5
2012 Community Report Oriana House is a nationally-renowned chemical dependency treatment & community corrections agency with facilities in Summit, Cuyahoga, Seneca, and Erie counties. Oriana House Administrative Offices P.O. Box 1501, Akron, Ohio 44309 330-535-8116; (TTY/TDD) 330-761-3375 www.orianahouse.org

Oriana House, Inc. Community Report.pdfHarold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Municipal Court Clerk (retired) Robert Fenner, Ohio Adult Parole

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    2

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Oriana House, Inc. Community Report.pdfHarold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Municipal Court Clerk (retired) Robert Fenner, Ohio Adult Parole

2012 Community Report

Oriana House is a

nationally-renowned

chemical dependency treatment &

community corrections agency

with facilities in Summit, Cuyahoga,

Seneca, and Erie counties.

Oriana House Administrative Offices P.O. Box 1501, Akron, Ohio 44309

330-535-8116; (TTY/TDD) 330-761-3375www.orianahouse.org

Oriana Oriana Oriana Oriana Oriana Oriana House, House, House, House, House, House, House, House, House, House, House, House, House, House, House, Inc. Inc. Inc. Inc. Inc. Inc.

Page 2: Oriana House, Inc. Community Report.pdfHarold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Municipal Court Clerk (retired) Robert Fenner, Ohio Adult Parole

Community corrections programs that require accountability and responsibility can often be tougher than jail or prison. Offenders in community corrections programs are not just serving their sentence in the form of days or years; they are learning about the consequences of their actions, how they can make better choices, how to find and maintain employment, and how to be a better parent, spouse, son or daughter.

As the need for programs like the ones offered at Oriana House continues to grow each year, so does the effectiveness of the programming. Through research and collaboration, Oriana House offers residential and non-residential community corrections programs that are targeted to the type of offender and his or her likelihood to reoffend. Those who pose a greater risk to reoffend, are required to participate in more programming such as cognitive skills programming, family programming, anger management classes, substance abuse treatment, and more. This programming is proven to reduce recidivism.

No addict sets out to be an addict; and no person in recovery can tell you that recovery is easy. Oriana House works to give people the tools they need to remain drug free and be contributing members of the community who work, pay taxes, and live crime free. When people leave Oriana House programs, they leave knowing there are many resources in their community that they can turn to for help.

While we continue to reevaluate our work to provide the most effective programming, one constant remains: our neighborhoods, work places, schools, and homes become better places with every person who maintains sobriety.

JamesJ.Lawrence President/CEO OrianaHouse,Inc.

William Kea (chair), Summit County Executive’s Office (retired)

Harold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired)

Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Municipal Court Clerk (retired)

Robert Fenner, Ohio Adult Parole Authority (retired)

James Lawrence, Oriana House, Inc.

George Romanoski, Akron Deputy Mayor (retired)

Judge Mary F. Spicer, Summit County Court of Common Pleas (retired)

James Wagner, Attorney

2012 B2012 B2012 Boardoardoard ofofof dddirectorsirectorsirectors

MMMessageessageessage tototo thethethe C C CoooMMMMMMunityunityunity

Page 3: Oriana House, Inc. Community Report.pdfHarold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Municipal Court Clerk (retired) Robert Fenner, Ohio Adult Parole

201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012201220122012 HHHHHHHHHHHHigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigigHHHHHHHHHHHHligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligligHHHHHHHHHHHHtstststststststststststststststststststststststs

Medina County contracted with Oriana House for Halfway House beds, electronic monitoring services, and case management services.

Oriana House expands services to Medina County

Oriana House expands services to Stark County

Oriana House begins the Short Term Offender ProgramThe Short Term Offender Program is for clients sentenced to 30 days or less in a residential facility. During this time, clients participate in supervised community service, monitored job searches, or report to work. Due to their short stay, programming is limited.

The Summit County CBCF accepts misdemeanants from the City of AkronA change in state law allowed for misdemeanants to be sentenced to a Community Based Correctional Facility (CBCF). The Summit County CBCF began accepting misdemeanants arrested by the City of Akron. This provision in the law gave Akron Municipal Court a much needed sentencing option to a residential facility.

Oriana House begins the Alternative Environment ProgramOriana House began this pre-trial program to provide the Summit County Jail with a residential option for people with specific developmental disabilities needs. The program was developed through a collaborative effort with the County of Summit Developmental Disabilities Board, the City of Akron Prosecutor’s Office, Felony Pre-Trial, Ardmore Inc., and Summit Psychological Associates.

Oriana House President/CEO James Lawrence receives state award

CBCF programs score 100% on ACA reaccreditationThe Summit County Community Based Correctional Facility (CBCF), the Cliff Skeen CBCF, and CROSSWAEH CBCF all earned perfect scores on their American Correctional Association reaccreditation audits.

The Ohio Community Corrections Association (OCCA) awarded its 2012 Leadership Award to James Lawrence, Oriana House president and CEO, for his noteworthy contributions to OCCA. OCCA is a professional organization that advocates for and assists community corrections providers to function more effectively.

Oriana House began providing electronic monitoring services to Stark County.

Page 4: Oriana House, Inc. Community Report.pdfHarold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Municipal Court Clerk (retired) Robert Fenner, Ohio Adult Parole

Housing & ReentRy seRvicesBeginnings Housing in Akron (tenants) 13

North Star Neighborhood Reentry Resource Center (NSNRRC) new members 1,553

NSNRRC in person contacts 15,874

Akron Community Residential Center 40

Cleveland Community Residential Center 39

Chemical Dependency Treatment 2,754

Program Assessments 749

Detoxification 1,534

Drop In 3,157

Central Assessment 4,267

Summit Link 498

Access to Recovery Summit County 446 Cuyahoga County 517

Chemical Dependency Treatment Totals 13,922

# of Clients

cHemical DepenDency pRogRams

# of Clients Days ServedElectronic Monitoring (includes juveniles) 1,878 89,623 78%

Global Positioning System (GPS) 273 13,014 67%

SCRAM (includes juveniles) 384 33,368 88%

Reentry Court 116 48,318 70%*

Summit County Felony Drug Court 73 55,063 87%*

Akron Municipal Drug Court 107 26,364 80%*

Family Violence Court 67 31,520 85%*

Day Reporting 527 42,581 55%

Transitional Services 97 6,255 61%*

Criminal Non-Support 38 12,593 72%*

Pretrial Diversion 80 n/a 68%

Discretionary Rehabilitation 560 n/a 96%

SCOPE (cognitive program for probationers) 319 n/a 64%

Pretrial Supervision Maximum 575 47,186 73%

Pretrial Supervision Medium 290 25,182 82%

Pretrial Supervision Minimum 213 19,240 88%

North Central Ohio Electronic Monitoring 19 641 95%

North Central Ohio SCRAM 42 4,267 93%

North Central Ohio GPS 179 9,073 95%

Nonresidential Totals 5,837 464,288

Successful Completions

nonResiDential pRogRams

201220122012 PPProgramrogramrogramSSStatitatitatiSSSticticticSSS

# of Clients Days ServedSuccessful Completions

Summit County CBCF 503 56,031 65%CROSSWAEH CBCF 213 31,922 79%Judge Nancy R. McDonnell CBCF 443 54,356 76%Federal Placement 123 10,005 82%Multiple Offender Program 248 4,237 98%Summit County Jail Overflow 309 9,335 83%Glenwood Jail Direct Placement 520 10,602 95%Restricted Halfway House 203 5,563 76%Halfway House 647 37,623 61%Work Release/Employment Placement 531 27,253 64%SHARP 76 6,969 73%Alternative Environment Program 2 88 n/aTransitional Control 292 28,655 71%Driver Intervention Programs (DIP) 415 1,660 100%DIP 6 (includes time served at Glenwood Jail 191 1,143 99%as part of 6-day sanction)

Cleveland Community Corrections & 1,041 77,919 78%Treatment Center (includes Electronic Monitoring)

Cleveland Transition Center 16 789 57%Lake Erie Community Corrections 99 7,939 75% Center (includes Electronic Monitoring)

Residential Totals 5,872 372,089

ResiDential pRogRams

* Retention rate - percentage of successful completions & active clients

10%City of Akron Community Corrections Contract

8%Federal Bureau of Prisons

3%Community Corrections Act

8%Summit County ADM Board

13% Summit County CBCF Contract

3%Cuyahoga County Jail Reduction Program, Other Cities/Counties & Third Party Fees

6%CROSSWAEH (Seneca County) CBCF Contract

21%Ohio Halfway House Contract

3%Client Fees

13%Summit County Community Corrections Contract

1%Miscellaneous/Other contracts

2012 Revenue$39,145,010

Oriana House clients paid $187,603 in restitution, child support, and court costs in 2012.

201220122012 FFFinancialsinancialsinancials

2%Insurance/Interest

12%Occupancy

6%Client Expenses

7%Supplies/Maintenance

3%Operating Expenses

2012 Expenses$38,988,109

Estimated savings to Summit County taxpayers in 2012$33,974,864

11%Judge Nancy R. McDonnell (Cuyahoga County) CBCF Contract

70%Personnel

Page 5: Oriana House, Inc. Community Report.pdfHarold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Municipal Court Clerk (retired) Robert Fenner, Ohio Adult Parole

Prison CountyJail CommunityBasedCorrectional Facilities* MinimumSecurityJail(Glenwood)* MultipleOffenderProgram* SummitCountyJailTransfer* GlenwoodJailDirectSentence* RestrictedHalfwayHouse* HalfwayHouse* WorkRelease* EmploymentPlacement* SHARP(MentallyIllOffenderProgram)* DriverInterventionProgram* IntensiveSupervisedProbation ElectronicMonitoring*/GPSMonitoring* SecureContinuousRemoteAlcoholMonitoring(SCRAM)* ReentryCourt* DrugCourts-Felony*andAkronMunicipal*(BothDiversion) MentalHealthCourt*(Diversion) FamilyViolenceCourt*(Diversion) DayReporting* CriminalNon-Support* CommunityControl SummitLink* CommunityService PretrialDiversionPrograms* PretrialSupervision* Forfeiture/Impoundment Restitution/Fines/Costs

Oriana House provides integrated rehabilitative services across the continuum of sanctions. Because many of the services are provided by Oriana House, offenders can easily be moved up and down the continuum, adding or removing restrictions as necessary, without interruption to programming. The continuum of sanctions in Summit County Ohio is a nationwide model for successful community corrections programs.

*ProgramsinwhichOrianaHouseprovidesservices,eitherinwholeorinpart.

Correctional Sanctions

Each step in the Continuum of Sanctions can be used in conjunction with one another or as a step up or down from one program to another.

Drug/AlcoholTreatment

Intensive Outpatient Program

Relapse Prevention Program

Aftercare Program

EmploymentPrograms

CrisisCounseling

CognitiveSkills

EducationPrograms

CaseManagement

Drug/AlcoholScreens

FamilyInvolvement

Rehabilitative Services(based on individual risk/needs assessment)

Leas

t Res

trict

ive

Mos

t Res

trict

ive

ResidentialSanctionsNon-ResidentialSanctionsFinancialSanctions

Oriana House, Inc. is an affiliate of the

Continuum of Sanctions Model

ItisthepolicyofOrianaHouse,Inc.,tonotdiscriminatebasedonrace,color,religion,sex,nationalorigin,disability,age,sex(wages),genetics,gender,sexualorientation,HIVstatus,retaliation,andmilitary/veteranstatus.