Pubdate: Fri, 18 Feb 2005 Source: Kelowna Capital News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005, West Partners Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.kelownacapnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1294 Author: Marshall Jones HELPING SET STREET PEOPLE STRAIGHT As was seen in downtown Kelowna this month, police are more than capable of sweeping up a street crime problem. Whoever falls through the gaps in drug treatment, housing or mental health can always find a home in the criminal justice system. But the local John Howard Society, which works to re-habilitate prisoners in the system, is working on a plan to use the strengths of cops and courts to guide qualified offenders back to the community's resources. Shelley Cook, local director of the John Howard Society, says courts and prisons are perhaps not the best answer for police pick-ups. Not if the reasons they committed crimes were based on social factors such as addiction or mental health. Statistics show 30 per cent of prisoners have mental health issues and 70 per cent of them also struggle with addictions. She said it's obvious a large sector of those collectively termed "criminals" are those who didn't get what they needed from community social services. "What we are doing is not working, so what do we have to lose by trying something new?" she said. Cook is seeking input from 28 groups in Kelowna that already deal with drug addicts, mental health needs or both. Her plan is to engage the police and courts to find treatment alternatives to sentencing. If addictions or mental health are factors in a crime, the case could be diverted to a help desk where professionals could determine exactly what the offenders needs are and how to address them. "It's a problem-solving process that tries to use the resources and expertise in a community and in the most effective way," she says. "The ultimate goal is to reduce crime by addressing the underlying factors." It costs roughly $85,000 per year to house a male offender in prison; more for women and youths. And that is simply a human warehouse keeping criminals among criminals. It's far better to spend that money and time working toward a resolution to the problems that got them in the criminal justice system in the first place, she said. Similar projects have been proposed for the community, using a co-ordinated one-stop shopping centre to help people find housing, health care, mental health care and either entitled benefits or employment that works best. Cook's idea uses the same principle with the natural strengths of the criminal justice system to identify those most desperate. The resources already exist in the community, they are already on the bus, they just need a driver. The difficult part will be capturing the imagination of police, Crown counsel, judges, probation officers, parole officers and others. She said there is precedent in drug and mental health courts in larger cities that work in a similar way. She is also counting on the experience and name of the John Howard Society to find its place. "We speak the language of corrections and we are located in the community," she says. "We see ourselves as a bridge between the two cultures. This a way to exploit that." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh