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MO Grant Will Help Inmates With Mental Illnesses Get Treatment

October 17th, 2011
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An inmate looks out of one of the segregation cells at the Greene County Jail. / Dean Curtis News-Leader

Proposed new tax would not be salve Grant will help inmates with mental illnesses get treatment.

A new collaborative project, now in its infancy, is aimed specifically at helping people who suffer from a serious mental illness get into treatment and stay out of jail. Report by News-Leader.com.

The partnership between law enforcement, jail officials, prosecutors and area mental health advocates has started to identify those stuck in a cycle of incarceration.

Parts of the collaboration project are funded by a two-year, $200,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice, which was awarded to the Greene County Jail.

Simultaneous to the jail’s project, Springfield police have begun to implement the city’s first comprehensive program focused on people suffering with mental illness.

Project participants hope the collaborative programs will free up city and county resources chronically drained by a small group of untreated mentally ill citizens.

Police Chief Paul Williams said the collaboration project, described as being on “the ground floor,” will need public and private support to combat what is widely perceived as a community problem.

“The standard has always been that if someone is doing something illegal, they go to jail,” Williams said.

“Really, the underlying issue could be mental illness.”

The police

Since beginning to work with the other officials in January, Springfield police have identified 16 people in the center-city area who suffer from mental illness and who cross paths with law enforcement often.

Now, when police respond to minor incidents involving these individuals, instead of taking them to jail, they are often diverted to available community resources.

Williams said, so far, two of the 16 are in treatment.

“The rest, we are still working with,” he said.

If successful, the list could be expanded to include those who are recognized as untreated mentally ill and live in other parts of the city.

The department’s new program is modeled after mental health programs at the Memphis Police Department in Tennessee and the Tulsa Police Department in Oklahoma, where Williams served for more than 20 years.

Williams hopes that, in time, local community groups, law enforcement and private citizens work together to help make the program successful.

“There needs to be more community involvement as opposed to just ignoring the problem.”

The grant will cover some specific instruction called Crisis Intervention Team training, a major component of the police department’s program.

That training focuses on the interaction between the mentally ill and law enforcement and is one of Greene County Deputy Cathy Ussery’s specialties.

“It kinda changes your tactics,” said Ussery, Crisis Intervention Team training coordinator with the sheriff’s office.

“Some tactics work better for someone with mental illness.”

The training

Ideally, officers who complete the 40-hour crisis intervention training are able to spot the difference between a psychotic episode, a drug-induced craze or something else entirely.

To date, only about six Greene County deputies — including Ussery — have received the specialized training.

“We are not a pioneer by any means,” said Sheriff Jim Arnott.

Ussery hopes to extend the training to more deputies as well as other police forces in nearby municipalities, including Springfield police.

“It’s something that the community desperately needs,” she said.

“We want to be able to train as many officers as possible.”

Williams said his goal is to have about 10 percent of the police force receive the specialized training.

One of the major goals of the training is to educate officers on community resources available to people suffering from mental illness.

For now, though, those resources are limited.

Beyond cooperating with family members, area law enforcement have two choices for mentally ill offenders: emergency room or jail.

“As of right now, there is nothing really in between,” Ussery said.

She and Williams said finding a viable alternative is a priority goal of the project.

“It would be great if we had something like that,” Williams said.

“But we aren’t there yet.”

The released

Another grant-funded aspect of the project is helping mentally ill inmates transition to life on the outside.

To that end, participants can receive medications, counseling sessions, a month of housing and bus passes to make it to appointments.

While the services that can be provided are short- term, they are designed to fill the gap to enable a needy person to sign up for Medicaid or veteran’s benefits if they qualify, or at least give the person a little time to get a job.

So far, about 50 former inmates are in various stages of the program.

“Hopefully they won’t end up in that revolving door of coming to the jail over and over,” said Melissa Ussery, mental health coordinator for the Greene County Jail.

(Melissa Ussery is Cathy Ussery’s sister-in-law).

In applying for the grant, county officials noted:

“Greene County Jail has become the largest mental health care facility in the area.”

People with mental illnesses are usually not taking medication when they arrive at the jail because they can’t afford them or have not been clinically diagnosed. Emergency rooms are the main medical provider for the uninsured.

“They are often rearrested and the cycle continues,” the application reads.

When the two-year grant expires, participants hope to have provided screening, assessment and discharge planning for about 400 people with mental illness who are detained for non-violent offenses.

As for the 50 former inmates taking advantage of the services, it isn’t yet clear if the project has been effective at limiting jail stints.

Melissa Ussery said patience is needed when treating people with mental illness. She said many also suffer from addiction and getting out of jail could lead to relapse.

But she added: “Relapse is a part of recovery.

“So, it depends on how you measure success.”

In proposing a new law enforcement tax, Greene County officials speak of many problems, holes and issues with the local criminal justice system.

They also speak of how a new 1/4-cent or 1/8-cent tax could provide remedies on some fronts.

No officials, however, have spoken about revenues from such a tax easing the problem with mentally ill inmates at the jail.

With a new tax, many new county-paid jobs have also been suggested or recommended, some at the jail. None, however, have been suggested as a way to deal with mentally ill inmates or reduce their numbers.

In addition, no one interviewed for this two-day report spoke of a new tax as the pathway to addressing this problem.

Movement toward any sort of solution, experts and officials say, would require more funding not for law enforcement but for resources for the ill outside jail and outside law enforcement, for instance at mental health facilities.

An additional wise move, experts say, would be to change commitment laws to force the seriously mentally ill to take help or to take medication.

Tammy Grants, Mental Health Issues, Missouri

KC Approves Regional Jail

April 26th, 2009
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The Kansas City Council on Thursday approved a deal to send city inmates to a Jackson County detention facility downtown.  Report from KansasCity.com.

The ordinance authorizes city staff to proceed with a regional jail concept, committing $3.1 million annually to house 150 prisoners a day in the county facility. The city will also provide money for construction costs estimated at $2.1 million. The city hopes to save $1 million in annual city jail operations, and the aging Municipal Correctional Institution will close.

vericatrajkova County-City Issues, MO Jackson County, MO Kansas City, Missouri, Regional Jails

County Wants Stimulus Funds For Jail

March 9th, 2009
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property-containersOvercrowding is pushing the issue for the Newton County MO Jail, a key area where local authorities hope for federal stimulus money.

“What we’re looking for at the jail is our jail is designed for approximately 80 inmates and on any given day we have 120,” said Jerry Carter, presiding county commissioner. “That doesn’t really need much explanation.”   Inmates often get a mattress instead of a bed. The kitchen is stretched as staff members try to care for almost double the number their facility was meant to handle. One industrial washing machine runs constantly and orange jumpsuits are stacked to the ceiling. Storage, too, is an issue. Officers keep their things in half a walled-off room, the closet they once used in the loading bay converted into storage for more inmate jumpsuits.  A bathroom was converted to a holding cell.

Officers wish they had more room for special needs prisoners. Sex offenders are kept in a separate holding area that is often overcrowded. The detox area is not big enough and prisoners craving that next fix or drink can be aggressive when crowded.
Upping the housing capacity is on the commissioner’s radar whether the federal money comes through or not.  “It’s just something we’re going to have to do,” Carter said … Funding from the stimulus package would speed the construction.

vericatrajkova Economic Issues, MO Newton County, Missouri, Overcrowding

KC Budget Switch To Jail Annoys Police

February 24th, 2009
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police-chief-jim-corwinKansas City MO Manager Wayne Cauthen wants to use $1.5 million from a public safety sales tax to expand the Jackson County Jail — a project never marketed to voters.  His plan angers Kansas City police.

Voters were told in 2002 that the quarter-cent sales tax would earmark $110 million for the Police Department, $13.2 million for Metropolitan Ambulance Services Trust, and $3 million for tornado sirens and emergency preparedness.   At the time, police told voters their share of tax proceeds would fund 10 specific capital improvement projects.  The jail project was not on the list, Police Chief Jim Corwin said.  “This is not what was sold to the public,” Corwin said Monday. “We feel it is inappropriate.”

Cauthen suggested in his budget proposal to divert $1.5 million from Police Department projects to renovate the county jail so it can accommodate city prisoners. The City Council voted last week to close the current city jail in order to save $1 million.  City officials believe using the money for the jail is proper, spokeswoman Mary Charles said Monday.   “It is a public safety sales tax, not just a police sales tax,” she said. “We believe it is a benefit to police, even though it wasn’t on the original list.”

More on this dispute in the Kansas City Star.

vericatrajkova County-City Issues, MO Jackson County, MO Kansas City, Missouri, Prison and Jail Construction

Regional Jail Plans Fleshed Out

February 18th, 2009
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mo-jackson-county-mapJackson County MO and Kansas City officials on Tuesday filled in important blanks about how they would operate a new regional jail, according to the Kansas City Star.

  • The third and fourth floors of the county’s Community Justice Building at 1305 Locust St. would house inmates once housed at the Municipal Correctional Institution;
  • The Kansas City Police Department is discussing whether to use the new facility for short-term detentions of prisoners now housed in police headquarters. The county wants $500,000 to upgrade its building;
  • The city would pay $57 per inmate per day, a total of $3.1 million for 150 beds. In addition, the city would pay an “intake fee” of $3 per inmate;
  • The city, if it allows the county to supervise needed improvements at the Community Justice Building, would provide $1.4 million in 2009 and up to $600,000 in 2010. An alternative would be for the city to design and contract the renovations.

Jackson County Executive Mike Sanders said other Jackson County cities may wish to join, but the priority was to get a deal with Kansas City, which would provide the largest number of inmates.   Legislator Dan Tarwater said, “In these economic times, this is the kind of thing that everyone needs to look at.”

vericatrajkova MO Jackson County, Missouri, Regional Jails

Kansas City’s Jail Problem

January 22nd, 2009
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The Kansas City Star has published an editorial on plans for the municipal jail and its inmates.

A plan to move 140 inmates from Kansas City’s aging Municipal Correctional Institution to the Jackson County Jail isn’t the ideal solution to the city’s corrections problem … The decrepit jail in eastern Kansas City houses non-violent offenders who commit violations such as panhandling, loitering and possessing drugs. Some city officials have long wanted to close the jail to save money … But it’s a much better option than another that’s been floated: shipping the inmates out of town to one or more privately run jails … The best solution would be a regional jail. A shared facility could handle corrections better and for less money than counties and cities are doing on their own.

blackinmates

vericatrajkova County-City Issues, MO Jackson County, Private Prisons, Regional Jails

Daily Sweep 11/8

November 8th, 2008
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vericatrajkova California, Female Inmates, IA Polk County, Missouri, Overcrowding, TN Greene County, WI La Crosse County, Work Release

Census of Facilities

October 10th, 2008
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The Bureau of Justice Statistics has just released the 2005 Census of Federal and State Correctional Facilities.  The document has a wealth of data across all States, including the numbers of privately-operated facilities.

The document can be accessed from the Basic Stats list at the top right sidebar.

vericatrajkova Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Federal Systems, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Private Prisons, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming

Daily Sweep 9/30

September 30th, 2008
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vericatrajkova AZ Tuscon, Community Corrections, France, MO Cole County

The Importance of Re-Entry

May 5th, 2008
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The Associated press has an interesting round-up story on re-entry efforts in Missouri, Wisconsin and Oregon.

In 2002, Missouri became one of the first states to overhaul its prisoner release program by linking state agencies, employers, nonprofit groups and drug and mental health counselors to help inmates fix the problems that led them to crime. Because nearly all inmates eventually are released, states across the country have been looking to copy ideas and methods that researchers and prison officials say are working best in Missouri and Oregon … The Missouri re-entry system was solidified when it was maintained in 2005 during the change from the administration of Democratic Gov. Bob Holden to that of Republican Gov. Matt Blunt, who issued an executive order cementing coordination within state departments. The model’s centerpiece is a transition accountability plan that has inmates identify problems in their lives that led them to prison, come up with ways to correct them, and identify community resources that can help after release …

“There will be people who do well no matter what, and there will be people who will mess up no matter what,” said Tony Streveler, an adviser to Wisconsin’s Department of Corrections, which has sent people to Missouri to study its system. “It’s the ones in between that the philosophy can help.” One of every three ex-convicts who lived in the transitional housing ended up back in prison within two years, whether for probation violations or a new crime. That compares with a nearly 50 percent recidivism rate for all other ex-convicts in Missouri …

Ginger Martin, an assistant director in Oregon’s Department of Corrections, said it has taken a major culture change in the last decade to convince corrections officers that their responsibilities go beyond running safe and secure prisons. Now, she said, “I don’t think there’s anybody who works in our department who doesn’t understand that one of our jobs is to prepare our inmates to be successful when they leave.”

More details can be found at KGW.com

vericatrajkova Missouri, Oregon, Re-Entry, Wisconsin