Spotlight Announcement

8/5/2008: CSG Justice Center Releases Innovative Web-Based Tool to Help State and Local Officials Improve Prisoner/Inmate Reentry

The Council of State Governments Justice Center unveiled today a first-of-its-kind interactive online tool for state and local government professionals working to make prison and jail reentry safer and more successful. The tool was developed with support from the Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice, to familiarize state and local government officials with different assessment instruments used in corrections systems across the nation to gauge the risks and needs of someone admitted to prison or jail.

"The only way we can stop the cycle of recidivism is to start planning for an individual's return to the community from the very first step he or she takes into a prison or jail," said Justin Jones, Director of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections. "Prison and jail officials need the latest thinking on assessment tool options to inform prison and jail programming, as well as decisions about release and community supervision."

According to the Justice Center, such information is typically collected through a series of screenings, assessments, and evaluations conducted before sentencing and immediately after admittance to a correctional institution. This information should be updated periodically throughout the person’s incarceration and during any community supervision. The information also should be used to make decisions about how to manage risk, deliver treatment and other services, and allocate resources.

"One reason this tool is so valuable is because it allows staff to search for key information at particular decision points (such as admission to a facility) or to search by topic areas (such as risk and security classifications, mental health, substance abuse, education, employment, housing, family relationships, and financial status)," said AT Wall, Director of the Rhode Island Department of Corrections. "Each of these categories includes descriptions of information to gather, examples of validated assessment instruments, resources and recommendations about prioritization, and suggestions for who should be charged with collecting each kind of data."

The online resource is part of a larger toolkit the Justice Center plans to release in fall 2008 that will include a policy guide and three case studies of the collective experiences of jurisdictions that applied the guide's recommendations to improve their assessment processes. The availability of the complete toolkit will be provided sometime this fall in an upcoming issue of the Reentry Policy Council's newsletter.

The Justice Center’s assessment webpage at http://tools.reentrypolicy.org/assessments/chart features the web-based tool.

The Council of State Governments Justice Center is a national nonprofit organization that serves policymakers at the local, state, and federal levels from all branches of government. It provides practical, nonpartisan advice and consensus-driven strategies—informed by available evidence—to increase public safety and strengthen communities.

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Homelessness and Prisoner Reentry

Many people released from prison or jail are at risk for homelessness, which can increase the likelihood that they will commit new crimes and return to prison.

Related Information

Issue Area:
Assessment Processes

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