Pubdate: Sun, 04 Nov 2007 Source: Times-Tribune, The (Scranton PA) Copyright: 2007 Townnews.com Contact: http://www.thetimes-tribune.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4440 Author: Erin L. Nissley PROBATION, PAROLE OFFICERS STEPPING UP ENFORCEMENT For years, checking in with a probation officer meant making a trip to his or her office in the morning, giving a urine sample and answering some questions. Not anymore. Now, Lackawanna County probation and parole officers are dropping in on clients at homes, stopping at bars and holding evening hours to make sure they are getting a full picture of their clients' behavior. "When offenders come to the office, they're on their best behavior. You're seeing them in an artificial environment," said John Conlon, director of the county's probation and parole office. "It's important for our officers to get to know the client in his or her neighborhood, their families." Probation and parole officers have always made the occasional home visit. Staffing increases -- eight new officers have been hired this year -- have made those visits more commonplace, Mr. Conlon said. Now, 20 supervision officers handle about 1,500 people on probation and parole, from the county's Treatment Court and Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition program to those sentenced to probation or released on parole. "It's necessary to supervise from outside the office," said Gerald P. Davis, director of field supervision for probation and parole. "But until this year, the sheer number of (clients) kept everyone chained to a desk." Judge Michael Barrasse, who along with President Judge Chester Harhut has led the push for probation and parole officers to get out into the community, said studies show that getting out of the office is more productive for the officers and the clients. "We're telling these people, no alcohol, no drugs, no frequenting establishments with liquor licenses," Judge Barrasse said. "It's useless to enter an order, though, if no one is going to make sure they are following it." Mr. Conlon estimates that probation and parole officers have at least one person a week violating the terms of their parole or probation since they began doing more home visits a few months ago. Catching violators is only part of the process, though. Home visits also allow probation and parole officers to get to know family, friends and neighbors. Meeting the officers may mean families and neighbors would be more likely to report someone breaking the rules, Mr. Conlon said. Working in teams of two, probation and parole officers will make about 20 home visits a shift, mostly stopping by in the evening and at night during the week and on weekends. While there, they usually administer drug and alcohol tests and may search the home for contraband like alcohol, drugs and drug paraphernalia. In addition to home visits, probation and parole officers are also working more early morning and evening hours to call clients in for drug and alcohol tests and participating in DUI checkpoints with the county district attorney's office. Also, a few times a month, probation and parole officers will do bar sweeps -- visiting just about every bar in a town or neighborhood to see if people on probation or parole are there. They're usually joined by local police when possible, Mr. Conlon said. If they do find someone on probation or parole in the bar, probation officers will administer a breath test on the spot. Mr. Davis said the punishment for finding someone violating probation or parole varies -- from a verbal warning to being taken to prison. "It's a shot in the dark," Mr. Conlon admitted. "We may not catch a lot of people at the bar we're at that given night. But it's about having a presence. Tavern owners and patrons know we're there, and that we'll be back." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek