.  He commented on  the intent  language that  focused on                                                              
state  agencies getting  things  moving. He  pointed  out that  on                                                              
page   iii  of   the   Recidivism   Reduction  Plan,   the   first                                                              
recommendation  was to  partner  with Alaska  Native entities.  He                                                              
discussed talking  to Ms.  Morris with  the Alaska Native  Justice                                                              
Center  about  this  missing  piece  and  the  proposal  to  House                                                              
Finance  that the  next  phase  involve an  actual  implementation                                                              
plan. It  would have  specific strategies,  the outcomes  of those                                                              
strategies, the  cost, the timeline,  the outcomes, and  the long-                                                              
term  savings to  the state.  He  opined that  direction would  be                                                              
forthcoming  to   put  together  an  implementation   plan.  Using                                                              
resources like Pew and others makes this doable, he said.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. JESSEE  said he'd be  remiss if he  didn't touch on  the third                                                              
rail.  He pointed  out that  a lot  of  the people  coming out  of                                                              
corrections are single males between the ages of 18 and 65.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     If  you want somebody  else  to help pay  for this,  you                                                                   
     need  to   start  thinking  about  Medicaid   expansion,                                                                   
     because that's  a really  powerful tool. And  Behavioral                                                                   
     Health,  as  far  as our  beneficiaries,  is  where  the                                                                   
     greatest impact  of expansion is going to  be and enable                                                                   
     us  to  access  a  funding  source  for  a  lot  of  the                                                                   
     substance abuse  support that  we just can't  fund right                                                                   
     now.  And  we don't  see  the  state  in a  position  to                                                                   
     generate  additional grant  dollars -  100 percent  GF -                                                                   
     in order  to provide  that support  for sobriety  in the                                                                   
     community.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
He  said  he understands  that  a  lot  of  questions need  to  be                                                              
answered,  but  Medicaid expansion  would  be  a major  factor  in                                                              
being  able  to carry  out  an implementation  plan  for  reducing                                                              
recidivism.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE asked what the cost savings would be.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. JESSEE replied  he didn't have a specific number  but it would                                                              
be  in the  millions.  Figuring  that out  would  be  part of  the                                                              
implementation plan.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Responding to the  concern about singling out a  single program in                                                              
the  [Recidivism  Reduction Plan],  he  explained  that the  point                                                              
wasn't to  give it preference over  all other programs.  It was to                                                              
not lose ground  on a program that was working.  He reiterated the                                                              
commitment to work  with tribal partners, hopefully  with guidance                                                              
from the finance committees about an implementation plan.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE thanked  Mr. Jessee and all the  other participants.                                                              
She  noted  that the  meeting  was  televised  and recorded  as  a                                                              
follow  up resource,  and that she  and the  committee would  work                                                              
with  the  House  Finance  Committee   to  keep  from  replicating                                                              
efforts.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:58:33 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR ELLIS  said it was  a magic moment  last year  when Senate                                                              
Bill  64  passed   unanimously.  Progressives  like   himself  and                                                              
conservatives  like Senator  Coghill  put  political and  partisan                                                              
differences aside  and found common  ground to do  the substantive                                                              
work that  is continuing here. He  said it appears  that everybody                                                              
is  pulling  together,  seeing the  inner-connectedness  of  these                                                              
efforts   and   how   to   build    on   the   synergies   between                                                              
nongovernmental  agencies and the  agencies of government  to make                                                              
a difference  in people's  lives, to  provide hope and  redemption                                                              
and rehabilitation.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He recalled  the constitutional amendment  effort a few  years ago                                                              
to remove  the words "rehabilitation"  or "reformation" as  one of                                                              
the purposes  of Alaska's  penal system.  It was partisanship  run                                                              
amok just  as it  was when  a particular  legislator directed  his                                                              
staff  to cut  all treatment  programs  in the  prison system.  He                                                              
said it's  taken over a decade  to achieve a  bipartisan consensus                                                              
to  say that  wasn't a  wise idea  and we're  building back  those                                                              
programs because they're cost effective.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He expressed appreciation  for Chair McGuire's efforts  to put the                                                              
state  on the  path of  developing an  Alaska model  that will  be                                                              
emulated across the country or across the world.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE  recalled the  effort he  referenced and  the notion                                                              
that bad people  that have done bad things should  not be rewarded                                                              
by  rehabilitation.  She  stated agreement  with  Senator  Coghill                                                              
that the best thing  that could happen for a victim  of a crime is                                                              
that the perpetrator  could return to the community  as a reformed                                                              
person.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
5:02:43 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  COGHILL  recognized  the   significant  contributions  of                                                              
Senator Ellis,  former Senator French,  and former  Senator Dyson.                                                              
He commented  on healthy  pathways and  ongoing work and  observed                                                              
that prison is a good place to keep people when they need to be                                                                 
kept, but it is not the best place to rehabilitate.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MCGUIRE remarked that this topic has been on this                                                                         
committee's radar for a long time, and this is a start toward                                                                   
looking at the issue in a different way.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
5:06:54 PM                                                                                                                    
There being no further business to come before the committee,                                                                   
Chair McGuire adjourned the Senate Judiciary Standing Committee                                                                 
meeting at 5:06 p.m.                                                                                                            

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
Crime Summit Agenda 2 25-Final.pdf SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
2015 Crime Summit - DJJ Rec Reduction Input.docx SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
Alaska Federation of Natives Resolution.pdf SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
ANJC Packet Documents.pdf SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
FY07-FY22 DOC Projected Institutional Inmate Population and Funding-LFD.pdf SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
Notable VIVITROL Program.docx SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
APD Recidivism v1.ppt SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
SAMHSA VIV for OPD 2012-02-15.pdf SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
PfP_ReentryinAK_Presentation_Feb2015.pptx SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM
SCF Recidivism Reduction Support FINAL.docx SJUD 2/25/2015 12:00:00 PM