Pubdate: Tue, 08 Jan 2002 Source: Blade, The (OH) Copyright: 2002 The Blade Contact: http://www.toledoblade.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/48 Author: ERICA BLAKE FACILITY GIVES LENAWEE JUDGES SENTENCE OPTIONS ADRIAN - For several years, Lenawee County District Judge James Sheridan has had to consider how crowded the county jail is before he sends someone else there. And for several years, he and other judges have pleaded for other options. Surrounded by factories and empty office space, Lenawee County's first privately run work-release and counseling facility has finally found its home. One year after he had hoped to offer an alternative to jail time for nonviolent offenders, local lawyer James Daly opened the doors of a 20,000-square-foot facility at 1020 Michigan St. in the city's east end. Local judges are not trying to help or hurt Mr. Daly's endeavor, but they are thankful for the option. "There is nothing more frustrating than when you're sitting on the bench, saying that this person really deserves jail time, but I can't do it because there's no room," Judge Sheridan said. "How would you feel going into the boxing ring for a number of years with one hand tied behind your back, and then someone cut the rope?" The Lenawee Development Corporation Work Release Facility was conceived in January, 2001, as an alternative for Lenawee County judges when sentencing nonviolent offenders. The facility targets inmates who could be better served with treatment programs instead of jail time, including repeat drunken drivers and retail fraud offenders. Residents report to work for their shifts and return to the facility where staff administers drug and alcohol tests and treatment programs. The program can serve 100 live-in participants and act as a counseling site for several others. Like jail, residents would pay for their stay: $35 a day. But unlike typical jail sentences, the program will offer offenders rehabilitation while allowing them to work. "This is not a secure facility at all. They can walk out any day, at any time, and all we can do is call the probation department at the court," Mr. Daly said. "People here are going to have to cooperate, they are going to have to want to be here. If they come here with an attitude, they can go to jail." While inmates at the Lenawee County Jail are forced to stuff themselves in cells built for far fewer prisoners, Mr. Daly's work-release facility offers rooms accommodating four residents complete with a small bunk, a closet, and cable television. When not at work or in counseling, residents are able to make their own food in a full-service kitchen or gather in a common room. Upstairs, staff members continued to prep rooms yesterday to provide meeting space for substance-abuse counselors, domestic-related therapy, and Alcoholics Anonymous - programs that were cut out of the jail many years ago because of a lack of space. And residents will follow the rules of the facility or they will be expelled, putting their fate back into the hands of the Lenawee County probation department and the judges who sentenced them, said Sally Underwood, former commander at the Lenawee County jail and the new facility' s director. "There will be a spirit of cooperation, or they won't be here," she said. "Unlike the jail, residents here won't be spending 24 hours a day figuring out how to screw with you. They're here because they want to be here." The project has developed as county commissioners are working to solve their own problems of an aged and highly overcrowded jail. Built in 1953 and later renovated, the jail is designed to hold 156 prisoners. For the last several years, however, the jail capacity has averaged 200 inmates, and judges are often asked to approve early releases. Mr. Daly admits that only time will tell if his program will both prove successful and relieve jail overcrowding. But he's confident that the counseling inmates receive while they continue to work will surely help many straighten out their lives. "These are mostly individuals who have no structure in their lives, who have problems with alcohol or substance abuse and need a period of sobriety. We can provide that," Mr. Daly said. "Here they're given an opportunity to have a job while staying sober," he added. "They're given the possibility of getting back on the right track." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart