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home >> SURJ news home
May 13, 2010 (1:23 pm)
Click here to view our YouTube video recognizing the work of our Americorps VISTA volunteers who are working to expand prisoner reentry programs in Delaware.
SURJ is proud to celebrate Americorps week (May 8 - May 15th, 2010) by recognizing the ongoing prisoner reentry work of its seven VISTA volunteers. These volunteers are working with six local organizations to expand and improve prisoner reentry services.
The organizations hosting a volunteer are SURJ, Delaware Reentry Consortium, Delaware Center for Justice, A Center for Relational Living, the Office of the Public Defender, and The Elizabeth House Family Life Center. VISTAs are tasked with expanding the capacity of the organizations where they are placed. Some of the VISTAs’ activities include recruiting volunteers, creating or improving programs, and investigating grants. Specific areas of service include creating mentoring projects for individuals leaving prison, expanding mental health support for ex-offenders, creating programs for older prisoners, and honing in on the specific needs of female prisoners.
VISTA volunteers sign on for a one year term of service, which includes a modest living allowance from the federal government of between $800 and $900 per month. The meager stipend helps VISTAs experience—some, for the first time—living at or below the poverty level. This is an important “immersion experience,” since most of the programs where VISTAs are placed serve clients who are struggling to make ends meet due to their recent incarceration.
Specific activities of the VISTAs include:
- Tiffany Reed (Office of the Public Defender) is focusing specifically on female prisoners at Baylor Women’s Correctional Institution. She has interviewed 27 female inmates over the last three months in order to assess the unmet needs that the women encounter when they are released from prison before their trial. Based on the interviews, Brooks has created a Gender-Specific Pretrial Reentry Needs Assessment Tool. The needs assessment includes the five commonly identified reentry pillars (housing, employment, human services, education, and community reintegration) but includes other needs as well. The tool will help the Public Defender staff to better understand the needs of their female clients and will enable the staff to develop protocol and best practices for new client intake. Brooks is also laying the groundwork for a “Pathways Through Probation” support group for the women. This pilot project would provide female offenders with the tools necessary to navigate the terms of their probation and would help them avoid technical violations while providing a safe place to get moral support. The pilot program design and launch plan should be in place by next February.
- Nicole Jones (A Center for Relational Living) is expanding a mentor program for former prisoners. Jones is currently assisting ACRL with recruiting mentors. Jones, who recently left her corporate job in New York to pursue public interest work, has been interviewing current and previous mentors at ACRL to determine how the organization can improve its program. She is also creating a mentor application process and is assembling training materials for mentors who are selected. ACRL will launch a mentor recruitment initiative in June to attempt to attract more male mentors to the program. Jones is also ramping up the organization’s donation system in order to ensure that the program is sustainable.
- Tiffany Brooks is assisting the Delaware Reentry Consortium in its mission of providing resources and support to agencies that engage in prisoner reentry work. Brooks has recruited three new board members to the organization and is assisting DRC with planning public events. She has also updated DRC’s Prisoner Reentry Resources Online Directory, which helps ex-offenders, their families, and service providers find appropriate services and resources by geographic area or by service category.
- Charles Goldberg (Delaware Center for Justice) is assisting DCJ with implementing a program aimed at ex-offenders who struggle with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Although approximately 25% of incarcerated individuals suffer from ADHD, little to no resources exist to provide them with behavioral coaching to control their symptoms as they reenter the community. Goldberg has been successful in implementing an ADHD screening tool for inmates that will be used by some probation officers going forward. He is also working with local mental health experts to design and implement a research project designed to study whether ADHD treatment and behavioral coaching contributes to reducing recidivism.
- Tinisha Brown and Talita Virgil (Elizabeth House Family Life Center, Inc.) are assisting EHFLC with developing and formalizing the organization’s ex-offender mentoring project. Virgil and Brown are developing the operations manual for the program, focusing on research pointing toward best practices in mentoring. In the coming months, Virgil and Brown will be recruiting mentors for the program.
- Julie Miller (Stand Up for What’s Right and Just), an attorney who graduated from Widener Law School in 2009, is assisting SURJ in its pilot year of the Project for Older Prisoners, or POPS Program. Under the supervision of SURJ, Widener Law students staff the program. POPS identifies eligible geriatric prisoners who pose a low risk for reoffending and for whom sentence modification may be an appropriate option. If sentence modification petitions are successful and the older inmate is released from prison based on the law students’ advocacy, prisoner reentry services are provided by the Delaware Center for Justice. Miller has assisted SURJ in coordinating the many legal and systemic details associated with submitting sentence modification petitions. She has also focused on recruiting law students to participate in the program and on securing grant funding to ensure that the program is sustainable.
April 13, 2010 (3:14 pm)
You’re Invited!
SURJ Wine Tasting Event Celebrating the Kickoff of the Project for Older Prisoners (POPS Program)
Saturday, May 1, 2010
4 - 8 pm
Deerfield Fine Wines, 205 Louviers Drive, Shoppes at Louviers (Off Paper Mill Road)
Newark, DE
RSVP’s Appreciated to (302) 426-9252
FREE Valet, Live Music, and Silent Auction and $2 Raffle Tickets
Click here to visit our Facebook Event Page! Hope to see you there!
January 15, 2010 (2:43 pm)
Senate Bill 60 is the first leg of a constitutional amendment to Article 1, Section 12 of the Delaware Constitution regarding the right of accused persons to post bail. If passed, this amendment would allow lawmakers to add to the list of crimes that are considered “non-bailable.” The Senate passed SB 60 last June, and it is expected that the bill will receive a floor hearing in the House soon.
Why is bail an important issue?
- Currently, only those facing capital murder charges can be denied bail. Allowing lawmakers to add crimes to the roster of non-bailable offenses would be a significant departure from the current system.
- Allowing the General Assembly to add crimes to the list of “non-bailable” offenses could significantly exacerbate our already-crowded prison system. For example, Howard R. Young Correctional Institution in Wilmington is already operating at 200% of its designed capacity. Citizens should carefully consider whether detaining additional offenders before trial is justifiable and affordable.
- Judges currently have the discretion to set a high bail on cases where the defendant poses a danger to the community or is a potential flight risk. Removing a judge’s discretion to set appropriate bail in certain cases is reminiscent of mandatory minimum sentencing, which has severely limited judges in sentencing drug cases individually. This measure would further tie judges’ hands.
Why should I oppose this measure?
- Those who support the bill are drawing from the “Framers’ intent” for the constitution. They point out that in 1792, manslaughter, rape, robbery, and burglary were capital offenses, and were therefore not eligible for bail. They argue that over time, fewer and fewer crimes were defined as capital offenses, undermining the constitution’s original intent. However, public standards are constantly changing. For example, our state carried out public whippings from 1717 until 1952, and that law was not officially abolished until 1972. Just as public opinion on public whippings has shifted, so has the public opinion on bail.
- The current bail system is working. In cases where the offender poses a danger to the community or poses a flight risk, judges can set bail at a rate just high enough to keep the accused person in custody.
- In fact, Delaware prisons are already filled with defendants who cannot post bail. The Delaware Office of Management and Budget’s Statistical Analysis Center indicates that between December 2007 and December 2009, the average number of detentioners during each quarter was 1,402. Fewer than 25 of the detentioners behind bars from June to September of 2009 were facing the death penalty. At a daily cost to Delaware taxpayers of $94.95 to keep a person in jail, adding to the already-large pool of detentioners would further crowd our prisons and stretch our budget.
What Would Be A Better Solution?
- Creating “bright line rules” to deny bail for more crimes is not a good solution– it’s not necessary, and it costs too much. However, there may be special cases and circumstances (for example, the recent case of the Sussex pediatrician who is accused of multiple sexual assaults on young patients) when a suspect should be held without bail for a period of time before appearing before a judge. This would allow police to continue their investigation without the risk of the suspect fleeing or harming additional victims. Legislators are researching whether such a measure would be constitutional.
- Another potential solution would be for lawmakers to revisit the presumptive bail amounts for serious crimes, such as child rape.
- Legislators should consider a variety of solutions for protecting the public without compromising the right that Delawareans have to post bail for non-capital offenses.
What Can I Do?
- Call, email, or write your House Representative and ask him/her to oppose the bill. Simply contact SURJ with your mailing address, and we can tell you who your Representative is and how to contact them. Or, look online to find out who your State Representative is, and how you can reach him/her (you will need your nine-digit zip code. If you don’t know the last four digits of your zip code, find them here.)
- We appreciate hearing from members who contacted their legislators- please drop us a quick note!
- Thank you for being engaged.
December 3, 2009 (2:38 pm)
SURJ is pleased to announce that it has received a grant to recruit seven Americorps *VISTA volunteers who will work full-time on prisoner reentry projects at six agencies in the state of Delaware. Agencies that applied to SURJ for pass-through funding are the Office of the Public Defender of Delaware, the Delaware Center for Justice, The Elizabeth House Family Life Center, Delaware Reentry Consortium, and A Center for Relational Living. SURJ will also receive one VISTA.
Projects at the six agency sites all relate to eradicating poverty and improving prisoner reentry programs. Work ranges from expanding mentoring services for ex-offenders, to expanding a program for geriatric prisoners, recruiting behavioral coaches for former prisoners who suffer from ADHD, to increasing the capacity and sustainability of organizations that serve ex-offenders.
For the press release on The News Journal’s website, please visit here.
Applications for the Americorps *VISTA positions are now being accepted, and recruitment will extend into the third week in December. Volunteer terms are slated to begin in early February following training in Philadelphia. For more information, including detailed project descriptions and more information on each agency and whom to contact at each site, please submit an email to jchampney@surj.org.
September 28, 2009 (3:34 pm)
SURJ and the Caesar Rodney Institute are Pleased to Present
Justice Reinvestment: The Potential for Cost Savings in Delaware
October 13, 2009
Registration & Regreshments 8:30 am - 9 am
Program 9 am - 12:45 pm
Theater N at the Nemours Building in Wilmington, Delaware
Michael Thompson of the Justice Reinvestment Project of the Justice Center at the Council of State Governments will share best practices information on how other states have cut corrections costs while improving public safety.
Local panelists will respond to Mr. Thompson’s keynote address. Panelists will include
Dwight Holden, Chair, Board of Parole
Brendan O’Neill, Public Defender for the State of Delaware
Carl Danberg, Commissioner, Department of Correction
Sgt. Robert Coupe, Superintendent, Delaware State Police
President Judge James Vaughn, Superior Court
REGISTRATION FLYER AND REGISTRATION FORM ARE FOUND HERE
SURJ Fundraiser Luncheon to follow conference
Cafe Mezzanotte (adjacent to Theater N) at 1 pm
$40 per person. Call (302) 426-9252 to register and to choose your entree
(2:03 pm)
SURJ and the Delaware Center for Justice
Together with co-sponsors CHILD Inc., Children and Families First, and Delaware Coalition Against Domestic Violence
are pleased to present
VISIONS OF JUSTICE X
Preventing Violence in Families and Relationships: Creating a Safer Delaware
Featuring Keynote Speaker David S. Lee, MPH, Director of Prevention Services
California Coalition Against Sexual Assault and Manager of Prevention Connection
Featured Delaware Panelists Include:
Dr. Karyl Rattay, Director, Delaware Department of Health and Social Services, Department of Public Health
John G. Culhane, Esq., Professor of Law, Widener University School of Law
Thursday, November 5, 2009
at Newark Embassy Suites Hotel
654 South College Avenue, Newark, Delaware
Registration & Refreshments 8:30 am - 9 am
Morning Program 9 am - Noon
Optional Lunch from Noon - 1 pm ($20 per person, deli buffet)
Afternoon Workshop: Using Social Media to Prevent Violence Against Women
1 pm - 3 pm
To register:
Registration deadline is October 30th
Call or email Joan Ciritella at Delaware Center for Justice at (302) 658-7174 or jciritella@dcjustice.org
Joining us for lunch? Please mail $20 per person, payable to Delaware Center for Justice
Mail to 100 W. 10th Street, Suite 905
Wilmington, DE 19801
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