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Transcript of Justice Assistance Thursday, September 10, 2015. The organization continued to support upgrades to...
Justice Assistance Thursday, September 10,
2015
2015 ANNUAL REPORT
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: INFRASTRUCTURE
The organization continued to support upgrades to the Management Information System (MIS) in both software and hardware.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: MEDIA
‘Justice Assistance News’ contact list continues to be revised and updated.
The organization’s webpage (www.justiceassistance.org.) completed its annual upgrade and reconstruction.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: VICTIMS’ RIGHTS
The organization continued to provide technical assistance to the Rhode Island Victim Assistance Portal. Justice Assistance and the Department of the Attorney General remain the exclusive managers of external use access.
The organization continued to work in partnership with the state court administration allowing Justice Assistance access to end user information that includes publicly restricted client data.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: STATE REPRESENTATION
The organization remains highlighted as a link on the state court’s webpage.
The organization continues to be represented on the Public Safety Grant Administration Office Policy Board.
The organization continues to be represented on the Legislative Batterers Intervention Standards Oversight Commission.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: QUALITY ASSURANCE
The in-house quality assurance and errors-free evaluation process entered its 5th year. The organization continued to make the process less subjective by modifying the quantitative values associated with mandatory MIS data points.
In FY2015, the Senior Case Manager was authorized to conduct random control file audits each quarter.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: INTERNAL IMPACT ISSUES
Justice Assistance remains authorized to collect restitution in cases involving the State Contractors’ Board. The authorization remains a transitional issue involving the matter of a criminal versus a civil judgment.
Authorization for Justice Assistance to collect restitution in cases involving the Department of Labor and Training cases for ‘Failure to Pay Wages’ remained in effect in 2015. This too is a transitional matter of criminal versus civil sanctioning.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: INTERNAL IMPACT ISSUES
For the third consecutive year the organization worked successfully to protect a crime victim’s right to restitution by advocating for the defeat of House Bill H-5188, House Bill H-5417, Senate Bill S-804, and Senate Bill S-593 calling for the decriminalization of shoplifting and disorderly conduct respectively.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: EXTERNAL IMPACT ISSUES
The organization successfully advocated for a Legislative Community Service Grant in the amount of $16,875 to support the Rhode Island Victim Assistance Portal activities.
The organization successfully advocated for a Legislative Community Service Grant in the amount of $100,000 to support the Office of Community Alternatives Pilot Project.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: PERSONNEL
The organization improved wages for all professional and support staff for the twelfth consecutive year.
The organization continued to provide health care benefits without requiring an employee co-pay.
The organization’s case management staff expanded in FY2015.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: FISCAL
Salaries continued to exceed those of local organizations comparable in size and mission (Source: Non-Profit Management Survey, 2013).
Salaries continue to exceed the organization’s goal of eighty-five percent of comparable Rhode Island public sector positions (Source: RI State Budget, 2015).
Development staff continues to manage and monitor our direct mail annual fund campaign for optimal cost-benefit efficiencies.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: FISCAL
The organization’s external debt remains zero.
The organization continues to receive rental income. Tenants include Flagship Staffing Services and Family Violence Intervention Corporation.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: FISCAL
Non-program income increased by three hundred and thirty-seven percent.
Banking/Bookkeeping user fee income decreased by twenty-one percent.
Management and consulting fee contracts declined by twenty-five percent.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: FISCAL
Government financial support shrunk by twenty-two percent, totaling seventy-four percent of the overall operating budget. The operating budget is now seven percent federally funded and sixty-seven percent state funded.
Client fee collection fell by thirteen percent - transactions increased by one percent.
Special event fundraising improved by eleven percent.
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION: FISCAL
The William G. Brody Fund was initiated in 2013 to provide financial assistance for indigent clients ordered by the court to receive domestic violence ‘psycho-educational’ counseling. The fund grew by thirty-one percent in FY2015 and is now at thirty-three percent of its total goal.
NEW INITIATIVE: FISCAL
The organization voted to open an endowment fund in FY2015. The fund, managed by Greenwood Credit Union, was launched with a $15,000 contribution from a number of individual donors.
NEW INITIATIVE: OFFICE OF COMMUNITY ALTERNATIVES (OCA) PILOT PROJECT
The OCA Pilot Project, in conjunction with the Brown University School of Public Health received a Rhode Island Foundation Strategy Grant. June Rockwell Levy Foundation and the TACO/White Family Fund added additional support.
The Roger Williams University School of Law Spring Symposium, “Sounding the Alarm on Mass Incarceration,” featured the OCA Pilot Project as an example of ‘what works.’
NEW INITIATIVE: OFFICE OF COMMUNITY ALTERNATIVES (OCA) PILOT PROJECT
The organization received forty referrals in FY2015.
Fifteen participants received insurance through HealthSourceRI and twenty-five participants were previously insured. All forty participants were successfully reinsured within the re-enrollment period.
NEW INITIATIVE: OFFICE OF COMMUNITY ALTERNATIVES (OCA) PILOT PROJECT
Twenty-four participants were referred to a behavioral health treatment provider.
Thirty-three participants were referred to a substance abuse treatment provider.
Eighteen participants were referred to a primary care provider.
NEW INITIATIVE: OFFICE OF COMMUNITY ALTERNATIVES (OCA) PILOT PROJECT
Eleven participants gained employment.
Ten participants successfully completed the project.
Eight participants refused to fully participate in the program and were sentenced to a determinant period of time at the ACI.
Four participants were refused admission.
PROGRAM STATUS SUMMARY: REFERRALS
New court-based referrals totaled one thousand, three hundred and forty-six in fiscal year 2015.
Sixty percent of the clients referred successfully completed the program.
Nine percent of the clients referred were sentenced and converted to probation for failure to comply with the court order.
PROGRAM STATUS SUMMARY: RESTITUTION COLLECTION
In FY2015, $116,776 in restitution was collected.
Restitution referrals increased by sixty-nine clients.
The average restitution claim totaled three hundred and fifty dollars.
Eighty-six percent of all restitution referrals paid in full the amount ordered.
PROGRAM STATUS SUMMARY: COMMUNITY SERVICE
Ten thousand and twenty-five community service hours were ordered in FY2015.
Community service referrals totaled four hundred clients, an increase of sixteen.
The average community service hours ordered per client totaled twenty-six hours.
Seventy-nine percent of all community service referrals fully completed their court ordered requirement.
PROGRAM STATUS SUMMARY: DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
In FY2015, four hundred and twenty-five domestic violence related offenses resulted in referrals to specialized counseling, an increase of seven clients, or 2%, over FY2014.
Three hundred and fifty-seven clients, or 84%, of all referrals successfully completed or are on target to complete their court ordered batterers’ intervention requirement.
PROGRAM STATUS SUMMARY:SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELING
One hundred and fifty-nine clients, who committed controlled substance related offenses, were referred to treatment.
PROGRAM STATUS SUMMARY: MENTAL HEALTH/ANGER MANAGEMENT
One hundred and eighteen clients were referred to mental health counseling services in FY2015, an increase of eight percent.
Anger management referrals increased to forty-six clients. A growth of one hundred percent.
PROGRAM STATUS SUMMARY:VICTIM SERVICES
Nine hundred and fourteen crime victims were notified of their case status.
Three hundred and sixty crime victims submitted victim impact/statement of loss forms.
Five hundred and eighty-nine crime victims were provided with specialized services or safety plan assistance.
PROGRAM STATUS SUMMARY: OTHER SERVICES
Seven hundred and fifty-two clients were referred to other agencies for specialized services.
Nine hundred and fourteen clients were provided follow-up services and justice system orientation.
JUSTICE ASSISTANCE DISTRICT COURT REFERRALS
FY2015: 1,346
FY2014: 1,330
FY2013: 1,601
FY2012: 1,748
FY2011: 1,600
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
0
500
1000
1500
2000FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCERESTITUTION CLAIMS
FY2015: 489
FY2014: 420
FY2013: 583
FY2012: 537
FY2011: 481
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
200250300350400450500550600
FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCERESTITUTION COLLECTION
FY2015: $116,776
FY2014: $135,769
FY2013: $159,141
FY2012: $146,451
FY2011: $128,233
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
$0
$40,000
$80,000
$120,000
$160,000
FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCERESTITUTION ORDERED PER CLIENT
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
FY2015: $350 FY2014: $377 FY2013: $273 FY2012: $273 FY2011: $267
FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCERESTITUTION COLLECTION RATE
PIF C D
FY2015: 86% - 5%-9%
FY2014: 79%-12%-9%
FY2013: 69%-22%-9%
FY2012: 63%-28%-9%
FY2011: 69%-26%-5%
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
Paid-in-full CurrentDelinquent
JUSTICE ASSISTANCECOMMUNITY SERVICE REFERRALS
FY2015: 400 FY2014: 384 FY2013: 491 FY2012: 455 FY2011: 494
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY20110
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCECOMMUNITY SERVICE HOURS ORDERED
FY2015: 10,025 Hours
FY2014: 10,013 Hours
FY2013: 12,339 Hours
FY2012: 11,489 Hours
FY2011: 14,061 Hours
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
02000400060008000
10000120001400016000
FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCECOMMUNITY SERVICE HOURS PER CLIENT
FY2015: 26 Hours FY2014: 26 Hours FY2013: 25 Hours FY2012: 25 Hours FY2011: 28 Hours
FY20
15
FY20
14
FY20
13
FY20
12
FY20
1123.5
2424.5
2525.5
2626.5
2727.5
28
FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCECOMMUNITY SERVICE COMPLETION RATE
P C NP
FY2015: 79%-1%-20%
FY2014: 59%-37%-4%
FY2013: 84%-15%-1%
FY2012: 75%-24%-1%
FY2011: 63%-36%-1%
FY20
15
FY20
14
FY20
13
FY20
12
FY20
11
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
FIVE-YEAR COMPARISONPositiveCurrentNon-Positive
JUSTICE ASSISTANCEDOMESTIC VIOLENCE COUNSELING
FY2015: 425 FY2014: 418 FY2013: 326 FY2012: 286 FY2011: 514
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCESUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELING
FY2015: 159 FY2014: 139 FY2013: 218 FY2012: 204 FY2011: 205
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY20110
50
100
150
200
250
FIVE YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCEMENTAL HEALTH COUNSELING
FY2015: 118
FY2014: 83
FY2013: 85
FY2012: 83
FY2011: 81
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
30
40
50
60
70
80
90FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
JUSTICE ASSISTANCEANGER MANAGEMENT COUNSELING
FY2015: 46 FY2014: 23 FY2013: 44 FY2012: 42 FY2011: 49
FY2015 FY2014 FY2013 FY2012 FY2011
20
30
40
50
60
70FIVE-YEAR COMPARISON
THE END