State Grantee Name
AL
AL
AR
Montgomery County Commission
St. Clair County
Craighead County
Program Name No Title for Project
St. Clair County Justice and Mental Health Collaboration
Project Intercept
Adult/Juvenile
Grant Category
Jurisdiction Type
Mental Health Entity
Criminal Justice Entity
Juvenile
Planning & Implementation
Suburban, Urban
Montgomery Area Mental Health Authority
Montgomery County Family Court
Adult
Adult
Planning
Planning & Implementation
Suburban, Urban
Suburban, Urban
AZ
Maricopa, County of
No Title for Project
Adult
Expansion
Rural
CA
County of San Joaquin
No Title for Project
Juvenile
Planning
Rural, Urban
CA
Mariposa County
No Title for Project
Adult
Planning
Urban
CA
Contra Costa County
Project Integration
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Rural
Program Description
Point of Contact
Project funds will be used to finalize plans for and implement a co-‐occurring juvenile mental health and co-‐occurring substance abuse court in the 15th Judicial Circuit of Amy F. Hinton Alabama and to develop curriculum materials for the psycho-‐educational needs of justice-‐involved youth and their families.
Alabama (Jefferson, St. Clair County will establish the “St. Clair County Justice and Mental Health Blount, St. Clair) Collaboration” to conduct a thorough planning process for the establishment of a Mental Health; Mental Health Court Program. The Collaboration will be comprised of representatives Alabama of government agencies, community service agencies, mental health service Department providers, mental health advocacy groups, consumers, and family members willing to St. Clair County Mental assume responsibilities and/or commit resources to this project through Community Health/Advocacy Memorandum of Agreement. The project will be administered and managed by the Corrections Office ; St. Clair County Community Corrections Office. Grant funds will also support the Eastside Mental preparation of written operational guidelines; procedures for assessment; referral Health; systems for identifying, screening, and enrolling participants; procedures for St. Clair County supervision and reporting; and identification of resources for sustained Hospital implementation of the program. Northeast This program proposes to increase public safety and decrease recidivism rates of the Arkansas mentally ill through planning, implementing, and evaluating a Mental Health Court Community addressing Craighead County and Crittenden County, in Arkansas’ 2nd Judicial Circuit Mental Health (population: 269,518). The goals of Project Intercept are: (1) to maintain and Center Craighead County enhance a collaborative plan to initiate systemic change for the identification and (Mid-‐south treatment of offenders with mental illness; (2) to intercept participants and provide Health Systems access to an enhanced system of mental health and community support services; and and Counseling (3) to improve stability and community connections for mental health court Services of graduates. Eastern Arkansas)
Cindy Smith
Elise Tanner
The cross-‐system collaboration will reduce recidivism by assisting female offenders who have co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse disorders and who are Jennifer Magellan Health Maricopa county being released from prison with a consecutive probation sentence. This program will Ferguson, Sherry Services Adult Probation expand an existing collaboration that includes the Arizona Department of Corrections Johnston and will leverage a Byrne competitive grant that supports a prison re-‐entry unit in the Maricopa County Adult Probation Department. San Joaquin County’s Behavioral Health Services (BHS) and Sheriff’s Office propose to jointly administer a comprehensive planning process which will result in a strategic, collaborative plan for system-‐wide improvements to the identification and treatment of individuals with mental illness or co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse Behavioral Health Kayce Garcia Sheriff's Office disorders involved with the justice system. The target population for the proposed Services Rane project is young adults and juveniles who have been diagnosed as having a mental illness or co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse disorder; and, who have faced, are facing, or could face criminal changes for a misdemeanor or nonviolent offense. The goal of the Project is to build a cross-‐system collaborative body in Mariposa Mariposa County Mariposa County County that strategically assesses and plans for the implementation of programs, Behavioral Health Probation policies and systems changes to increase public safety through addressing the needs Anita Hopman and Recovery Department of individuals with mental illness or co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse Services disorders. Contra Costa County will build on an existing mental health law enforcement collaboration to plan and implement an enhanced county-‐wide Crisis Intervention Behavioral Health Lt. Brian Sheriff's Office Team (CIT) Program. The project will enable law enforcement and detention officers Court Kalinowski to respond more effectively to mentally ill residents who encounter law enforcement and/or are involved in the criminal justice system.
Escondido Community Sobering and Stabilization (ECSS) Program
Adult
Expansion
Rural, Urban
PERT Inc.; Neighborhood Healthcare
Escondido Police Department
CO
City and Denver County of Assessment Denver, Response Denver Police Team (DART) Department
Adult
Expansion
Urban
Mobile Crisis Unit (MCU) of Denver Health Hospital.
Denver Police Department
FL
Orange County Orange County Government, Mental Health Orange County Diversion Florida Program
Adult
Expansion
Rural, Urban
Lakeside Behavioral Healthcare
Orange County Corrections
GA
Monroe County Board of Commissioner s
Adult
Planning
Urban
CA
City of Escondido
No Title for Project
GA
Bibb County Bibb County Board of Adult Mental Commissioner Health Court s
IA
Johnson County (Iowa) CARES: “help at the right time”
Johnson County
Adult
Expansion
Rural, Urban
Juvenile
Planning
Suburban
River Edge Monroe County Behavioral Health Sherrif's Office Center
The Escondido Police Department requests a grant in the amount of $200,000 to enhance the community’s justice and mental health collaboration, through the ECSS program. This program has two operating components: (a) a short-‐term community “sobering service,” providing a safe, secure alternative to incarceration for adult Barbara MarLett inebriates to reach initial sobriety and be assessed for appropriate further assistance; and (b) a transitional housing component with intensive case management and treatment for homeless adult men and women, whose homelessness is associated with a chronic substance abuse/mental health history. The Denver Police Department (DPD) is applying for the Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Program under the Expansion category. The DPD proposes to re-‐ implement the Denver Assessment Response Team (DART) program that operated from June 2008 to December 2009 but was forced to be cut due to budget restrictions...Anticipated goals and objectives include: 1) to provide early intervention and problem resolution to a larger population of individuals in crisis Rebecca and/or mentally ill; 2) to prevent unnecessary mental health holds and/or Skrivanek hospitalization of persons with mental illness; and 3) to enable patrol officers to focus on emergency public safety issues. Outcomes expected will be a greater percentage of individuals in mental crisis connected to needed resources, fewer incarcerations and hospitalizations of these individuals, and increased officer patrol time for other DPD crime fighting duties. The purpose of the Mental Health Diversion program is to avoid unnecessary, prolonged incarceration of relatively minor offenders whose mental illness may be the primary criminogenic factor in their lives. The goal of this program is to divert eligible offenders to appropriate mental health treatment, supervise them safely in Donna Wyche, the community, and reduce recidivism of the mentally ill in the criminal justice Heather Thomas system. Orange County’s Mental Health Diversion program serves men and women, over age 18, who have committed a nonviolent crime and are diagnosed with a mental illness. Monroe County Government, in joint partnership with River Edge Behavioral Health Center and other community partners, is engaged in a strategic, systemic, community-‐ based and collaborative planning effort to promote early identification and improved Kathleen Varda delivery of interventions and supports for justice-‐involved persons with mental illness or co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse needs.
Superior Court of Bibb County; State Court of Bibb County; The Bibb County Mental Health Court is being expanded to address gaps in the Bibb County continuum of care for adults age 18 and over who come in contact with the criminal District Attorneys’ River Edge justice system and who have a mental health or co-‐occurring mental health disorder. Office; Kathleen Varda, Behavioral Health The Mental Health Court plans to address this problem by expanding in several areas Macon Reentry Greta O'Dell Center including; overall capacity, collaborative partnerships, family and victim services, and Coalition; training. The program will serve 75 additional participants in the jurisdiction of Bibb Georgia County, Georgia during the two year funding period. Department of Corrections; Bibb Sheriff’s Office The Community There are a variety of efforts underway in Johnson County to address the mental Mental Health illness or co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse disorders of juvenile Juvenile Court Center for Mid-‐ offenders; however, the system is fragmented and there is concern among current Amy Correia Services Eastern Iowa stakeholders that better processes could be put in place to identify assess needs and (CMHC) deliver services to respond to the needs of this population.
IA
Iowa Dept of Human Rights, Division of No Title for Criminal & Project Juvenile Planning
Juvenile
Planning & Implementation
Suburban
ID
Idaho Supreme Court
No Title for Project
Adult
Planning
Suburban, Urban
IL
Macon County
Macon Mental Health Court
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Rural
IL
IL
IN
County of Kankakee
County of DuPage
Project Renewed
Mental Illness Court Alternative Program (MICAP) Expansion
Indiana Juvenile Indiana Justice & Department of Mental Health Correction Collaboration Project
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Suburban, Urban
Third Judicial District Juvenile Court Services; Jackson Recovery The Iowa Division of Criminal and Juvenile Justice Planning (CJJP), a state juvenile Centers; justice agency and the applicant, is partnering with the Third Judicial District Juvenile Siouxland Mental Iowa Division of Court Services, Jackson Recovery Centers, Siouxland Mental Health Center, Seasons Health Center; Criminal and Community Mental Health Center, Siouxland Human Investment Partnership, and Scott Musel Seasons Juvenile Justice other organizations to reduce substance abuse, mental health, and juvenile Community Planning delinquency issues affecting youth, particularly females, in Northwest Iowa. Partners Mental Health request planning and implementation support for their already-‐ initiated criminal Center; justice and mental health/co-‐occurring disorders (MI/COD) collaboration. Siouxland Human Investment Partnership This project will achieve a Statewide Strategic Plan for improving outcomes for justice involved persons with mental illness and co-‐occurring substance use disorders through organizing and convening a broadly based, statewide task force chaired by the Chief Justice of the Idaho Supreme Court. The project will assess the prevalence Departments of Idaho Supreme of mental illness and co-‐occurring substance use disorders among female felony Health and Norma Jaeger Court offenders and assess their unmet service needs and will assess service needs of Welfare veterans, particularly those returning from combat service in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom and strengthen linkages between community services, government agencies, and the Veterans Administration medical facilities that serve Idaho. The project plans to develop a Mental Health Court and conduct preliminary Heritage Behavior Macon County mapping of the local criminal justice system and how persons with mental illness can Mary Bolton Health Center be intercepted. Kankakee County Renewed The requested funds will allow Kankakee County Renewed Opportunity to meet the Helen Wheeler Opportunity; needs of ex-‐offender substance users/abusers by closing service gaps and expanding Center for Jerome Combs the capacity of partnering agencies to provide access to treatment and invest in Jasper J. Jones Community Detention Center; sustained reentry efforts. The overarching intention for Project Renewed is the Mental Health Kankakee County replication of successful components in other correctional facilities. Sheriff’s Department
Adult
Expansion
Urban
DuPage County Health Department (Mental Health Services Division)
Juvenile
Planning
Urban
Correctional Medical Services
The proposed project will address: 1. Targeted treatments to enhance integrated services for individuals with co-‐ occurring disorders by expanding outpatient and residential mental health/ DuPage County, IL substance abuse services. (Office of the 2. Treatment support measures that improve therapy outcomes including enhanced Jim Wojtas, Chief Judge, 18th diagnostic services targeting female offenders in order to better determine multi-‐ Robin Partin Judicial Circuit axial diagnoses and treatments such as cognitive behavior therapy, dialectical Court) behavior therapy and trauma therapy. 3. Essential non-‐treatment support services that facilitate recovery including, alcohol testing, job training and monitoring, and transportation assistance. The Indiana Juvenile Justice & Mental Health Collaboration Project will increase Indiana public safety by facilitating collaboration among the juvenile justice and mental Department of health and substance abuse treatment systems across the state to increase access Correction/Divisio and to improve mental health, substance abuse, and other treatment services for Kellie Whitcomb n of Youth youth with mental illness or co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse Services disorders as they complete their commitment to IDOC and upon their reentry back into the community.
Johnson County Criminal Justice-‐ Intercept Project
KS
Johnson County Kansas Government
KS
AIMS (Assess, Douglas Intervene, County Mobilize and Sheriff's Office Succeed)
KY
Jefferson Louisville County Mental Jefferson Health Court-‐ County Metro Enhanced Government Supervision Docket
LA
LA
MA
Parish of Calcasieu
The Calcasieu Parish Juvenile Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Project
Jefferson Parish Human Forensic Services Collaborative Authority
City of Boston
No Title for Project
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Rural
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Urban
Expansion
Suburban, Urban
Adult
Juvenile
Planning
Rural
Adult
Planning
Suburban, Urban
Adult
Expansion
Suburban, Urban
This grant will focus on implementation of two early intercept strategies. The first is Johnson County a “co-‐responder” program that pairs a qualified mental health professional with a CIT District Attorney's trained officer at the scene to properly triage the case. This project will involve a Johnson County Office, Johnson partnership between the Johnson County Mental Health Center, the Johnson County Mental Health County Sheriff, Sheriff and the City of Olathe, Kansas Police Department. A second intervention is to Rise Haneberg Center and the Olathe expand the current District Attorney Mental Health Diversion Program to include SMI Police in addition to SPMI clients. The clients will be case-‐managed by the JCMHC staff, with Department oversight supervision for the legal related case issues provided by the District Attorney’s Office diversion officer assigned to the mental health caseload. The overarching goal of AIMS is to create a system of safe, humane and coordinated services for inmates thought to have serious mental illnesses (MI), sub-‐acute mental Bert Nash disorders and co-‐occurring disorders. The planning for service responses to persons Community Douglas County with MI and co-‐occurring disorders in the DCJ and the community has been ongoing. Shannon Mental Health Sheriff's Office In 2008, the DCSO initiated a transition from jail to community (TJC) reentry initiative Murphy Center supported by the National Institute of Corrections (NIC). The DCJ in conjunction with a variety of community service providers is organizing and delivering transition and reentry services to the sentenced inmate population. Louisville Seven Counties Jefferson County Services Metro Government
The Goal of this proposal is to expand and enhance the existing Jefferson County Mental Health Court-‐Enhanced Supervision Docket (JCMHC-‐ESD) to allow for additional clients and to build upon service capacity available for court-‐involved participants with mental illness.
The Calcasieu Parish Juvenile Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Project will use a planning process to design a model and a continuum of services that will ensure that juveniles with mental health and co-‐occurring disorders are diverted from the Educational and juvenile justice system and not placed inappropriately in prison settings. This Office of Juvenile Treatment initiative will allow professionals, consumers and advocates to design a mental Justice Services Council, Inc. (ETC) health court and other processes according to best practices to ensure successful outcomes for justice involved youth. The project will create a model that will provide early intervention and diversion from formal court processing and reduce into correctional system, while assuring public safety. Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority
Boston Emergency Services Team
Stephanie Stidham
Vi Martin
Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office
The JPHSA proposes to establish a Forensic Collaborative to develop a system-‐wide plan for addressing the needs of persons with behavioral health disorders who are Barbara Polikoff involved with or have been involved with the criminal justice system.
Boston Police Department
The proposal represents an extension and strengthening of the collaboration between the Boston Police Department and the Boston Emergency Services Team of the Boston Medical Center. Up until now, the collaboration has paid special attention to mental illness among one particular subset of the population: the homeless. A major goal of the proposed program expansion is to increase mental health services Jenna Savage provision to EDPs beyond the homeless population by educating BPD officers about BEST and encouraging them to draw upon BEST’s services when appropriate. This education will occur via an E-‐Learning curriculum that will be made available to all BPD sworn personnel, including not only street officers but also special unit detectives (e.g., Homicide, Sexual Assault, etc.).
MA
Suffolk County Suffolk County Female Sheriff's Offender Department Mental Health Collaborative
MD
St. Mary''s, No Title for County of, dba Project Circuit Court
ME
MI
MN
MN
City of Portland
County of Berrien
Psychiatric Evaluation, Referral, and Tracking (PERT) Team
Mental Health System of Care for Juvenile Offenders Workgroup
Minnesota No Title for Department of Project Corrections
Judiciary courts of the State of Minnesota
The Justice and Mental Health Task Force (TF)
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Rural, Urban
Prison Health Services
Juvenile
Planning & Implementation
Suburban, Urban
Walden Sierra
Rural, Urban
Ingraham Youth Alternatives; NAMI Maine
Adult
Juvenile
Juvenile
Adult
Expansion
Planning
Planning & Implementation
Planning
Suburban, Urban
Michiagan Dept. of Human Services
Suburban
Minnesota Department of Human Services, Children’s Mental Health Division
Rural, Suburban, Urban
Sioux Trails Mental Health Center; New Ulm Medical Center (NUMC); ISJ Hospital
The Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department seeks a Planning and Implementation Grant, to expand and enhance services available to women offenders with dual diagnoses. Currently there is no systematic way to screen for mental illness, identify needs, provide treatment pre-‐release, and ensure that the woman follow through on her post-‐release treatment plan. The goal of SCFOMHC is to scale up mental health and Suffolk County related services provided by the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department and local Rachelle Sheriff's agencies to women in the target population who have been diagnosed as having a Steinberg Department mental illness or co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse disorder and who have faced, are facing, or could face criminal charges for a misdemeanor or nonviolent offense. They will provide 40 women with assessment and some treatment with an additional 40 women receiving more comprehensive and continuing treatment before and after release to the community. The proposed project’s purpose is to enhance the experiences of co-‐occurring Juvenile Drug adolescents enrolled, or eligible for, juvenile courts in St. Mary’s and Charles Courts of St. Counties through expanded services focused on stabilizing participants in a Pete Cucinotta Mary’s and community-‐based recovery that reduces the risk of acute mental health or substance Charles County abuse episodes. Portland Maine Police Department
This project calls for the integration of the Portland Police Department’s existing specialized mental health response approaches into a single program. At the same time, the project will exponentially increase the Department’s capacity to provide crisis intervention, coordinated follow-‐up, referrals and data tracking.
Jo Freedman
The Trial Court of Berrien County proposes to develop a strategic and collaborative plan to meet the needs of court involved youth or those who are at risk of involvement in the future and have mental health problems or a diagnosis. With this grant, we propose to form a Mental Health System of Care for Juvenile Offenders The Trial Court of Terrie L. Matthes Workgroup that will include a broad representation of stakeholders from the Berrien County Elvin Gonzalez community that will include the court, law enforcement, community mental health providers, substance abuse service providers, Department of Human Services, schools/educational programs, youth serving agencies, consumers, consumer advocacy groups, and faith-‐based programs. Objectives are to decrease the recidivism and adjudication rates for youth with mental health issues by improving the screening rate and provide post-‐screening Susan Moore, Minnesota response; improving community-‐based crisis response services to the target Kathleen Department of population, including culturally validated responses and law enforcement training; Jefferson, Jill Corrections improving the ability of therapy professionals to respond to the needs of youth Carlson, Martha through family-‐based and community-‐based practices; developing Peacemaking Aby Circles, a culturally validated resource for diverting participants from adjudication. The Fifth Judicial District Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Task Force will be established to conduct planning for how to better address the needs of the adult offenders with co-‐occurring disorders who are exiting prison or are participating in an adult drug treatment court in a rural twelve county area in southwestern Minnesota. Contingent upon information learned through conducting a needs assessment and Fifth Judicial resource inventory, the Task Force intends to plan for the following activities: a) Mariann District Court online training modules to be developed for corrections personnel; 2) pilot a mental Johnson health track in an existing adult drug court, 3) to create better coordination between prison release planners and community supervision especially for the female offender population so there is a seamless transition back to the community and no interruption in mental health services, and; 4) Enhance family engagement and support for mentally ill offenders.
MO
MO
MS
MT
NC
NH
NJ
County of Greene, MO
No Title for Project
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Suburban
Adult
Expansion
Urban
Adult
Planning
Urban
Yellowstone Project CALM County Sheriff Health Office
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Urban
Mental Health Outreach Program
Both
Planning & Implementation
Urban
Missouri Missouri Crisis Department of Intervention Mental Health Team
Lauderdale County
City of Durham
The Community Partnership
Grafton County
Grafton County Adult Mental Health Court Program
County of Ocean
Joint Juvenile Justice and Children’s Mental Health Collaboration Project
Adult
Juvenile
Planning & Implementation
Planning
Rural
Suburban
Through this Justice and Mental Health Collaboration (JMHC) project, 20 city and county law enforcement officers will receive Crisis Intervention Training to de-‐ Forest Institute of escalate incidents with offenders who have mental illness. As possible, those persons Psychology (and Greene County will be diverted to community mental health services to minimize risk of incurring Melissa Holliday, Jordan Valley Missouri Sheriff’s repeated or more serious charges. JMHC project funds will provide screening, Psy.D. Community Department assessment and discharge planning for at least four hundred people with mental Health Center) illness detained for non-‐violent offenses. The JMHC project will support successful transition to community treatment services and probation by establishing a pre-‐ release substance abuse treatment program. This project seeks to increase the number of communities in the state of Missouri that have fully trained Crisis Intervention Teams (CIT) within their law enforcement agencies. This project seeks to increase the number of communities in the state of Missouri Missouri Missouri that have fully trained Crisis Intervention Teams (CIT) within their law enforcement Department of Department of Rita McElhany agencies. In addition, this project seeks to expand the number of CIT coordinating Mental Health Public Safety councils made up of advocacy organizations, mental health and substance abuse and healthcare providers, crisis responders and criminal justice system members including courts and detention facilities, and addressing the economic and structural challenges that impact individuals with psychiatric disorders who are in crisis. The proposed program will address three main interceptions at which an Weems Lauderdale intervention can be made to prevent individuals from entering or penetrating deeper Community County Sheriff’s into the criminal justice system: the initial response by the law enforcement officer, Pace Eammons Mental Health Department the point at which the person is booked and retained by the detention center, and Center (Weems) the point at which the person re-‐enters the community. During the two year project period, YCDF and its partners will plan and implement Yellowstone coordinated and centralized medical/social services for the mentally ill offenders Community Crisis Jay Bell, Terry County Detention located in Yellowstone County Detention Facility and Billings service area in order to Center Jesse Facility create diversions to arrest and reduce the recidivism rates among these persons with mental illness. In order to respond to Durham County’s growing mental health population’s needs, the City of Durham, Center for Child and Family Health, Durham Center and Criminal Justice Resource Center are collaborating in order to propose the development of a Mental Health Outreach Program that will serve as a co-‐responder model between law enforcement and mental health. Specifically, it is expected that the extended Durham Police Durham Center outreach and follow up will significantly reduce the number of arrests, incarcerations Sgt. Lori Ray Department and requests for service. This program will serve as an enhancement to the Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) program and an extension of the North Carolina Child Response Initiative (NCCRI). With these combined efforts, the program aims to significantly improve outcomes related both to criminal justice involvement and engagement in treatment. To reduce recidivism of the mentally ill in the criminal justice system and to facilitate effective treatment, Grafton County seeks to establish misdemeanor level mental Northern Human health courts in our district courts. The mental health courts will be a collaboration Services and West Grafton County between the community mental health and treatment programs and the criminal Lara Saffo, Shelly Central District Courts justice system (including the Court, defense, law enforcement and prosecution). Golden Behavioral Health Currently there are no mental health courts in Grafton County. With this funding, two mental health courts will be established in year one of the grant and planning for the two remaining district could will be finalized by the end of year two of the grant.
Children’s Inter-‐ Agency Coordinating Council
The Youth Services Commission
Utilizing the structure of a Task Force, the Collaboration intends to analyze the juvenile justice and mental health service systems over a 12-‐month period. Based on existing data and the identification of new information, the Collaboration will develop a plan to improve cross-‐system functioning using the DOJ’s SAMHSA APIC Shelby Voorhees planning model. The goals of the Collaboration are to increase public safety in Ocean Jamie Hart County and decrease recidivism through early identification and treatment of juveniles with mental health and co-‐occurring disorders in the juvenile justice system, and to improve the mental health of youth in Ocean County to prevent involvement with the juvenile justice system.
NJ
County of Cumberland
The Cumberland County Jail Diversion Program
NM
Children Youth No Title for and Families Project Department
NY
New York City Administration Bronx Futures for Children's Services
NY
NY
City of Albany -‐ No Title for Department of Project Public Safety
Drug Borough of Treatment Brooklyn Alternatives to Prison (DTAP)
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Juvenile
Planning
Juvenile
Planning & Implementation
Adult
Adult
Planning
Expansion
Suburban, Urban
Cumberland Cumberland County Jail and County Guidance Vineland Police Center Department
Rural
State of New Probation and Mexico Children Aftercare Youth and Services/Bernalill Families o County Department
Rural
NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
Rural
Rural, Urban
Albany County Mental Health Department
New York City Administration for Children's Services
Albany Police Department
The Cumberland County Jail Diversion Program proposes a One-‐Stop and Coordinated Strategy for providing on-‐site screening and evaluation to emotionally disturbed individuals who come into contact with local law enforcement entities. The proposed program will provide a number of benefits to the partnering agencies and the mental health consumers including: 1) Reduced transport and other costs; 2) Direct and coordinated connections with care providers and services; 3) Professional mental health counseling and services; 4) A reduction in the potential for Elvira Smith confrontation and violence; 5) Fewer arrests; 6) Rapid utilization of the family support system; and 7) Enhanced confidentiality. A Crisis Intervention Response Team (CIRT) supported by staff, funded by this grant, and partner agencies will provide these One-‐Stop Services through a prescribed. This team will be solely available to respond on-‐site in the community along with the police officer or will be available at the Early Response Center. The State of New Mexico Children Youth and Families Department (CYFD) proposes to develop a collaborative strategic plan involving juvenile justice, youth consumers Kristin and their families, community-‐based behavioral health service providers, the Doellinger Jones, statewide Single Entity for behavioral health, and other stakeholders that will use a LISW, Gerri phased approach to develop and implement a system of co-‐occurring mental health Dupree and substance abuse intensive outpatient treatment services in least-‐restrictive settings to youth aged 13 to 21 involved in the New Mexico juvenile justice system. The New York City Administration for Children’s Services and the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, in collaboration with the Center for Court Innovation, propose to create Bronx Futures. This court-‐based initiative will create a clinical team to work with delinquency judges and other key players in the Bronx to coordinate social service and juvenile justice resources for young people with mental health problems, serving as a resource to all players in the juvenile justice system and helping to create a bridge between the juvenile justice and mental health systems. The overarching aim of Bronx Futures is to reduce repeat offending by young people with mental health disorders in the juvenile justice system. Bronx Futures will work Suzanne Sousa with young people mandated by Family Court judges to have mental health evaluations and participate in treatment and will also accept referrals from law guardians and parents for voluntary program participation. Bronx Futures will seek to identify young people with mental health needs at the earliest stages of delinquency proceedings but will accept referrals at all stages of the delinquency process and remain involved with youth and families after the adjudication of their cases and throughout any period of probation or other community-‐based disposition that might be ordered. The Albany Police department will implement a planning project to attain buy-‐in and cooperation between mental health providers, law enforcement, and the courts in order to improve their response to persons with mental illness and co-‐occurring substance abuse disorders and enhance long-‐term follow-‐up to reduce the recidivism Anthony Bruno rate in the target population. Females in the target population – who are especially vulnerable and are increasingly represented in arrests -‐ will receive priority attention, and additional agencies and resources will be solicited to ensure appropriate care.
The existing program Drug Treatment Alternatives to Prison (DTAP), which includes Treatment Alternatives for the Dually Diagnosed (TADD), is a nationally recognized alternative to incarceration (ATI) program for non-‐violent felony offenders and chronic misdemeanants with co-‐occurring disorders. DTAP/TADD utilizes the SAMSHA adopted, evidence-‐informed New York Model to screen and assess clients in Education and Kings County order to ensure appropriate treatment. The expansion will create an additional David Heslin, Assistance District Attorney court based screening and assessment team, which will allow simultaneous court Tania Chandler Corporation (EAC) representation and on-‐site evaluation. One team will screen or interview while the other team will present before the court, making proposals when the case comes forward for consideration. The purpose of this expansion is to reduce the need for court adjournments and improve the efficiency with which those presenting before the court have their cases resolved.
OH
Clermont County ADAMHS Board
No Title for Project
Planning & Implementation
Urban
Clermont County Mental Health and Recovery Board
OH
Delaware County
Delaware County Transition (DCT) Program
Adult
Planning
Suburban, Urban
Delaware/Morro w Mental Health & Recovery Services Board
OH
State of Ohio
EMPOWER
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Rural
Recovery Resources
OH
Auglaize Co. Sheriff's Office
Auglaize County Transition (ACT) Program
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Suburban, Urban
Lutheran Social Services
OR
Douglas, County Of
No Title for Project
Juvenile
Planning
Urban
Oregon Social Leaning Center
OR
Curry County (Oregon)
Kewaunee County Sheriff’s Department
Adult
Planning
Suburban, Urban
Curry County Human Services
Adult
The Clermont County Mental Health and Recovery Board (CCMHRB) seeks to increase public safety and access to mental health services through a cross-‐system Union Township collaboration with Clermont Police Departments (including: Clermont Sheriff’s Police Department, Union Township; Miami Township; and the City of Milford) by planning, Lee Watson Department developing and implementing a wraparound mobile crisis response team with availability of crisis intervention services, and Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) trained police officers and mental health professionals. The Delaware County Transition Program (DCT) will introduce a Reentry Case Management model into the Delaware jail. THis model will combine “strength-‐ based” and “assertive” case management models to maximize the impact on cleints. The case manager serves in a therapeutic capacity and brokers services. All people Delaware County entering the Delaware County Jail would be eligible for Reentry Case Management Patricia Freeman Sherriff's Office services. The proposed model will incorporate six stages; 1) Intake, assessment and classification; 2) Developing and implementing a Reentry Accountability Plan (RAP); 3) Linking the client to appropriate community resources; 4) Intervention; 5) Monitoring and evaluating the client’s progress; and 6) Advocating for the client as needed. The project will utilize grant funds to establish a milieu based housing trauma treatment program (Mosaic) that supports the reentry planning process of female offenders discharged to the Cuyahoga County area, across a range of treatment and Ohio Department release needs and an ‘in-‐reach’ component by Recovery Resources staff who will of Rehabilitation assess the offenders’ reentry needs and facilitate their linkage with the full range of Todd Thobe and Correction case management, behavioral health and trauma-‐informed care services. The goal is to increase the rate of female offenders receiving behavioral health with integrated trauma informed care services and accessing auxiliary community based services to reduce the recidivism rate among program participants and increase public safety. The nationally-‐acclaimed Auglaize County Transition (ACT) Program will be expanded to include services to offenders suffering from mental illness. The ACT program already uses a success-‐proven integrated approach to offender re-‐entry. Requested federal funds will add a mental health component to the effective ACT model and increase mental health services to 40 hours per week in the jail. The proposed program features a six-‐month planning phase followed by an eighteen-‐month Auglaize County implementation phase. The expanded ACT program includes five primary activities: Mark Fuerstenau Sheriff's Office 1) Crisis Intervention Training/certification for all road deputies and corrections officers ; 2) Assessments to determine appropriate services; 3) Pre-‐incarceration diversion plan to be established with the county court system to provide an additional means of intervention with mentally ill offenders; 4) In-‐house services for offenders with mental illness to provide assessments, intervention and stabilization services; and 5) Aftercare using already-‐established protocol with the county adult probation office to ensure continuity of care after release. The goal of this project is to develop a strategic plan of corrections responses and treatment options for non-‐violent adolescent female offenders with mental health or mental health and co-‐occurring substance use problems. This will be accomplished Douglas County Diane through the work of a project planning partnership among juvenile justice, mental Juvenile Schvaneveldt, health, researchers, an alcohol and other drug treatment provider, advocacy groups, Department Linda M. Wagner education, and law enforcement. In addition, clients will be part of the planning process. This team will review all relevant data and develop a Needs Statement describing the prevalence and variety of issues in these girls’ lives. The Planning grant will involve the development of two related collaborative mental health and criminal justice programs. The first of these projects is the creation of a 24 Curry County hour facility to provide psychiatric crisis respite, detox and/or brief transitional Annette Sherriffs Office supported housing for non-‐violent women and men who are either involved or at risk Klinefelter-‐ and District for involvement in the criminal justice system due to mental illness or co-‐occurring Dingle Attorneys Office mental illness and substance abuse. The second project to be planned is a Mental Health Court.
PA
PA
Chester County
Planning for Sequential Intercept Action
Philadelphia City of RESPONDS Pre-‐ Philadelphia trial Team
Intensive Diversion Treatment Program (IDP)
RI
Judiciary of the State of RI
SC
South Carolina Department of No Title for Juvenile Project Justice
TN
TX
City of Knoxville
the Community Safety Center
Border Children’s El Paso County Mental Health Interception Project
Adult
Planning
Urban
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Rural, Urban
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Rural, Urban
Juvenile
Planning & Implementation
Rural, Urban
Adult
Juvenile
Planning & Implementation
Planning & Implementation
Rural
Rural
Chester County Department of Curry County Mental Sherriffs Office Health/Intellectu and District al and Attorneys Office Developmental Disabilities
The proposed Planning for Sequential Intercept Action project will follow a Cross-‐ System Mapping session planned for June, 2010 with Pennsylvania’s new Mental Health and Justice Center of Excellence. The mapping exercise will engage the county’s mental health, substance abuse, and criminal justice systems stakeholders in examining the county’s strengths and weaknesses at each Sequential Intercept, and identify priorities for change and/or integration.
Caroline Smith
This program addresses a critical need to screen for suicide and mental health at initial detention and develop crisis and jail alternative strategies. The proposed grant position will fund the Post-‐Arrest Crisis Specialist (PACS) to conduct a mental health Philadelphia and suicide screening and Community Linkage Plan for the target population. The Christina Finello, Police PACS will work together with a Pre-‐Trial Team, consisting of the current position, JD, Phd Department Post-‐Arrest Crisis Specialist (PACS), the Forensic Triage Specialist, police personnel, the CIT Coordinator, the Mobile Emergency Team, and the Arraignment Court Magistrates. The proposed Intensive Diversion Treatment Program helps to reduce the prosecution of many nonviolent misdemeanor offenses, most notably those committed by individuals with mental illness, addiction, and/or co-‐occurring Gateway disorders, who often enter the criminal justice system subsequent to disengagement Healthcare (plus Sixth Division of from treatment. The program offers comprehensive services: legal review, clinical Lori Castor other local the District Courts assessment, a preliminary service plan for each participant, case management and providers) care coordination, intensive 8-‐week on-‐site treatment program and on-‐going monitoring by the Pretrial Services Unit for the duration of the required diversionary time. This initiative will build upon and expand an existing juvenile justice/mental health strategic plan to serve a minimum of 100 juvenile justice youth in Marlboro and Chesterfield Counties that are at risk for recidivism due to undiagnosed and/or unmet mental health and substance abuse treatment needs. The Juvenile Justice and SC Department of SC Department of Mental Health Collaboration Program will help reduce juvenile crime and recidivism Angela W. Mental Health Juvenile Justice through the early identification of DJJ youth with mental health and substance abuse Flowers, LMSW treatment needs and the provision of appropriate services in a timely manner. Services provided through this program will help ensure that court-‐involved youth in the two counties do not further penetrate the juvenile justice system due to undiagnosed or unmet mental health or substance abuse needs. Department of Behavioral Health and Mental Retardation Services
Helen Ross McNabb Center
The Knoxville Police Department (KPD) will establish a Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Program in partnership with the Helen Ross McNabb Center (HRMC) to address the incarceration of women with mental illness and co-‐occurring disorders. Grant dollars will be used to plan and create the proposed program that promotes Knoxville Police public safety and public health by providing services for system-‐involved individuals Janet Gorman Department with mental illness and/or co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse disorders. This program will target the priority population, women 18 years of age and older, with mental illness or co-‐occurring disorders, who have come in contact with law enforcement and the criminal justice system, or are already incarcerated.
The collaboration between county departments will plan and implement the use of a Sequential Intercept Model to: 1) enhance a pre-‐adjudication diversion program to intercept referrals from the JJC due to their mental disorder or lack of access to El Paso County appropriate mental health treatment; 2) formulate agreements and a 5 year strategic El Paso County Border Children's plan for inter-‐agency collaboration and sustainability; 3) through Care Management, Rita Ruelas, Juvenile Justice Mental Health ensure assessments, services and treatment are provided to 30 youth in the Deferred Edward Enriquez Center Collaborative Prosecution Program; 4) devise and implement a data collection plan with an evaluator familiar with JJC and mental health issues, on the rate of recidivism and 5) reduce recidivism over the implementation period for 70% of the youth enrolled through this project.
UT
Weber Human Services
Project Empower
VA
City of Richmond, Virginia
Mental Health Alternative Sentencing Program
Juvenile
Expansion
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Utah Division of Mental Health and Sbstance Abuse
Urban
Utah Administrative Office of the Juvenile Courts
City of Richmond Richmond Department of Behavioral Health Justice Services Authority (RBHA) (DJS)
VA
Commonwealt Department of h Consortium Behavioral Cross Systems Health and Mapping Developmenta Initiative (XSM l Services Initiative)
Adult
Expansion
Department of Behavioral Health Department of and Criminal Justice Developmental Services (DCJS) Services
WA
Department of Corrections
Gender-‐ Specific Transition Services (GTS)
Adult
Planning & Implementation
Regional Support Washington Networks Department of (Community MH) Corrections
WI
Rock County, Wisconsin
No Title for Project
Both
Planning
Rock County Human Services Department
Rock County Sheriff’s Office
Project Empower is a 12-‐year highly collaborative, well-‐functioning intervention program for juvenile offenders presenting with co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse symptoms. It is cooperatively delivered by Utah’s 2nd District Juvenile Court and Weber Human Services, the county mental health/substance abuse authority. This program expansion will serve juveniles in need of earlier Darin Carver, intervention. Project Empower will screen, assess, and serve an additional 30-‐35 LCSW juveniles demonstrating clear need of intervention services due to co-‐occurring symptoms. These are juveniles who have a current court-‐order to participate in counseling but have been denied access to the services offered currently through Project Empower due to insufficient history of delinquent behavior. Through the Alternative Sentencing Program, all defendants referred through a non-‐ clinical screening instrument will be given a clinical assessment. The assessment report will make recommendations to the judiciary based on level of risk and treatment history. Non-‐violent mentally ill defendants with a prior history of Rhonda Glimer treatment from RBHA will be eligible for release to the community, where they will receive treatment and ancillary support services; a system of rewards and sanctions and case management will monitor compliance. The XSM Initiative is a state led effort to provide training and assist localities to 1) develop a cross-‐systems map that identifies how people with mental illness and co-‐ occurring substance use disorders come in contact with and flow through the local criminal justice system; 2) educate participants regarding utilization of best and Victoria evidence based practices; 3) identify available local resources as well as gaps in Cochran, services and processes 4) utilizing an action planning matrix, create a detailed and Braswell, Jana effective plan to achieve attainable short-‐term goals that incur little or no cost, as (DBHDS) well as longer term goals for systems change. The XSM Initiative will provide 24 Cross Systems Mapping Workshops (XSM Workshops) in regions throughout Virginia over two years. The purpose of this project is better meet the needs of women with mental health and co-‐occurring disorders by increasing the capacity of the community health network to meet the gender-‐specific mental health and substance abuse needs of female offenders. The Gender-‐Specific Transition Services program will create a case-‐ management system of transition planning for this population, increase the capacity Candy Curl of the community health network to meet the gender-‐specific needs of female offenders, and better prepare the offenders and their families to access community resources. The project will serve 125 non-‐violent female offenders who have an assessed need for mental health and/or chemical dependency services, but do not qualify for Medicaid benefits. The Sequential Intercept Model will serve as the framework for designing interventional strategies to meet the goals of public safety through evidence-‐based and best practices for persons with mental illness (MI) and co-‐occurring mental health and substance abuse disorders (COD). Strategic planning will focus on diverting non-‐violent adults and juveniles with MI/COD from the justice system at the earliest point possible and providing them with the treatment they need to reduce Elizabeth recidivism and become productive members of society. Specific objectives of the Pohlman planning process are to determine what information should be tracked and how to McQuillen create a system for tracking such data; enhance communication and coordination between justice entities, mental health providers, and AODA providers; increase diversion strategies for MI/COD offenders; and increase the number of justice personnel with knowledge about MI/COD. A cross-‐systems strategic plan will be designed to improve the nexus between the mental health, AODA, and justice systems.
WI
WV
County of Kewaunee
No Title for Project
Adult
Planning & Implementation
West Virginia Supreme The Mental Court of Health Court Appeals
Adult
Expansion
Kewaunee County Implementation of this initiative will include the hiring of a full-‐time crisis project Sheriff’s coordinator, expand the Crisis Intervention Training for 45 law enforcement officers Department; in Kewaunee,County, development of a crisis diversion/social setting detoxification County Kewaunee City program for 35 persons between the ages of 18-‐70, development of a crisis Department of Police Mark Seidl intervention program in the Kewaunee County Jail and the development of a Health Department; computerized information system between the collaborative systems which would Kewaunee City enhance the response times for law enforcement personnel and crisis workers to Police incidents of crisis for persons with mental health or co-‐occurring disorders. Department The West Virginia Mental Health Court, designed as a regional program, began in 2003. The program consists of 2 circuit mental health courts and 4 magistrate mental health courts operating under one mental health court treatment team. The Mental Health Court is divided into two phases. During Phase I, defendants undergo a series West Virginia of assessments to determine mental health, chemical dependency, housing, Healthways, Inc. Supreme Court of vocational, and educational needs. Individualized treatment plans are developed Linda Artimez Appeals and implemented based upon the assessment results and professional and defendant input. Phase II is a step down phase, as less intensive services facilitate a successful integration back into the community with the least restrictive supervision level possible. The expansion will facilitate the acquisition of a second mental health probation officer to allow for a doubling of the mental health court population.