| Chapter 343 |
| 2017 -- H 5065 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 09/28/2017 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO CRIMINAL PROCEDURE - CORRECTIONS - BATTERERS INTERVENTION PROGRAMS AND PROBATION SUPERVISION |
| Introduced By: Representatives Craven, Knight, McEntee, Ruggiero, and Casimiro |
| Date Introduced: January 11, 2017 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Section 12-29-5.2 of the General Laws in Chapter 12-29 entitled "Domestic |
| Violence Prevention Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 12-29-5.2. Duties and responsibilities of committee. |
| (a) The committee shall have the duties and responsibilities to: |
| (1) Establish and promulgate minimum standards for batterers intervention programs |
| serving persons mandated pursuant to § 12-29-5,; revise the standards as is deemed necessary,; |
| ensure the standards comport with evidence-informed practices designed to reduce risk,; and |
| make the standards available to the public, provided that the standards shall include, but not be |
| limited to, the following: |
| (i) Batterers intervention programs shall be conducted using evidence-informed |
| programming and dosage levels designed to reduce the risk of future violent behavior in the |
| context of psycho-educational groups, i.e., groups of domestic violence perpetrators led by one or |
| more professional group leaders trained and experienced in batterers intervention programming |
| and conducted for the purposes of learning and enacting non-abusive behaviors through didactic |
| instruction, interaction among participants and leaders, and teaching of skills within the groups; |
| (ii) The duration of batterers intervention programs shall be a minimum of forty (40) |
| contact hours over the course of twenty (20) weeks; |
| (iii) Batterers intervention programs shall require that all mandated batterers pay fees for |
| the programs in accordance with the provisions of § 12-29-5; provided, that programs shall |
| accommodate varying levels of ability to pay by means of sliding-fee scales and may elect to |
| offer alternatives to payment in the form of community restitution and/or deferred payment for a |
| portion of the fees; and |
| (iv) Provisions shall be established defining the circumstances under which defendants |
| who have attended a batterers program while incarcerated, and/or a batterers program in another |
| jurisdiction which that is certified under that jurisdiction's standards or not subject to standards in |
| that jurisdiction, may request that their documented participation in such program be accepted in |
| satisfaction of some portion of their obligation to attend forty (40) hours of a certified batterers |
| intervention program as described in subdivision subsection 12-29-5.2(a)(1)(ii)(a)(1)(ii). |
| (2) Monitor and review batterers intervention programs seeking certification with respect |
| to compliance with the standards, including periodic, on-site review; |
| (3) Certify those batterers intervention programs which that are in compliance with the |
| standards established pursuant to subdivision (1) of this subsection; subsection (a)(1) ; and |
| (4) Investigate and decide appeals, complaints, requests for variances, and post- |
| enrollment certification applications. |
| (b) For purposes of this chapter, "post-enrollment certification applications" means those |
| applications made to the committee by a batterer mandated to attend a certified batterers |
| intervention program in accordance with § 12-29-5 who has, prior to adjudication, enrolled in a |
| program not certified by the committee. The application shall include supporting documentation |
| from the batterers intervention program and a request that participation in the batterers |
| intervention program be accepted in lieu of the equivalent number of hours of a certified batterers |
| intervention program. The committee shall act upon a post-enrollment certification application |
| within thirty (30) days of receipt of the application. |
| (c) The state public safety grant administration office may provide grants to provide for |
| the access to, and expansion and improvement of, community-based batterers intervention |
| programs. The batterers intervention standards oversight committee shall make recommendations |
| to the public safety grant administration policy board regarding the distribution of funds in the |
| form of grants to programs to cover the costs of delivering quality services to indigent offenders, |
| and to assist community providers and their staffs to utilize outcome-based best practices and |
| effective programming methods. |
| SECTION 2. Sections 42-56-1 and 42-56-7 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-56 |
| entitled "Corrections Department" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 42-56-1. Declaration of policy. |
| (a) The legislature general assembly finds and declares that: |
| (1) The state has a basic obligation to protect the public by providing institutional |
| confinement and care of offenders and, evidence-based probation and parole supervision and, |
| where appropriate, treatment in the community; |
| (2) Efforts to rehabilitate and restore criminal offenders as law-abiding and productive |
| members of society are essential to the reduction of crime; |
| (3) Upgrading of Maintaining the quality and effectiveness of correctional institutions |
| and rehabilitative services, both inside and outside correctional institutions, deserves priority |
| consideration as a means of lowering crime rates and of preventing offenders, particularly youths, |
| first-offenders, and misdemeanants, from becoming trapped in careers of crime; and |
| (4) Correctional institutions, supervision, and services should be so diversified in |
| program and personnel as to facilitate individualized treatment. |
| (b) The purpose of this chapter is to establish a department of state government to |
| provide for the supervision, custody, care, discipline, training, and treatment, and study of |
| persons committed to state correctional institutions or on probation or parole, so that those |
| persons may be prepared for release, aftercare, and supervision in the community. |
| 42-56-7. Parole and probation. |
| (a) Authority. The division of rehabilitative services, subject to the authority of the |
| director, shall perform the functions relating to the parole and probation of adults as prescribed by |
| this chapter and chapters 18 and 19 of title 12, and under those rules and regulations adopted by |
| the director of corrections with the approval of the governor and the parole board in the executive |
| department. |
| (b) Assessments. The division of rehabilitative services shall adopt risk and needs screens |
| and assessments and behavioral health assessments that are validated at least once every five (5) |
| years for the purpose of informing the following decisions: |
| (1) Probation supervision intensity, case management, and treatment objectives, adopted |
| in collaboration with the superior courts; |
| (2) Correctional treatment and classification; and |
| (3) Parole supervision intensity, case management, and treatment objectives, adopted in |
| collaboration with the parole board, and parole release decisions, adopted in collaboration with, |
| and for implementation by, the parole board. |
| (c) Special conditions. The assessment implemented under subsection (b)(1) of this |
| section should be performed prior to placement on probation, whenever possible, to support |
| judicial decisions affecting conditions of supervision under §12-19-8.1. |
| (d) Supervision. The division of rehabilitative services shall: |
| (1) Provide limited supervision for probationers who qualify based on offense level, time |
| under supervision without a violation, and the results from a validated risk and needs assessment; |
| (2) Provide high-intensity supervision and treatment for probationers who, based on |
| screening and assessments, are high risk to re-offend and present high needs for behavioral health |
| services; |
| (3) Collaborate with the executive office of health and human services to implement |
| Medicaid payment incentives designed to ensure timely access to quality behavioral health |
| treatment and cognitive-behavioral programs for probationers; and |
| (4) Require that program providers serving probationers pursuant to a contract with the |
| department use cognitive-behavioral programs to reduce criminal thinking. |
| (e) Behavioral change guidelines. The division of rehabilitative services shall adopt |
| guidelines for probation and parole officers, governing: |
| (1) Incentives for compliance and risk-reducing behavior; |
| (2) Swift, certain, and proportionate non-confinement sanctions in response to |
| corresponding violations of probation conditions; and |
| (3) The use of confinement as a sanction after the consideration of all other appropriate |
| non-confinement sanctions in response to corresponding violations of probation conditions. |
| (f) Training. The division of rehabilitative services shall organize and conduct evidence- |
| based training programs for probation and parole officers. The training shall include: |
| (1) Scoring and use of validated risk and needs assessments under subsection (b) of this |
| section; |
| (2) Risk-based supervision strategies; |
| (3) Cognitive behavioral interventions; |
| (4) Targeting criminal risk factors to reduce recidivism; |
| (5) Use of incentives for compliance and risk-reducing behavior; |
| (6) Use of and swift, certain, and proportionate sanctions in response to corresponding |
| violations of probation conditions pursuant to subsection (d)(e)(2) of this section; |
| (7) Recognizing symptoms of substance use and mental health needs and making |
| treatment referrals; and |
| (8) De-escalating erratic criminal behavior. |
| (g) All probation and parole officers employed on or after the effective date of this act |
| shall complete the training requirements set forth in this section. Selected probation and parole |
| officers shall become trainers to ensure sustainability of these training requirements. |
| (h) Information. The division of rehabilitative services shall develop or adopt an |
| automated case management and reporting system for probation and parole officers. |
| (i) Implementation. Deadlines for implementation of this section by the department of |
| corrections shall be as follows: subsection (b) (initial assessment validation), subsection (c) |
| (special condition recommendations), subsection (d) (supervision intensity), and subsection (f) |
| (for training of existing probation and parole officers), one year from the effective date of this |
| section; subsection (e) (behavior change guidelines), six (6) months from the effective date of this |
| section; subsections (f) and (g) (for training of new probation and parole officers) and subsection |
| (h) (case management system), two (2) years from the effective date of this section. |
| SECTION 3. Chapter 42-18 of the General Laws entitled "Department of Health," is |
| hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
| 42-18-8. Cooperation with the department of corrections. |
| The director of the department of health shall coordinate and cooperate with the director |
| of the department of corrections to ensure collaboration around existing department of health |
| programs and initiatives, with regard to people under the care of the department of corrections, on |
| probation, during incarceration, and upon release to the community. |
| SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC000222/SUB A |
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