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Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera Institute of Justice Mary Winter, Onondaga County Probation

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Page 1: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens

Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice

Annie Salsich, Vera Institute of Justice

Mary Winter, Onondaga County Probation

June 10, 2007

Page 2: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

NYS Status Offenders Defined

Persons in Need of Supervision (PINS):• Truancy• Running away• Ungovernability

Page 3: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

History of PINS Assistance Project: Vera State-wide PINS Report

Changing the PINS System in New York: A Study of the Implications of Raising the Age

Limit for Persons in Need of Supervision

By Jesse Souweine and Ajay KhashuVera Institute of Justice

September, 2001

Page 4: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Findings of Vera’s PINS Report

• New York State expected to experience up to a 100% increase in new PINS intakes under current system;

• Projected costs of $29 million for increased use of detention and placement.

Page 5: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

New York State PINS Assistance

• Prompted by:-New PINS Legislation-Vera State-wide PINS Report

• OCFS contracted with Vera to help the state and its counties prepare for the influx of youth entering the system under the new law.

Page 6: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

New York State PINS Assistance

Page 7: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

New York State PINS Reforms

Two Central Trends:

• Front end – Strategies to improve intake and diversion;

• Back end – Development of community-based alternatives to detention and placement.

Page 8: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Front End Reforms: Intake and Diversion

Issues:

• Lack of immediate crisis response (delay in services)

• High number of court referrals- Immediately- Upon termination of diversion services

• High use of non-secure detention and placement

Page 9: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Front End Reforms: Orange County

POINT OF

ENTRYFAMILY KEYS

FOLLOW-UPSERVICES

NETWORK INTERVENTION

INTENSIVE SERVICES

FAMILY COURT

HOSPITALEVALUATION

ACCESS TO CLINICAL APPOINTMENT WITHIN

5

DAYS

REFERRALTO PROBATION

DEPARTMENT

MENTAL HEALTH

Page 10: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Back End Reforms:Alternatives to Detention & Placement

Issues:

• Cost

• Overcrowding

• Poor outcomes

• Focus on keeping youth and families together – at home and in the community

Page 11: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Back End Reforms:Albany County

Juvenile Release Under Supervision:

• DSS funded

• Daily contact with youth

• Service referrals

• PINS and JDs

• Reduction in non-secure detention costs

Page 12: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

New York City Reforms and Vera Research

Page 13: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

New York City’s Family Assessment Program (FAP)

• December 2002 in Manhattan, rolled out in other boroughs over 2 years

• Administration for Children’s Services (ACS) point of entry- Used to be Department of Probation

• Immediate response- Diversion from court

- Families must exhaust all services to PINS petition court access

Page 14: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Vera’s Research on FAP

• 2002: Study on the PINS system in New York City- Helps lead to development of FAP

• 2005: Implementation study of the FAP program

• 2005: PINS remand study

• 2007: FAP tracking study

Page 15: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

2005: PINS Remand Study

• Goals:- Identify the PINS cases that resulted in

remands- Identify the demographic and systemic

factors associated with being remanded as a PINS case

• Pathways of a PINS case:- Intake to FAP office

Subset go on to Probation department Subset go on to Court

• Subset are remanded by Court

Page 16: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Total Remands per Year

518

713

709

607

468*

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

*2005 is a projection based on first 8 months.

Page 17: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Remands per Day Pre- and Post-FAP

0.08

0.25

0.13

0.45

0.45

0.15

0.29

0.1

0.66

0.61

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8

Staten Island*

Queens

Manhattan

Bronx***

Brooklyn***

Pre-FAPPost-FAP

***Difference is statistically significant at the p<.01 level.*Difference is statistically significant at the p<.10 level.

Page 18: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Monthly Indicators Pre- and Post-FAP

• First six months of 2002 (last pre-FAP period):- Probation Intakes = 587/month- Court Referrals = 187/month- Remands = 56/month

• First six months of 2005 (first post-FAP period):- Probation Intakes = 112/month (81% decline)- Court referrals = 93/month (50% decline)- Remands = 41/month (27% decline)

• Probation intake, court referral and remand decreases statistically significant

Page 19: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Post-FAP Remands by Race

According to the 2000 Census, New York City’s population under 18 was 31% White, 29% Black, and 28% Hispanic.

White1%

Black63%

Other4%

Hispanic32%

N=497Missing=16

Page 20: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Pre- and Post-FAP Remands by Gender

Post-FAP

Female69%

Male31%

Pre-FAP

Female59%

Male41%

Page 21: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Pre- and Post-FAP Remands by Runaway Allegation

Post-FAP

No20%

Yes80%

Pre-FAP

No58%

Yes42%

Page 22: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Additional Research

• 2007: FAP Tracking Study: Tracked 100 families and followed up at 3 months after FAP intake- Findings: Improvement on mental health indicators and

family functioning

• 2007: PINS/JD study- Quantitative inquiry to the pathways and characteristics of

court-involved PINS and JDs; and overlap of the PINS and JD populations

- Qualitative inquiry on services provided and organizational structure of ACS interventions for court-involved PINS and JDs

• Randomized control trial of Adolescent Portable Therapy’s (APT) work with PINS- APT - Vera demonstration project providing mental health

and substance use treatment to JDs and now PINS

Page 23: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Onondaga County Reforms

Page 24: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Onondaga County Reforms:Overview and History

Why

• Fiscal problems

• Research

Who

• Interagency collaborative

What

• Aim to reduce costs and provide better outcomes for PINS youth

How

• Keep kids in their communities

Page 25: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Onondaga County Reforms Placement Outcomes

New PINS Placements, 1995 - 2006

4395

13151714

2931

43

67

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006Year

Num

ber P

lace

d

Page 26: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Onondaga County Reforms:Components

• Social Service placement staff moved to Probation

• Creation of Placement Review Board

• Cost Re-Allocation

• New major Alternative to Placement Program (PRISM)

Page 27: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Onondaga County Reforms:PRISM

• Partnership among Probation, Social Services, and the Salvation Army

• Comprehensive treatment planning

• Approximately 50% of PRISM cases staffed by FFT therapist

Probation Rehabilitation Intensive Services Management (PRISM)

Page 28: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

NYS Legislative Reforms:Family Court Act 2005

• Mandated diversion services

• Emphasized immediate crisis response

• Changed detention eligibility criteria

Page 29: Changing the Status Quo for Status Offenders: New York State’s Efforts to Help Troubled Teens Michael Lens, Vera Institute of Justice Annie Salsich, Vera

Working Beyond New York State

• Massachusetts

• Louisiana