Pubdate: Mon, 07 Jan 2008 Source: Star-Gazette (NY) Copyright: 2008 Star-Gazette Contact: http://www.stargazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1005 Author: Jeff Murray Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) PROBATION OFFICIALS OFFER HOPE FOR THOSE WITH MENTAL ILLNESS In Chemung County, Program Aims to Treat People With Disorders, Drug Problems. Chemung County hopes to lead the way with a new statewide effort to address a serious problem in the criminal justice system. Officials believe the program could save taxpayers money while more effectively dealing with a significant number of the people who run afoul of the law. A large percentage of people who come into the system have mental health disorders or substance abuse issues, or often both. But the system is set up to punish people who commit crimes and not to deal with some of the underlying problems that often lead to those crimes, according to local criminal justice and mental health officials. That's starting to change, and a new program launched by the Chemung County Probation Department is a step in the right direction, said provisional probation director Tom Bruner. "The criminal justice system has been shortsighted in working with individuals with mental health disorders," Bruner said. "We used to warehouse them in large, abusive institutions. It's been replaced with a new system -- prison. It's morally repugnant to take some of the most vulnerable people in our society who commit a crime and end up in a jail cell but still have a disorder. "Because they continue to have a mental health disorder, they often end up in the worst possible situation -- solitary confinement," Bruner said. Bruner's solution isn't costing the county any more money but is focusing more attention on the needs of jail inmates and probation clients with mental health issues. To achieve that, Bruner took one of his probation officers and created a special caseload for her. That officer will focus solely on clients who come into the system and are flagged with potential mental health and/or substance abuse issues. "She will monitor these individuals and make sure they are in proper treatment. It's intensive supervision," Bruner said. "We have someone who comes here once a week, an expert in mental health issues. She meets with our officers to discuss cases that are problematic." Bruner has worked closely with the county Department of Mental Hygiene, the sheriff's office and Family Services of Chemung County to develop the program. He launched the initiative after attending a conference in the fall sponsored by the New York Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitative Services. There's a statewide push called Project CONNECT that also involves the state Office of Mental Hygiene and Division of Probation and Correctional Alternatives to re-evaluate the way the criminal justice system handles people with mental health disorders, said association Deputy Director Mathew Mathai. "Across the state and the country, there's a growing recognition that people with psychiatric disabilities and those with addiction are more and more likely to also be involved in the criminal justice system," Mathai said. "There's research that demonstrates people with even the most severe mental illness can recover. "The idea was to come up with a process and money for technical assistance to allow (local agencies) to talk to each other and get training from each other to help them integrate values of wellness and recovery," he said. Warehousing people with mental illnesses in jails and not properly treating them is not only unfair to the individual, but it puts an extra burden on the system and the community, said Brian Hart, director of community services for the Chemung County Department of Mental Hygiene. "Certainly the vast majority of those coming into the legal system have either mental health or substance abuse issues," Hart said. "That plays out when you look at specialty courts. We have three drug courts in our community. "We continue to design programs that will triage people better so they aren't ending up in jails, and really focus on the jails and how to move people off of constant watch in a quicker fashion, so they are not sitting there and having high-end service they may not need," he said. Those high-end services are also high cost, said Chemung County Sheriff Christopher Moss. A system that better sorts people coming in so that the people who need mental health services the most get them can benefit those people and save taxpayers money, Moss said. "It's very costly. We spend $200,000 a year in overtime for individuals on constant watch because of suicidal or homicidal tendencies," said Moss, who said all jail inmates are screened for mental health disorders on intake. "What we're tying to do is make sure there isn't overlap in services provided. It will be good for one person to keep track of it," he said. "Long term, we want to save some funds but also make sure inmates get the mental health services they deserve." The Chemung County Probation Department currently supervises about 1,000 adults, Bruner said. Six officers handle about 100 cases each from the general population, while another two officers oversee high-risk felons and one handles sex offenders. Another three officers work with juveniles who are making the transition to the adult system, Bruner said. The officer who was assigned a month ago to work with clients with mental health issues has about 10 people to supervise so far, and Bruner would like to limit her caseload to about 25, because each client requires intensive supervision. Bruner said that it's a small step given the enormity of the problem but added that an important step and one which he hopes will catch on around the state. "I'd love to see a statewide cooperative effort to put this on the front burner, and really put the resources into the community to work with this category of individual," Bruner said. "We've been pointing fingers at each other without doing a lot of talking. We have to stop that. "We want the community to be safe, but we want these individuals to be treated humanely and fairly." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake