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SPONSOR: |
Beam |
DATE TYPED: |
01/22/02 |
HB |
65 |
||
SHORT TITLE: |
2nd Judicial Women’s Re-entry Drug
Treatment |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Hayes |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY02 |
FY03 |
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
$32.5 |
|
|
Recurring |
General Fund |
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates
SB101
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
LFC files
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
House Bill 65 appropriates $32.5 from the
general fund to the Second Judicial District Court for the purpose of funding a
women’s re-entry drug treatment court pilot project. The project will provide services for 28 to 35 women paroled from
prison. The effective date is July 1,
2002.
Significant
Issues
Laws 2001, Chapter 330
appropriated money from the general fund to CD to accomplish the following:
·
Provide residential treatment and transitional
reintegration services for women released from prison ($500.0) and $1 million
to provide residential treatment plus family and reintegration services for
female offenders with children under the age of eleven.
·
$1 million was also appropriated to the
Department of Health (DOH) to provide coordinated services in conjunction with
CD for substance abuse and treatment along with community reintegration for
probationers and parolees. CD is
currently focusing efforts on a transitional reporting center for parolees that
would also provide day and evening treatment programming and support through a
case management system.
·
In the Tobacco Substance Abuse fund, there is $2
million specifically designated for substance abuse treatment that could be
used for women parolees.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $32.5 contained in this
bill is a recurring expense to the general fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of
fiscal year 2003 shall revert to the general fund.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Since the offenders will be on parole and
reporting to a district court judge, procedures must be established with the
State Parole Board, the courts and the Corrections Department to determine who
has jurisdiction over the re-entry program in case a participant incurs another
violation or is arrested. A separate
set of court policies and procedures will need to be developed specifically for
this re-entry program as a result.
Given that the 2nd District Court (along with all the state’s
drug courts) will be establishing new policies for drug court as a result of a
statewide effort by the Supreme Court to standardize procedures, a potential
conflict may result.
DUPLICATION/RELATIONSHIP
SB101, Tobacco Settlement Program Fund
Distributions, duplicates HB65 in requesting an appropriation of $32.5 for the
women’s re-entry drug treatment pilot project.
HB64 relates to HB65 in its $250.0 request for
providing a women’s inpatient substance abuse treatment as an alternative to
incarceration.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
CH/prr:ar
[1]Begin typing on the * in replace mode. Do not add or delete spaces.