"What Works" To Protect The Public, Cut Costs & Reduce Recidivsm
"Putting Evidence-Based Principles Into Action"
August 8 - 9, 2013
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
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Most of the attention on reentry reform has been on high level “strategic plans” spurred by the excellent work of the National Institute of Corrections (NIC) and their Transition from Prison to Community (TPC) Model. But, the work of moving from planning to implementation requires an extraordinary level of coordination and capacity building. Many jurisdictions lack the capacity to take the action needed to translate their strategic prisoner reentry plans into specific, measurable, tactical, implementation steps that will actually reduce the rate of former prisoner violations and returns to prison. Without additional tools and resources to support effective implementation activity, federally funded programs will not be sustained once federal funding ends, let alone be taken to scale, and major statewide reductions in recidivism will continue to fall well short of state and national goals.
The workshop, provided by Dennis Schrantz, the former Chief Deputy Director of the Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC,) has three inter-related components. • First, the session will focus on the major lessons learned in Michigan and ten other states which have implemented reentry reforms and performance improvements. • Second reentry models will be discussed in detail. The TPC Model has been the operative high-level model for prisoner-reentry reform and has helped foster much of the change witnessed in the United States over the past ten years. The TPC Model has enormous value as a foundation for effective strategic planning, but does not focus on tactical or implementation planning for putting those plans into action. |
Third, the workshop will focus on tactical, implementation planning including the recommendations of the national Reentry Policy Council Report and a new framework developed to guide the process of putting these into action in order to improve offender and system outcomes. The Council’s 2003 report included policy statements and recommendations to assist with planning through the development of sound, evidence-based policies.
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DAILY AGENDA AT A GLANCE
8:00 |
REGISTRATION, BREAKFAST & NETWORKING | |
8:30 |
WORKSHOP BEGINS | |
10:00 |
AM NETWORKING BREAK | |
10:15 |
WORKSHOP RESUMES | |
12:00 |
LUNCH | |
1:00 |
WORKSHOP RESUMES | |
2:30 |
PM NETWORKING BREAK | |
2:45 |
WORKSHOP RESUMES | |
4:30 |
WORKSHOP CONCLUDES DAILY |
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ANNOTATED AGENDA AT A GLANCE
Executives, program managers and professionals at corrections and justice agencies, human and social services supports for mental and behavioral health, rehabilitation and reentry. Administrators, managers and leadership at prisons, county jails, community corrections organizations and service providers implementing evidence-based programs and practices.
WHY ATTEND?
Approved for 14 CE training hours
Joyfields Institute CE: Upon completion of the course, participants will receive a certificate as evidence of your accomplishment and status as a practitioner who has acquired specific new skills. Many licensing/certification bodies accept this designation. Please check with your licensing body
Licensed Alcohol & Drug Counselors: Joyfields Institute is an approved education provider by National Association of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC)/National Certification Commission (NCC) Provider #745. Many licensing/certification bodies accept this designation. Please check with your licensing body.
Substance Abuse Counselors: Joyfields Institute is an approved education provider by National Association of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC)/National Certification Commission (NCC) Provider #745. Many licensing/certification bodies accept this designation. Please check with your licensing body.
Social Workers: This program is co-sponsored by Commonwealth Educational Seminars (CES) for continuing education credit. CES, provider #1117 is approved as a provider for social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) www.aswb.org, through the Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. CES maintains responsibility for the program. ASWB Approval Period: 9/6/12-12/31/15. Social workers should contact their regulatory board to determine course approval. Social workers participating in this course receive 14 continuing education clock hours.
Professional Counselors: Joyfields Institute is an approved education provider by the National Association of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC)/National Certification Commission (NCC) Provider #745. Many licensing/certification bodies accept this designation. Please check with your licensing body.
Dennis Schrantz is a nationally known speaker, consultant and policy analyst who has worked for over 30 years across the U.S. assisting state and local jurisdictions in reducing prison and jail populations while improving public safety. From 2009 through 2012 Mr. Schrantz was the Senior Policy Analyst and Vice President of Business Development for Northpointe, Inc. From 2002 through 2009, Mr. Schrantz served as the deputy director of planning and community development for the Michigan Department of Corrections under the leadership of Michigan Governor Jennifer M. Granholm. In his seven years with the agency, Schrantz oversaw the development and implementation of initiatives such as the nationally recognized Michigan Prisoner ReEntry Initiative that resulted in a decline in the prison population by over 12 percent, the closing of 20 prisons, and a cost savings to the State of over $900 million – without any related increase in crime. Michigan’s accomplishments in putting evidence-based practices to work have been highlighted in numerous publications including from The Sentencing Project, Downscaling Prisons; Lessons from Four States (2010) and On the Chopping Block: State Prison Closings (2012); The Council of State Governments, States Report Reductions in Recidivism (2012), The Pew Center for the States, State of Recidivism: The Revolving Door of America’s Prisons (2011), the ACLU, Michigan Breaks the Political Logjam: A New Model for Reducing Prison Populations (2009) and, the Washington Monthly, “Prison Break: How Michigan Managed to Empty its Penitentiaries while Lowering its Crime Rate.” |
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Between 1995 and 2002 when he took his post in the Granholm Administration, Mr. Schrantz worked in Wayne County (Detroit), Michigan as head of their community corrections division where he tackled the vexing issue of a 24 year old law suit against overcrowded conditions in the jail system. As a result of improved management in the courts and the jail system, the lawsuit was ended and for the first time in decades the jail had ample space to house prisoners.
From 1989 until 1995, Mr. Schrantz was the founding executive director of the Michigan Office of Community Corrections that was responsible for reducing admissions to prison under the state’s then-fledgling Community Corrections Act. Under his leadership the state’s rate of admission to prison dropped from 32% to 22% where it has been maintained for nearly 15 years due to the structural changes in the front end of the justice system put into place by the Office of Community Corrections. During that time, Mr. Schrantz served under two governors, James Blanchard (D) and John Engler (R).
Mr. Schrantz has served as a consultant and advisor to the Sentencing Project, the Vera Institute of the Justice, the National Reentry Resource Center, the National Institute of Corrections, the Urban Institute, the Pew Center for the States, Public Policy Associates, the Center for Effective Public Policy, the Constitution Project and Joyfields Institute.
How to make your reservation:
The registration fee covers;
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REGISTRATION TUITION
* GROUPS: REGISTER 3, GET 4TH ATTENDEE FREE - All 4 Pay $675 ea!
** Multi Program Discount -Take Additional 10% OFF
Register online below or, download and complete registration form and fax to +1(678)605-0271. For assistance, call +1(770)409-8780.
Event Date | 08/08/2013 |
Event End Date | 08/09/2013 |
Individual Price | $895.00 |
Location | Luxor Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada |
Number of Registrants | Rate/Person ($) |
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4 | 675.00 |