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| History of the Office of Community Corrections |
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The Office of Community
Corrections (OCC) within the MDOC administers Public
Act 511 passed in 1988 to reduce prison commitments through a state grants
program for community-based sanctions and services.
OCC works in cooperation with offices of Field Operations Administration and
local government to reduce admissions to prison, modernize use of local jail
facilities, improve rehabilitative services to offenders and strengthen offender
accountability.
By supporting appropriate use of non-prison sanctions for offenders who might
otherwise come to prison, the department has helped reduce the state prison
commitment rate from 32.1 in 1991 to about 26 percent.
Local governments apply for grants by establishing community corrections advisory
boards which develop comprehensive corrections plans. The plans identify local
policies and practices as well as programs and services which will help achieve
their goals.
OCC requires each community corrections advisory board to identify linkages
with Michigan Works! agencies, the local Substance Abuse Coordinating Agency,
the local community health departments, local school districts and other agencies
to help provide cost-effective and non-duplicated services to offenders.
The State Community Corrections Board reviews the grant applications and makes
recommendations to the director of the MDOC on which awards to make. The director
then makes the final decision.
Grants are awarded to help support services such as substance-abuse treatment
and to provide residential programs for certain types of offenders such as probationers.
OCC has also awarded grants to help local communities expand jail beds.
Practically every county in Michigan has participated in the process and received
funding.
Most of the offenders enrolled in treatment-type programs are sentenced felons.
Offenders with higher sentencing guideline scores, probation violators and those
who have convictions for driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol account
for increasing proportions of new enrollees in residential programs. Misdemeanants
account for the majority of enrollments in community service programs.
Cognitive restructuring is frequently a part of treatment programming in the
community, and there is an emphasis on educational programming which has been
enhanced through use of computer-assisted instruction.
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