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UT Video Visits For Inmates Keep Jail Calmer

December 6th, 2011
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OGDEN — Nothing like technology to calm things down a bit inside a jail.

What two years ago were twice-weekly visits of family and friends for Weber County Jail inmates, talking through plexiglass with a phone, is now up to eight visits a week or more with the latest evolution of video visitation technology. Report by Standard Examiner.

In October the jail upgraded the video software to allow extra visits — for a nominal fee.

When the video system first replaced the “barrier visits” in the visiting room late in 2009, the weekly inmate half-hour visits went from two to four, said Sheriff Terry Thompson. That capacity now is much expanded since October — probably doubling again — limited pretty much by how often an inmate’s visitor can afford the $10 fee, he said.

The impact of the video systems has been obvious from the start — no more escorting groups of up to 18 inmates at a time to the visiting room.

Prisoners from maximum security had to be escorted in shackles individually, under guard with two or more correctional officers.

“That was a severe safety and security issue, very labor intensive,” Thompson said. “The potential for assaults and those kinds of things on my staff was tremendous.”

“Just the noise alone from walking 18 inmates through the jail to visitation was bad enough,” said Corrections Sgt. Dustin Anthon, one of the direct beneficiaries of video visitation. A steel and concrete jail has no buffers, he explained, with no carpet or upholstery to absorb sound.

“It’s been mutually beneficial, for staff and inmates,” Thompson said.

Now inmates can sit down to one of the 50 terminals spread throughout the jail housing units to take their video phone call.

That extra contact with loved ones, enhanced since October, has made for more manageable inmates, officials said.

“It makes them far less of a problem,” Thompson said. “We absolutely have far less complaints from inmates on visitation issues … and overall, I believe inmate discipline problems in general are down, although I don’t have exact statistics on that.

“I feel their overall demeanor is better, and no question the video system contributes to that.”

Family and friends can schedule and pay for the visits from their home PCs, then go to the jail to connect via 25 terminals available to the public to place their video calls.

Renovo Software, the Minnesota-based company that installed the video system and handles the billing, in a recent news release estimated that adding the fee system allows for “3,500 additional personal paid visits per week without adding to (the jail’s) existing infrastructure.” The jail holds up to 900 inmates at any given time.

Officials didn’t have exact numbers available on the increased visitation since the fee system came online late in October.

Renovo keeps about a third of the $10 fee, the rest going to the jail. Renovo estimates the jail will earn between $9,000 and $18,000 a year from its take. The old barrier visitation room, with 18 small cubicles, or “slots” as they are called, is now reserved for special circumstances, or visits from inmates’ lawyers.

Tammy Utah, Video Use

Utah DOC Cuts 6% Of Jobs

April 15th, 2009
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director-tom-pattersonThe Utah Department of Corrections will eliminate as many as 160 full-time jobs – more than six percent of its work force – by July 1.  Report by the Salt Lake Tribune.

Officials say only three workers will be laid off … Twenty-three people will be reassigned to new jobs, some of those will take pay cuts averaging 22 percent and ranging as high as 37 percent. In extreme cases, workers will drop as many as two grades in rank – from captain to sergeant, for example …

And for the prison system, work-force cuts is just one of many reductions stemming from the recent legislative session.  En route to lopping $20 million from its 2010 budget, Corrections scaled back a program aimed at reforming drug addicts, closed a center that helped judges decide the best sentence for various violators and eliminated a parole office and a transition center …

But when it came to workers, Corrections head Tom Patterson wrote in an April 9 letter to his staff that the agency’s main priority was “to preserve employment for as many staff members as possible.”   “In every possible case, we tried to offer affected staff members a reassignment to alternative positions,” said Patterson, who acknowledged that many of those positions paid much less and forced workers to commute farther. Patterson noted that many of the looming cuts were absorbed by leaving open positions vacant, and by 21 workers who accepted retirement incentives.

vericatrajkova Economic Issues, Personnel Issues, Utah

Salt Lake County May Go “Pay-for-Stay”

March 31st, 2009
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sheriff-jim-winderSalt Lake County UT Sheriff Jim Winder will pitch a pay-to-stay program that would require wrongdoers to pay a portion of their room and board while incarcerated.

“People who commit crimes ought to pay for them,”  Councilman Jim Bradley said.  So the County Council will consider a six-month pilot program that will charge inmates $40 a day to bunk at the 2,000-bed Adult Detention Center in South Salt Lake. That’s about half the actual cost, now pegged at $82 a day.  The policy would not apply to state and federal inmates. Nor would the jail pursue claims against “indigent” inmates.  “Are we going to offset the jail budget with this program? No,” Sheriff Winder said. “But in cases where people can pay, they should” …

It’s not much compared with the half-million dollars the jail in Logan spends on food or the $6.1 million needed for its overall operation. But it’s money “the taxpayer doesn’t have to pay,” said Capt. Kim Cheshire, commander of the Cache County Jail. The idea is hardly groundbreaking. Jails have imposed similar rules elsewhere in Utah, including in Cache County. There, officials likely will collect up to $100,000 this year from a jail population of about 310 inmates …

Yet Winder’s proposal could run into resistance in Salt Lake County, where some council members fear the policy would prove too burdensome for inmates already strapped financially. Bill dodgers wouldn’t have to serve more time for not paying, but they could face collections.  “My concern is that we will be sending people out the door with a bill that they cannot pay,” Councilwoman Jenny Wilson said. “These are people who are already down and out. It may just be too much.”

vericatrajkova Booking Fees, UT Salt Lake County, Utah

County To Re-Open Jail — Maybe

March 9th, 2009
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ut-oxbow-jailSouth Salt Lake has given Salt Lake County UT a green light to reopen Oxbow Jail — even as looming state budget cuts put the plan in jeopardy, according to the Salt Lake Tribune.

On Thursday, the South Salt Lake Planning Commission unanimously approved a conditional-use permit that gives the county the city’s permission to open the mothballed facility … “There were several neighbors who spoke, and they were all in favor of it,” South Salt Lake Community Development Director Larry Gardner said Friday. “They feel like opening the jail will be good for driving away unwanted activity that’s occurring on their street right now.” Oxbow is scheduled to reopen this summer, relieving overcrowding at the nearby Adult Detention Center. But the Legislature is weighing whether to slash money paid to house state inmates in county jails. That could wipe out $2.7 million currently sent to Salt Lake County and shelve plans to unlock Oxbow.

vericatrajkova Economic Issues, Overcrowding, UT Salt Lake County, Utah

Prison Education Overhaul In Utah

February 24th, 2009
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inmate-readingLawmakers took a major step Monday toward overhauling the way prisoners in Utah learn while locked up. This report from the Salt Lake Tribune.

The State House, in a 68-3 vote, passed HB100 — a bill that would force inmates to pay for their own schooling, even if it means taking out loans. The bill also would give the Department of Corrections more control over programs offered to state prisoners.  The measure is based on the belief that educated prisoners are less likely to land back behind bars after they’re released.

Utah’s higher education system has been directing prison education, using about $900,000 generated annually by a fee prisoners and their families pay for using phones in the lock-up facilities … Corrections officials argue they are better in touch with prisoners’ needs and should control inmates’ educations rather than be notified of what changes will come each year. And they want to refocus prison education on vocational programs rather than degrees. That, officials say, would better prepare inmates to land jobs when they are released from prison and enable them to pay back their loans while helping to fund future inmates’ educations.

vericatrajkova Inmate Education, Utah

Utah’s Prison Gangs

February 17th, 2009
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ut_gangsGang control is an aspect of security in Utah’s corrections system that has found renewed importance with a recent spike in gang membership and violence.

“Most of the public, they look at it like the guy has been picked up, he’s gone through the court process and now, everything is good,” said Pete Walters, who oversees the gang unit at the Utah State Prison and is president of the Utah Gang Investigators Association. “They get to make phone calls. They are all allowed to get and send letters. The majority of them have visits. … They, a lot of times, still have an influence over some of the groups in the neighborhood” … In an activity known as “fishing,” inmates can pass messages between their cells by way of make-shift delivery devices called kites, made with a piece of string, a note and a weight. Letters can contain hidden code words, symbols, or drawings to signal an attack on a rival. Phone calls could also contain hidden messages.  Corrections gang officers are trained to intercept and decode the hidden messages …

Retaliation for a gang event on the street can play out in prison or jail; or an incident that occurs in the corrections system can have ramifications in neighborhoods.  “You still have people trying to deal drugs, you still have extortion, you still have assaults,” said Jeremy Sharp, a gang officer with the Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Office who works at the jail. “They continue to do it here” …

While Utahns might not think the state has the same gang problems as larger cities such as Los Angeles or Chicago, the corrections system faces the same challenges in containing gang activity, Walters said.  New inmates undergo mental health and physical evaluations, and checking for gang affiliations is a part of the evaluations, Walters said. Some are forthcoming about their gang ties, others deny it despite telling tattoos on their bodies, he said.  Some gang members determined to be a threat are placed in high security housing. Whether someone is housed with the general prison population or in the security threat unit often depends on the inmate’s behavior, Walters said.

The article in the Salt Lake Tribune has much more detail.

vericatrajkova Gangs (STGs), Utah

Utah Budget Cuts To Cause Early Releases

February 10th, 2009
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Up to 550 inmates from Utah’s prisons could be released as early as September because funding for a massive prison expansion in Gunnison has been yanked.

ut-gunnison-prisonThe Utah State Legislature took $54.5 million for the Central Utah Correctional Facility’s maximum security expansion to backfill all state agencies facing the budget crisis. It was able to save some jobs and fund some programs.   The flip side is the Utah Department of Corrections needed that money to prepare for an influx of criminals by 2011.  “The loss of those 192 beds and the loss of a parole violater center has created a situation that is quickly reaching a crisis,” state corrections spokeswoman Angie Welling said Tuesday … By law, if the prisons max out on bedspace they must release inmates. Welling said their projections have it happening as early as September or as late as 2010.

The state prisons have already reached their 1,250-bed capacity in county jails the agency contracts with to house inmates because of funding issues. The Utah Department of Corrections refuses to house first-degree felons in county jails after a series of escapes occurred in 2007 …

Corrections will work with the Utah Board of Pardons and Parole to determine what inmates will be released. They are typically prisoners who are non-violent and have already been given a parole date — it’s just moved up to accommodate the statutory requirements.

The full story is from the Deseret News.

vericatrajkova Early Release, Economic Issues, Overcrowding, Probation and Parole, Utah

Salt Lake City To Add Parole Center

February 4th, 2009
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With a six-month moratorium on halfway houses set to expire this month, Salt Lake City leaders are considering a plan that would make room for a 300-bed parole center on the city’s west side, as reported by the Deseret Morning News.

The city issued the moratorium last August after the state Department of Corrections’ plans to build a correctional center near 500 West and 1000 South raised concerns from residents and city officials. Now the city is considering changes to its ordinances that would place more restrictions on halfway houses and relegate larger facilities to industrial areas west of I-215 …

“We’re not against the idea, just the location,” said Councilman Van Turner, who would like to see the area near 500 West and 900 South redeveloped and turned into a city center with shops and high-rise apartments. “This is something that would just take up valuable space.” Turner’s west-side district is already home to three halfway houses, including a 115-bed facility for federal inmates and a 68-bed facility for state sex offenders. “They’re good neighbors,” Turner said of the centers …

The state’s proposed parole center, which could eventually house up to 522 people, would be a place for parole violators to “get a tune-up” while keeping precious bed space free in the state’s crowded prison system, said Corrections spokeswoman Angie Welling … “These aren’t prison inmates,” Welling said. “They’re already out in the community and they’re struggling.”

vericatrajkova Probation and Parole, UT Salt Lake City, Utah

All Sheriffs To Be Trained COs: Utah Bill

February 3rd, 2009
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The Utah Senate Judiciary, Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice Committee unanimously passed a bill Tuesday morning requiring new sheriffs in the state to become certified as corrections officers.  The bill is

intended reduce the number of lawsuits filed against county sheriffs’ offices.    Greenwood said most lawsuits against sheriffs are the result of something that happened in a jail setting and that his bill “makes our sheriffs better qualified to serve the public.”   Currently, when a person files to run for sheriff, they are required to show that they have received police training and been certified as a peace officer.  The proposed legislation would add a requirement that, between the time of election and time of taking office, any newly elected county sheriff complete a 40-hour correctional facility management course.

vericatrajkova Accreditation, County-State Issues, Utah

“Could Have Been Worse”: Utah Budget Cuts

February 2nd, 2009
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It could have been worse.  That was the sentiment Utah department heads were expressing Friday, as legislators agreed on a current-year budget that slashed $190 million from state programs, but sliced about half as deep as was originally contemplated.

Department of Corrections director Tom Patterson said the department would have to find new spots for 76 employees or they would be let go within the next few months. Parole officers’ caseloads would also likely increase.  Patterson said more challenging will be trying to find more cuts in next year’s budget. On the current funding path, the department might be forced into the early release of inmates beginning in 2011.   “We will not jeopardize safety and we feel like the public can be assured safety will be maintained to the best of our ability,” he said.

This is an excerpt from a detailed look at the entire Utah budget at the Salt Lake Tribune.

vericatrajkova Economic Issues, Utah