Pubdate: Sat, 28 Jun 2003 Source: Hartford Courant (CT) Copyright: 2003 The Hartford Courant Contact: http://www.ctnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/183 Author: Associated Press PRISON POPULATION RISES AS ALTERNATIVES, TREATMENT PROGRAMS WITHER NEW LONDON, Conn. -- Over the years, whenever Putnam police spotted Michael Peckham's car on the road at night, they'd reach for their lights and sirens. More often than not, Peckham said, he was drunk behind the wheel. The 37-year-old has been arrested for drunken driving more times than he can remember. He has spent about four of the last 10 years behind bars. In the past he had a simple plan upon his release from prison: Go out and have a beer. This time he hopes things will be different. During his current incarceration Peckham, who also used cocaine, received prison-run substance abuse treatment for the first time. He was released in September to the supervision of Fellowship House, a residence in Groton designed to help offenders re-enter society. People who work with drug-addicted defendants and inmates say treatment for people like Peckham greatly improves their chances for long-term recovery and reduces the likelihood they will return to prison. Connecticut faces a major budget crisis, with a deficit in the fiscal year that begins Tuesday estimated at $1 billion. Republican Gov. John G. Rowland and Democrats and Republicans in the General Assembly have thus far failed to reach agreement on a new tax-and-spending plan. Even though studies show programs offering treatment and alternatives to prison save money, the various departments that deal with defendants and convicts have cut staff and trimmed funding. Legislators, drug counselors, attorneys, judges and prison officials say the cuts will expand the prison population and increase costs. The state's Judicial Branch is just one agency making cuts: - - In August the Judicial Branch closed its drug courts, which provided an alternative to prison for nonviolent offenders. - - In January six bail commissioners - whose job it was to find alternatives to incarceration for people awaiting trial in prison - were laid off. The program no longer exists. - - Only 25 of 70 probation officers who either retired or were laid off since January have been replaced. The remaining officers have higher caseloads and less time to consider alternatives to prison for people who have violated probation because of drug use and other infractions. "In my opinion, by default we end up incarcerating too many people whose main problem is drug and alcohol dependency," said state Rep. Mike Lawlor, a Democrat from East Haven who is co-chairman of the legislature's Judiciary Committee. "The system is really overwhelmed with problems it wasn't designed to solve," he said. - --- State agencies estimate that 80 percent of the roughly 80,000 people in prison or under court supervision have drug, alcohol or a combination of addictions that were a direct or contributing factor in their crimes. A 1997 report by the state's Law Revision Commission found that 69 percent of inmates studied were rearrested within three years. Of those rearrested, 22 percent were sent back to prison. Academic and legal research shows a clear connection between substance abuse treatment and reduced recidivism, or the relapse into criminal behavior. In turn, reductions in repeat arrests and incarcerations lead to considerable savings for Connecticut taxpayers, according to the research, including a 2002 Brown University study on the cost effectiveness of substance abuse treatment in Connecticut prisons. As of mid-June the state's prison population of 19,108 was near an all-time high. The Department of Correction estimates per-prisoner costs at $72 a day. The state will spend about $500 million - more than 3 percent of the $13 billion state budget - on inmates for the fiscal year ending Monday. Connecticut's response to the burgeoning prison population has focused more on expanding capacity and sending prisoners out of state than on rehabilitative measures. Since 1997 the state has issued more than $96 million in bonds to build new prisons and expand existing ones. The state has also shipped 500 inmates to a prison in Virginia, and Rowland has proposed sending 1,500 more out of state to save the state money. Legislators said last week they might support the idea - if there was also money set aside to reform Connecticut's prison system. Led by Rep. Bill Dyson, D-New Haven, a group of lawmakers are pushing a "Building Bridges" plan that would make more inmates eligible for parole, increase drug treatment for criminals and provide alternatives to prison for parole and probation violators. The plan could save the state $50 million, according to two consultants hired by the legislature. The proposal's fate is uncertain. A bill with similar proposals died in the regular session that ended June 5. Between fiscal years 1997 and 2003 the Correction Department budgeted roughly $50 million for prison-based treatment programs and halfway houses, according to the department's estimates. Since 2000, that spending has fallen each year. The hodgepodge of agencies responsible for court-supervised and inmate populations complicates efforts to maintain and coordinate funding for substance abuse treatment. The departments - the Judicial Branch, the Department of Correction, the Board of Parole and the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services - - have independent budgets, increasing the possibility for insular decision-making, said state Rep. Bob Farr, R-West Hartford. If programs are cut in the Judicial Branch, higher costs are eventually borne by the Correction Department due to an increased prison population, he said. Political myopia also plagues the system. Legislators, with an eye trained on upcoming elections, are better at putting out fires than preventing them, said Farr, who is on the Judiciary Committee. With the crime rate in Connecticut near historic lows, there is little political incentive to put more inmates out on the street. Legislators who promote alternatives, said state Rep. Wade Hyslop, D-New London, risk appearing "soft on crime." - --- The opportunities to rehabilitate addicted convicts and save taxpayer money exist well before offenders pass through the prison gates. The Judicial Branch is responsible for defendants throughout their court proceedings. It also oversees probation. With help from DMHAS, the branch has access to private and public treatment centers for defendants and convicts with drug and alcohol problems. Lawrence Dorr, 29, of Canterbury, is among those who have received private treatment paid for by the state. Police arrested Dorr in December 2002 for drunken driving and other crimes. Prior to that arrest, he spent more than two years in prison for drunken driving-related offenses. One arrest occurred after he led state police on an 18-mile, high-speed chase on Interstate 95. After his most recent run-in Dorr told his probation officer he wanted help. Along with alcohol, Dorr had begun abusing Oxycontin, a powerful narcotic pain reliever. Within two months the officer found him a bed at Lebanon Pines, a private treatment center in Lebanon, and Dorr was able to go there instead of prison. "There's not a whole lot of positive behavior in prison," Dorr said. At Lebanon Pines, he said, he can relate to people who have lived with sobriety. "If you stay here," he added, "you're serious about it." The state's first drug court opened in New Haven in July 1996. By the time the Judicial Branch shuttered the courts in August of this year the program had expanded to four locations. The system was open to defendants charged with drug possession but not a violent crime or the sale of drugs. A defense attorney and a prosecutor negotiated a prison sentence for each offender. If the person agreed to attend a 12- to 15-month program requiring drug tests, court appearances, job training and education, the prison sentence would be suspended after its completion. The country's first drug court opened in Dade County, Fla., in 1989. Estimates on the cost savings of drug courts vary from state to state. But in a 1999 nationwide review of drug courts the federal Department of Justice found the recidivism rate among defendants who at least tried the program ranged from 5 percent to 28 percent. Those who completed it had re-arrest rates of 4 percent. Recidivism for inmates with drug charges who did not go to drug courts was well over 50 percent, the study found. Jim Chase, 63, a public defender and recovering alcoholic, helped to set up the New Haven court and worked there until its closing. He estimates Connecticut spent $10,000 per defendant involved in the program. "Take 70 people now who would not be in prison, you're costing the taxpayer millions of dollars right now," he said. "You can't justify it economically." The Judicial Branch's jail re-interview program started in December 1997 to ease prison overcrowding. Bail commissioners assessed people awaiting trial in prison because they could not post bond. The goal was to release as many as appropriate to one of several places, including relatives' homes and outpatient and inpatient treatment centers. The program placed nearly 5,000 people during its five years, according to the Office of Legislative Research. Although some of those alternatives cost money, the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services estimates the program saved 146 beds a day in Connecticut prisons, or roughly $3.8 million annually. Treating those people at Lebanon Pines would be cheaper. The facility estimates it costs $55 a day to care for a resident; at that rate treating 146 inmates would cost the state $2.9 million a year. Funding for beds in alternative programs falls woefully short. Last year DMHAS found all 340 state-funded beds filled with 229 pretrial defendants waiting. This kind of backup leads many defendants to opt for immediate prison sentences rather than wait for treatment, the report states. "These guys can do math," said William Carbone, executive director of the Court Support Services Division. An inmate who can serve eight months in prison or wait several months for a 12-month treatment program will likely take the sentence, he said. The lack of beds can have other costly results. It forces probation officers to send more violators back to prison when drug treatment is what they need, said Bob Coyne, a chief probation officer in New London. More than a quarter of people jailed for violation of probation committed drug and alcohol offenses, such positive drug tests, according to the Office of Legislative Research. Coyne lost four officers in the January state layoffs. The caseloads of his 12 remaining officers have gone from fewer than 200 to as high as 260, he said. The Judicial Branch considers an optimum caseload average to be 100 probationers per officer. By the end of the month, the statewide average will be 175, a department spokesman said. Under the stress of too much work, Coyne said, the officers have little time or incentive to consider alternatives to jail for probation violators. "There's nobody in state government who can toss more taxpayer money than a probation officer," Lawlor said. - --- Once in prison, an inmate's chances of receiving substance abuse treatment are tenuous at best. After his last arrest in August 2000 Peckham said he was tired of prison, the hangovers and the mess he had made of his life. Though he never injured anyone while driving drunk and high, he ruined a marriage, was estranged from his children and lost a number of jobs. During the many plea negotiations he was involved in over the years, Peckham said, treatment was never mentioned. During his latest incarceration, the Department of Correction decided to send him to the DWI unit at the Bergin Correctional Institution in Storrs. The 2002 Brown University study suggests that Peckham and state taxpayers might have benefited if he had undergone treatment in prison much sooner. The study found that a moderate-intensity program reduces a participant's recidivism by more than 18 percent in the year following release. Among those who complete treatment, each avoided prison sentence saves the state nearly $19,000, the study found. As a prisoner approaches the end of a sentence, two things can happen: The inmate can be moved to a halfway house or ride out the time behind bars. In the mid-1990s the Department of Correction tightened the rules on eligibility for halfway houses. To be eligible, convicts must have at least applied for a prison-run substance abuse program, if not attended one. Since that change prisoners have sought treatment in far greater numbers. From fiscal years 1997 to 2002, nearly 5,000 more inmates have requested treatment - a 20 percent increase, according to department statistics. Funding for the drug programs has remained flat, however. By last year, prison-run programs treated 34 percent fewer inmates than in 1997, according to department statistics. State funding cuts extend to halfway houses, too. In the fiscal year ending Monday the DOC budget for halfway houses was $2.5 million. That represents a 30 percent drop since 2000. Lawlor finds the state's handling of drug-addicted inmates maddening. It all boils down, he said, to a question posed to him by a friend. "Who would you rather meet in a dark alley?" Lawlor said. "A person who just completed a year in rehab or someone who just spent a year in prison?" - --- MAP posted-by: Alex