Pubdate: Sun, 26 Jun 2005
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2005 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author:  Kate Zernike
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

IN ILLINOIS, KICKING DRUGS AND THE PRISON HABIT

Andre Willis started selling cocaine and heroin when he was 14, and 
by 25 had been sent to prison four times. Each time he got out he 
vowed to look for an honest job. But employers did not want to hire 
an ex-convict, so he would give up after two months and go back to 
selling drugs and smoking marijuana.

The fourth time the state offered a different kind of sentence: a 
year at a new state prison dedicated solely to drug treatment, where 
Mr. Willis was given job training and addiction counseling that has 
continued into his parole.

When he got out of prison in late 2004, his parole officer and 
treatment counselor helped him find a halfway house to live in, away 
from the patterns of his old neighborhood. And they watched as he 
went door-to-door for three months until he found a job at a food 
market. "It's not the job I want," says Mr. Willis, who turns 27 next 
month, "but it's a job."

Faced with a record 40,000 inmates coming out of prison this year, as 
well as record rates of recidivism, Illinois has put the new prison 
- -- the Sheridan Correctional Center -- at the center of a plan, 
closely watched by other states, to prevent repeat offenders from returning.

Opened 18 months ago in a previously shuttered prison in Sheridan, 
Ill., 70 miles southwest of here, the facility will soon be the 
nation's largest prison dedicated to drug treatment, a recognition by 
the state that drug addiction is a major reason inmates are ending up 
back behind bars. Sixty-nine percent of all inmates are in prison on 
drug-related crimes.

Across the country, more than 600,000 prisoners are released each 
year, and about two-thirds return to prison within three years, 
according to the Justice Department. About 70 percent have drug or 
alcohol problems, and about 40 percent return to prison because of 
drug violations.

With prison costs rising and budgets tightening, even states that had 
embraced tough law-and-order approaches are now trying to smooth 
re-entry to break the cycle of repeat offenses. Illinois officials 
say even small declines in the recidivism rate would save them money 
in the long term because right now, statewide, 55 percent of all 
prisoners return within three years, and 80 percent are rearrested.

The Sheridan program, a project of Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich, who 
campaigned in 2002 on a promise to reduce recidivism, costs about $35 
million a year to run. With new construction, it is expected to grow 
to 1,300 beds, serving about 1,700 prisoners each year.

Promising early results at Sheridan have made it something of a 
model. Corrections officials from Kentucky and Louisiana have 
visited. And here in the Midwest, where a surge in methamphetamine 
use has officials desperate for any possible remedy, Nebraska and 
Iowa are studying whether to dedicate facilities to drug treatment.

About a dozen drug treatment prisons exist across the country, but 
most focus on first-time offenders. Sheridan is rare because it is a 
medium-security prison where most of the inmates are repeat offenders 
convicted of serious crimes. It is also unusual for the services it 
offers after release.

The state has added 100 parole agents, for a total of 440, to allow 
agents to work more closely with former felons, and has also assigned 
drug treatment counselors to all Sheridan parolees, to help them find 
jobs and housing, and to obtain ID like a driver's license -- 
services often not available to former felons.

Illinois has opened seven re-entry centers across the state where 
some parolees check in daily for drug testing and others come for job 
and treatment support.

And for the first time, state officials have formally worked with 
local groups in Chicago that have set up drug addiction support 
groups and bought buildings that are being rehabilitated to provide 
housing for former offenders. One group even took two busloads of 
local residents to visit Sheridan to remind them that its inmates 
were their once and future neighbors.

"These people are coming home; they're going to be behind you in line 
at the Wal-Mart," said the warden at Sheridan, Michael Rothwell. "Not 
to help them is folly."

The state screens inmates to determine whom to send to Sheridan; 
prisoners must be serving terms of 6 to 24 months and have to 
volunteer for the program. Murderers, sex offenders and those with 
severe mental illness are not allowed.

The average inmate at Sheridan has been arrested 16 times, convicted 
5 times and sent to prison 3 times. The prisoners divide about evenly 
between users of heroin, cocaine, marijuana and alcohol, and 52 
percent said they had taken more than one drug daily. About half had 
not been employed before prison, and more than half had no high school diploma.

Prison officials say Sheridan inmates begin preparing to leave the 
day they arrive at the prison, set on 270 acres surrounded by 
cornfields. Inmates spend their time in group therapy, drug 
counseling, and classes or job training, which is mandatory.

Mr. Rothwell, the warden, arranged for the National Association of 
Home Builders to teach construction trades. The Illinois 
Manufacturers' Association, facing a wave of retirement among workers 
who make spring wires, asked to set up a program as well and has 
hired hundreds of graduates, said John Bitowt, who trains the prisoners.

Ordinarily, Mr. Bitowt said, the metal instruments the men work with 
might be seen as potential weapons. "I feel I can trust them," he 
said. "They've earned it." The men are searched and tested for drugs, 
and sent back to a regular prison if found to be involved in gang 
recruitment or violence; 800 have completed Sheridan, and about 250 
have been expelled.

The prison tries to build trust, responsibility and some measure of 
independence. The inmates move in small groups without guards to 
escort them, although cameras track their movements. As a result, 
Sheridan looks more like the boys' reform school it once was than a prison.

Most prisons release inmates with a small amount of money and 
sometimes clean clothes; at Sheridan, inmates meet with parole 
officers 30 days before they leave and are assigned a drug counselor 
to work with them after release.

Among the first 150 graduates of Sheridan, said David E. Olson, a 
professor at Loyola University Chicago who has tracked the program, 
27 percent were arrested within nine months of release, compared with 
46 percent of a group of inmates of other institutions with similar 
backgrounds and drug use. Ten percent of the Sheridan graduates 
returned to prison within that time, compared with 27 percent of the 
other sample.

Officials in more rural Midwestern states say that as methamphetamine 
continues to devastate families and small towns, public support is 
shifting toward treatment.

"I cannot go to a restaurant or a department store without running 
into someone whose niece or daughter or friend is on meth," said 
Marvin Van Haaften, the drug policy adviser to Gov. Tom Vilsack of 
Iowa. "Suddenly people are a little more open. They realize these 
aren't child molesters, they are sons and daughters who have gotten 
hooked on meth." Mr. Van Haaften is considering proposals to turn a 
state jail into a treatment center.

Some Sheridan parolees have resented the follow-up, but success 
depends largely on motivation. Reginald Banks, 38, had been through 
drug treatment in his previous prison stays when he arrived at 
Sheridan in January 2004.

"When I got out I'd just get myself a bag," Mr. Banks said. "I knew 
it wasn't going to work." That changed after his last arrest for 
dealing drugs, when his 5-year-old son told him, "That's all you do, 
is stay in trouble."

At Sheridan, Mr. Banks said, he learned "there are more important 
things than being on the corner."

"What's important to me," he said, "is being home with my son, rather 
than just having him accept my phone calls."
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MAP posted-by: Beth