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Public Act 096-0761
Public Act 0761 96TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
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Public Act 096-0761 |
SB1289 Enrolled |
LRB096 03761 RLC 13791 b |
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| AN ACT concerning criminal law.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the | Illinois Crime Reduction Act of 2009. | Section 5. Purpose and Definitions. | (a) Purpose. The General Assembly hereby declares that it | is the policy of Illinois to preserve public safety, reduce | crime, and make the most effective use of correctional | resources. Currently, the Illinois correctional system | overwhelmingly incarcerates people whose time in prison does | not result in improved behavior and who return to Illinois | communities in less than one year. It is therefore the purpose | of this Act to create an infrastructure to provide effective | resources and services to incarcerated individuals and | individuals supervised in the locality; to hold offenders | accountable; to successfully rehabilitate offenders to prevent | future involvement with the criminal justice system; to measure | the overall effectiveness of the criminal justice system in | achieving this policy; and to create the Adult Redeploy | Illinois program for those who do not fall under the definition | of violent offenders. | (b) Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the context |
| clearly requires otherwise: | (1) "Assets" are an offender's qualities or resources, | such as family and other positive support systems, | educational achievement, and employment history, that | research has demonstrated will decrease the likelihood | that the offender will re-offend and increase the | likelihood that the offender will successfully reintegrate | into the locality. | (2) "Case plan" means a consistently updated written | proposal that shall follow the offender through all phases | of the criminal justice system, that is based on the | offender's risks, assets, and needs as identified through | the assessment tool described in this Act, and that | outlines steps the offender shall take and the programs in | which the offender shall participate to maximize the | offender's ability to be rehabilitated. | (3) "Conditions of supervision" include conditions | described in Section 5-6-3.1 of the Unified Code of | Corrections.
| (4) "Evidence-based practices" means policies, | procedures, programs, and practices that have been | demonstrated to reduce recidivism among incarcerated | individuals and individuals on local supervision. | (5) "Local supervision" includes supervision in | local-based, non-incarceration settings under such | conditions and reporting requirements as are imposed by the |
| court or the Prisoner Review Board. | (6) "Needs" include an offender's criminogenic | qualities, skills, and experiences that can be altered in | ways that research has demonstrated will minimize the | offender's chances of re-offending and maximize the | offender's chances of successfully reintegrating into the | locality. | (7) "Risks" include the attributes of an offender that | are commonly considered to be those variables, such as age, | prior criminal history, history of joblessness, and lack of | education that research has demonstrated contribute to an | offender's likelihood of re-offending and impact an | offender's ability to successfully reintegrate into the | locality. | (8) "Violent offender" means a person convicted of a | violent crime as defined in subsection (c) of Section 3 of | the Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act.
| Section 10. Evidence-Based Programming.
| (a) Purpose. Research and practice have identified new | strategies and policies that can result in a significant | reduction in recidivism rates and the successful local | reintegration of offenders. The purpose of this Section is to | ensure that State and local agencies direct their resources to | services and programming that have been demonstrated to be | effective in reducing recidivism and reintegrating offenders |
| into the locality. | (b) Evidence-based programming in local supervision. | (1) The Parole Division of the Department of | Corrections and the Prisoner Review Board shall adopt | policies, rules, and regulations that, within the first | year of the adoption, validation, and utilization of the | statewide, standardized risk assessment tool described in | this Act, result in at least 25% of supervised individuals | being supervised in accordance with evidence-based | practices; within 3 years of the adoption, validation, and | utilization of the statewide, standardized risk assessment | tool result in at least 50% of supervised individuals being | supervised in accordance with evidence-based practices; | and within 5 years of the adoption, validation, and | utilization of the statewide, standardized risk assessment | tool result in at least 75% of supervised individuals being | supervised in accordance with evidence-based practices. | The policies, rules, and regulations shall: | (A) Provide for a standardized individual case | plan that follows the offender through the criminal | justice system (including in-prison if the supervised | individual is in prison) that is:
| (i) Based on the assets of the individual as | well as his or her risks and needs identified | through the assessment tool as described in this | Act. |
| (ii) Comprised of treatment and supervision | services appropriate to achieve the purpose of | this Act. | (iii) Consistently updated, based on program | participation by the supervised individual and | other behavior modification exhibited by the | supervised individual. | (B) Concentrate resources and services on | high-risk offenders. | (C) Provide for the use of evidence-based | programming related to education, job training, | cognitive behavioral therapy, and other programming | designed to reduce criminal behavior. | (D) Establish a system of graduated responses. | (i) The system shall set forth a menu of | presumptive responses for the most common types of | supervision violations.
| (ii) The system shall be guided by the model | list of intermediate sanctions created by the | Probation Services Division of the State of | Illinois pursuant to subsection (1) of Section 15 | of the Probation and Probation Officers Act and the | system of intermediate sanctions created by the | Chief Judge of each circuit court pursuant to | Section 5-6-1 of the Unified Code of Corrections. | (iii) The system of responses shall take into |
| account factors such as the severity of the current | violation; the supervised individual's risk level | as determined by a validated assessment tool | described in this Act; the supervised individual's | assets; his or her previous criminal record; and | the number and severity of any previous | supervision violations. | (iv) The system shall also define positive | reinforcements that supervised individuals may | receive for compliance with conditions of | supervision. | (v) Response to violations should be swift and | certain and should be imposed as soon as | practicable but no longer than 3 working days of | detection of the violation behavior. | (2) Conditions of local supervision (probation and | mandatory supervised release). Conditions of local | supervision whether imposed by a sentencing judge or the | Prisoner Review Board shall be imposed in accordance with | the offender's risks, assets, and needs as identified | through the assessment tool described in this Act. | (c) Evidence-based in-prison programming. | (1) The Department of Corrections shall adopt | policies, rules, and regulations that, within the first | year of the adoption, validation, and utilization of the | statewide, standardized risk assessment tool described in |
| this Act, result in at least 25% of incarcerated | individuals receiving services and programming in | accordance with evidence-based practices; within 3 years | of the adoption, validation, and utilization of the | statewide, standardized risk assessment tool result in at | least 50% of incarcerated individuals receiving services | and programming in accordance with evidence-based | practices; and within 5 years of the adoption, validation, | and utilization of the statewide, standardized risk | assessment tool result in at least 75% of incarcerated | individuals receiving services and programming in | accordance with evidence-based practices. The policies, | rules, and regulations shall: | (A) Provide for the use and development of a case | plan based on the risks, assets, and needs identified | through the assessment tool as described in this Act. | The case plan should be used to determine in-prison | programming; should be continuously updated based on | program participation by the prisoner and other | behavior modification exhibited by the prisoner; and | should be used when creating the case plan described in | subsection (b).
| (B) Provide for the use of evidence-based | programming related to education, job training, | cognitive behavioral therapy and other evidence-based | programming. |
| (C) Establish education programs based on a | teacher to student ratio of no more than 1:30. | (D) Expand the use of drug prisons, modeled after | the Sheridan Correctional Center, to provide | sufficient drug treatment and other support services | to non-violent inmates with a history of substance | abuse. | (2) Participation and completion of programming by | prisoners can impact earned time credit as determined under | Section 3-6-3 of the Unified Code of Corrections. | (3) The Department of Corrections shall provide its | employees with intensive and ongoing training and | professional development services to support the | implementation of evidence-based practices. The training | and professional development services shall include | assessment techniques, case planning, cognitive behavioral | training, risk reduction and intervention strategies, | effective communication skills, substance abuse treatment | education and other topics identified by the Department or | its employees. | (d) The Parole Division of the Department of Corrections | and the Prisoner Review Board shall provide their employees | with intensive and ongoing training and professional | development services to support the implementation of | evidence-based practices. The training and professional | development services shall include assessment techniques, case |
| planning, cognitive behavioral training, risk reduction and | intervention strategies, effective communication skills, | substance abuse treatment education, and other topics | identified by the agencies or their employees.
| (e) The Department of Corrections, the Prisoner Review | Board, and other correctional entities referenced in the | policies, rules, and regulations of this Act shall design, | implement, and make public a system to evaluate the | effectiveness of evidence-based practices in increasing public | safety and in successful reintegration of those under | supervision into the locality. Annually, each agency shall | submit to the Sentencing Policy Advisory Council a | comprehensive report on the success of implementing | evidence-based practices. The data compiled and analyzed by the | Council shall be delivered annually to the Governor and the | General Assembly.
| Section 15. Adoption, validation, and utilization of an | assessment tool.
| (a) Purpose. In order to determine appropriate punishment | or services which will protect public safety, it is necessary | for the State and local jurisdictions to adopt a common | assessment tool. Supervision and correctional programs are | most effective at reducing future crime when they accurately | assess offender risks, assets, and needs, and use these | assessment results to assign supervision levels and target |
| programs to criminogenic needs. | (b) After review of the plan issued by the Task Force | described in subsection (c), the Department of Corrections, the | Parole Division of the Department of Corrections, and the | Prisoner Review Board shall adopt policies, rules, and | regulations that within 3 years of the effective date of this | Act result in the adoption, validation, and utilization of a | statewide, standardized risk assessment tool across the | Illinois criminal justice system. | (c) The Governor's Office shall convene a Risks, Assets, | and Needs Assessment Task Force to develop plans for the | adoption, validation, and utilization of such an assessment | tool. The Task Force shall include, but not be limited to, | designees from the Department of Corrections who are | responsible for parole services, a designee from the Cook | County Adult Probation; a representative from a county | probation office, a designee from DuPage County Adult | Probation, a designee from Sangamon County Adult Probation; and | designees from the Attorney General's Office, the Prisoner | Review Board, the Illinois Criminal Justice Information | Authority, the Sentencing Policy Advisory Council, the Cook | County State's Attorney, a State's Attorney selected by the | President of the Illinois State's Attorneys Association, the | Cook County Public Defender, and the State Appellate Defender. | (c-5) The Department of Human Services shall provide | administrative support for the Task Force. |
| (d) The Task Force's plans shall be released within one | year of the effective date of this Act and shall at a minimum | include: | (1) A computerized method and design to allow each of | the State and local agencies and branches of government | which are part of the criminal justice system to share the | results of the assessment. The recommendations for the | automated system shall include cost estimates, a | timetable, a plan to pay for the system and for sharing | data across agencies and branches of government. | (2) A selection of a common validated tool to be used | across the system. | (3) A description of the different points in the system | at which the tool shall be used. | (4) An implementation plan, including training and the | selection of pilot sites to test the tool. | (5) How often and in what intervals offenders will be | reassessed. | (6) How the results can be legally shared with | non-governmental organizations that provide treatment and | services to those under local supervision.
| Section 20. Adult Redeploy Illinois.
| (a) Purpose. When offenders are accurately assessed for | risk, assets, and needs, it is possible to identify which | people should be sent to prison and which people can be |
| effectively supervised in the locality. By providing financial | incentives to counties or judicial circuits to create effective | local-level evidence-based services, it is possible to reduce | crime and recidivism at a lower cost to taxpayers. Based on | this model, this Act hereby creates the Adult Redeploy Illinois | program for offenders who do not fall under the definition of | violent offenders in order to increase public safety and | encourage the successful local supervision of eligible | offenders and their reintegration into the locality. | (b) The Adult Redeploy Illinois program shall reallocate | State funds to local jurisdictions that successfully establish | a process to assess offenders and provide a continuum of | locally based sanctions and treatment alternatives for | offenders who would be incarcerated in a State facility if | those local services and sanctions did not exist. The allotment | of funds shall be based on a formula that rewards local | jurisdictions for the establishment or expansion of local | supervision programs and requires them to pay the amount | determined in subsection (e) if incarceration targets as | defined in subsection (e) are not met. | (c) Each county or circuit participating in the Adult | Redeploy Illinois program shall create a local plan describing | how it will protect public safety and reduce the county or | circuit's utilization of incarceration in State facilities or | local county jails by the creation or expansion of | individualized services or programs. |
| (d) Based on the local plan, a county or circuit shall | enter into an agreement with the Adult Redeploy Oversight Board | described in subsection (e) to reduce the number of commitments | to State correctional facilities from that county or circuit, | excluding violent offenders. The agreement shall include a | pledge from the county or circuit to reduce their commitments | by 25% of the level of commitments from the average number of | commitments for the past 3 years of eligible non-violent | offenders. In return, the county or circuit shall receive, | based upon a formula described in subsection (e), funds to | redeploy for local programming for offenders who would | otherwise be incarcerated such as management and supervision, | electronic monitoring, and drug testing. The county or circuit | shall also be penalized, as described in subsection (e), for | failure to reach the goal of reduced commitments stipulated in | the agreement. | (e) Adult Redeploy Illinois Oversight Board; members; | responsibilities. | (1) The Secretary of Human Services and the Director of | Corrections shall within 3 months after the effective date | of this Act convene and act as co-chairs of an oversight | board to oversee the Adult Redeploy Program. The Board | shall include, but not be limited to, designees from the | Prisoner Review Board, Office of the Attorney General, | Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, and | Sentencing Policy Advisory Council; the Cook County |
| State's Attorney; a State's Attorney selected by the | President of the Illinois State's Attorneys Association; | the State Appellate Defender; the Cook County Public | Defender; a representative of Cook County Adult Probation, | a representative of DuPage County Adult Probation; a | representative of Sangamon County Adult Probation; and 4 | representatives from non-governmental organizations, | including service providers. | (2) The Oversight Board shall within one year after the | effective date of this Act: | (A) Develop a process to solicit applications from | and identify jurisdictions to be included in the Adult | Redeploy Illinois program. | (B) Define categories of membership for local | entities to participate in the creation and oversight | of the local Adult Redeploy Illinois program. | (C) Develop a formula for the allotment of funds to | local jurisdictions for local and community-based | services in lieu of commitment to the Department of | Corrections and a penalty amount for failure to reach | the goal of reduced commitments stipulated in the | plans. | (D) Develop a standard format for the local plan to | be submitted by the local entity created in each county | or circuit. | (E) Identify and secure resources sufficient to |
| support the administration and evaluation of Adult | Redeploy Illinois. | (F) Develop a process to support ongoing | monitoring and evaluation of Adult Redeploy Illinois. | (G) Review local plans and proposed agreements and | approve the distribution of resources. | (H) Develop a performance measurement system that | includes but is not limited to the following key | performance indicators: recidivism, rate of | revocations, employment rates, education achievement, | successful completion of substance abuse treatment | programs, and payment of victim restitution. Each | county or circuit shall include the performance | measurement system in its local plan and provide data | annually to evaluate its success.
| (I) Report annually the results of the performance | measurements on a timely basis to the Governor and | General Assembly.
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Effective Date: 1/1/2010
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