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Prison Treatment Cuts Could Feed Recidivism in Calif.
November 20, 2009

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News Summary

An 80-percent reduction in prison addiction-treatment capacity could lead to a proportional increase in recidivism in California, some experts say.

The Contra Costa Times reported Nov. 12 that $1.2 billion in budget cuts for state prisons will mean that just 2,350 inmates will receive addiction treatment next year, down from 12,164. Nine-month programs will be cut to three months, which critics say could limit their effectiveness.

"Those inmates will have very little treatment service to deal with behavioral issues that they've spent years to develop, most of which was put on them from an early age," said Darrol Monfils, a counselor at the California Institution for Women. "Their chances of succeeding are slim."

"California prisoners will be paroling inmates with little or no rehabilitation," Monfils said. "They will be paroling with the same behaviors as they did when they arrived. Now, having said that, there will be a few exceptions to the rule, but they will be the larger minority."

A state corrections department spokesperson said the agency is "scientifically evaluating and assessing inmates, those at the highest risk of recidivism and so we are targeting our resources to that population group and identifying what their needs are."

David Conn, senior vice president for treatment provider Mental Health Systems, Inc., said the state made the cuts only reluctantly. "These were sort of last-minute budget cuts to balance the budget, and everyone agrees it's probably a foolish decision," he said. "Individuals who are incarcerated to support drug habits will not receive substance abuse treatment. The likelihood of them reoffending increases significantly."

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Old Counselor on 23 Nov 09 11:11 AM EST
Which go to show the prison system is more committed to preserving it's jobs than rehabilitation. They give lip service to treatment and only support it if plenty of money is involved.

Posted by Professional in Recovery on 23 Nov 09 02:38 PM EST
It's time to for the CDC reach out to 12 step programs and bring more meetings inside. If the CDC would loosen some of it's requirements to enter prisons and provide larger rooms more frequntly then we can bring the solution to more men and women.

Posted by Joseph Coykendall on 23 Nov 09 11:23 PM EST
I think it is incredible that the State of California is going to "throw in the towel" just like that!I am a counselor that works with the addicted on the state level and I have seen miracles happen. How can we expect these men & women not to give up if we are giving up on them. We need to increase Tx and cut C/O jobs. That would balance the budget!

Posted by Addiction Professional on 24 Nov 09 01:03 AM EST
It is silly. Treatment costs less and is more effective than incarceration, yet cutting treatment is the way polititians "save money". Imagine all of the fiscal decisions made with this sort of backward thinking and you can start to understand how CA got in this financial mess in the first place!

Posted by John from Oceanside on 01 Dec 09 04:41 PM EST
The Prison Guard Union is one of the second most powerful union in Calif next to the Teachers Union. Good luck tring to cut C/O jobs. The Teachers Union is one of the big reasons Calif is in the mess we are in because each time the budget proposals were on the ballet they threw millions of dollars to defeat them.

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