2023, 09-26 Formal Meeting MinutesMINUTES
City of Spokane Valley
City Council Regular Meeting
Formal Format
Tuesday, September 26, 2023
Mayor Haley called the meeting to order at 6 p.m. The meeting was held in person by Council and staff in
the Great Room at CenterPlace Regional Event Center, 2426 N Discovery Place, Spokane Valley, and also
remotely via Zoom meeting.
Attendance.
Councilrnernbers
Para Haley, Mayor
Rod Higgins, Deputy Mayor
Tim Hattenburg, Councilmember
Laura Padden, Councilmember
Brandi Peetz, Councilmember
Ben Wick, Councilmember
Arne Woodard, Councilmember
Others in attendance:
Kelly Konkright, Attorney
Staff
Erik Lamb, Deputy City Manager
Chelsie Taylor, Finance Director
Gloria Mantz, City Services Administrator
John Bottelli, Parks and Rec Director
Bill Helbig, Community & PW Director
Adam Jackson, Engineering Manager
Glenn Ritter, Senior Engineer
Rob Lochmiller, CIP Engineering Manager
Scan Walter, Assistant Police Chief
Nikki Kole, IT Specialist
Marci Patterson, City Clerk
INVOCATION: Matthew Larson, Advent Lutheran Church gave the invocation.
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE Council, staff and the audience stood for the Pledge of Allegiance.
ROLL CALL City Clerk Patterson called the roll; all Councilmembers were present.
APPROVAL OF AGENDA It was moved by Deputy Mayor Higgins, seconded and unanimously agreed
to approve the agenda.
INTRODUCTION OF SPECIAL GUESTS AND PRESENTATIONS n/a
COUNCILMEMBER REPORTS
Councilmember Peetz: spoke about the COG meeting and the Measure 1 discussion, and that she attend the
ValleyFest activities.
Councilmember Padden: said she attended an SRLJC meeting and that their focus groups were still meeting
and that there was still not much to report. She also noted that she attended a GSI event with the
Superintendent providing a presentation and that she attended ValleyFest as well.
Councilmember Hattenburg: said he attended the Spokane Regional Homeless Entity Group meeting and
gave some brief statistics on STA (Spokane Transit Authority).
Councilmember Woodard: said he attended the Council of Government meeting as well and that there was
a lot of good information provided.
Councilmember Wick: discussed the meetings he attended for AWC; and said that he is the Chair of the
AWC Large City Advisory Committee noted the newly elected training that will be taking place later in the
year. He also spoke about his FMSIB meeting and that they are currently doing a study on rest areas and
additional safe parking for trucks. He also provided an update on the Human Rights Task Force meeting
and that they are analyzing the reports of hate crimes in the area. His final update was that he attended
ValleyFest as well.
Deputy Mayor Higgins: reported that he attended the exit audit with the State Auditor's and the city has
had a clean audit for the year.
Council Meeting Minutes, Formal: 09-26-23 Page 1 of 4
Approved by Council: 02-27-24
MAYOR'S REPORT
Mayor Haley reported that she attended Buell Felts ceremony at Pines Cemetery and attended Spokane
Transit Board meeting and they had a clean audit as well. She also provided an STA update; ridership is
up 180% from last year.
PROCLAMATIONS:
GENERAL PUBLIC COMMENT OPPORTUNITY:
Deputy City Manager, Erik Lamb spoke about the transitional housing at 1 Ith and Blake and reviewed
the contents of the letter from Reclaim. After Mayor Haley explained the process, she invited comments
from the public. Dan Allison, Spokane Valley said he sent a letter a month ago asking for a response and
noted that he was still awaiting responses from council. John Robertson, Spokane Valley, stated he had
been around construction almost all his life and recently noticed Avista began work in the area and that
the trees had been limbed up 2011. Terry Lalonde, Spokane Valley, spoke about the transitional housing
and she realizes that the house on Blake is not taking place but still wants to inform council- reviewed the
low level and mid -level felon statistics. Andrea Furston, Spokane Valley, provided informative materials
"When Halfway Houses Pose Full -Time Problems" and read some of the information she provided to
council. Brandi Bongers, Spokane Valley, said that council needs to understand that we don't want it (the
transitional house) in our neighborhoods, these men are not one-time offenders and they hurt people all
over town and she wants a specific location to put these people. Rob Tupper Spokane Valley,encouraged
the council to speak about property taxes and take the 1% allowable and noted it has not been taken
advantage of for 14 years. Brahane Windhorst, Spokane Valley, said she manages a treatment facility, and
everyone deserves a second chance, but the city needs to look outside of neighborhoods for transitional
homes and be in an area that they can make a positive difference. Mia Dimanico, Spokane Valley, spoke
to not being heard and people in the neighborhood not being informed in the right amount of time about
the transitional home. She also said incorporating offenders into socially rich neighborhoods is not a good
idea and is a heavy imbalance.
NEW BUSINESS:
1. Consent Agenda: Consists of items considered routine which are approved as a group. Any member of
Council may ask that an item be removed from the Consent Agenda to be considered separately.
Proposed Motion: I move to approve the Consent Agenda.
a. Approval of Claim Vouchers on September 26, 2023, Request for Council Action Form: $4,653,179.14
b. Approval of Payroll for Pay Period Ending September 15, 2023: $531,160.48
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Higgins, seconded and unan imously agreed to approve the Consent Agenda.
2. Motion Consideration --Water Quality Combined Funding Program Grant Application — Adam Jackson
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Higgins and seconded to authorize the City Manager, or designee, to
apply for .$212, 500 from Ecology's Combined Water Quality Funding grant program for the Montgomery
Boulevard Storrnu,ater Improvements design project, After Mr. Jackson gave a brief overview of the
grant application Mayor Haley invited public comments. No comments were offered. Vote by
acclamation: in favor, unanimous. Opposed: none. Motion carried.
3. Motion Consideration: 2024 State Legislative Agenda — Virginia Clough, Gloria Mantz, Briahna Murray
It was proved by Deputy Mayor Higgins and seconded to approve the to approve the proposed 2024 State
Legislative Agenda. After Ms. Clough provided a brief introduction and gave a brief synopsis of the purpose
of ti►e previous Legislative Agenda, Gloria Mantz then provided additional details for the homeless housing
portion of the agenda. Ms. Murray provided details regarding 2024 being a "non -budget" year and noted
that funding requests should be kept smaller to stay competitive. Council had expressed interest in making
a capital budget request for $600,000 in order to help fund the new regional cross country course facility
on the Flora Park property. There was also discussion regarding the wording used around the drug related
Council Meeting Minutes, Formal: 09-26-23 Page 2 of
Approved by Council: 02-27-24
penalties. Ms. Murray noted the revisions and stated she would make the requested changes and come back
at a later date with those revisions. Mayor Haley invited public comments. No comments were offered.
4. Motion Consideration: KPFF Consultants Agreement, Sullivan/Trent Design, Rob Lochmiller
It was moved by Deputy Mayor Higgins and seconded to authorize the City Manager to finalize and execute
the consultant agreement tivith KPFF' Consulting Engineers, inc. in an amount not to exceed $3,195, 832.68
for the Sullivan/Trent Interchange Reconstruction Project. Mr. Lochmiller went through the conceptual
plan giving a brief explanation of the background of the project, and explaining the options concerning the
cost and scope of the project using Alternative #2 as previously chosen. KPFF net with staff and developed
an initial scope for final design services and submitted it to the City for review in late March. Mayor Haley
invited public comments; no comments were offered. Vote by acclamation: in favor • unanimous. Opposed. -
none. Motion carried
ADMINISTRATIVE REPORTS:
5. Transportation Benefit District TBD Formation — Erik Lamb Adam Jackson Deanna Gregory
Mr. Lamb introduced the potential formation of a TBD pavement management program and provided a
brief history and discussed all the necessary steps to form at TBD. Mr. Lamb presented a PowerPoint
presentation that explained the formation requirements in greater details. Council noted that the TBD has
been historically talked about many times and it is time to finally make it happen. Funding can be discussed
at a later time. Council also discussed the need for community involvement when the funding discussion
happens. There were quite a few questions around the funding portion and Mr. Lamb noted that the current
item being presented was only for the formation and that discussion regarding funding would be at a later
date. At the conclusion of the discussion there was consensus to bring the resolution forward next week.
6. Proposed Property Tax Ordinance — Chelsie Taylor
Ms. Taylor presented a property tax ordinance and provided background in the development process and
that there are six TCA's (tax code area) in Spokane Valley, The 2024 proposed levy, if the city would
adopt an ordinance with the 1 % tax it would be $3.08 estimated on a $400,000 home. Council extensively
discussed the additional 1 % tax weighing the pros and cons. Discussion included saving the fiends over
time for a larger project as well as not wanting additional taxes for our residents. Ultimately at the end of
the discussion there was not consensus on including the 1 % tax on the property tax ordinance.
7. JAG Memorandum of Understanding — Erik Lamb, Assistant Chief Walter
Mr. Lamb presented the agreement with Spokane County and the City of Spokane. Ms. Lamb briefly
reviewed a history on the funding and that our allocation qualified as a "disparate allocation" and noted
we would need to enter into an agreement together to jointly spend and administer the funding. Assistant
Chief Walter explained that our portion of the funds would be used to enhance the security system at the
precinct. After a brief discussion, Council provided consensus to move forward with the MOU.
At 8:56p.m. It was moved by Deputy Mayor Higgins and seconded to extend the council meeting for an
additional 45 minutes. Vote by acclamation: in favor: unanimous. Opposed.- none. Motion carried
8. Measure 1 Discussion — Erik Lamb
Mr. Lamb provided details on the contract with Spokane County for detention services and an overview
of the information that has been provided on Measure 1. Mr. Lamb noted key points in a PowerPoint
presentation that were provided from Spokane County on Measure 1 if approved. Spokane County also
identified potential uses of the funds if Measure 1 passed. Council discussed the information that had
been provided at length and there was not a consensus to bring forward a Resolution regarding Measure 1.
9. City Hall Update — Bill Helbig, Glenn Ritter
Mr. Helbig presented a project update on the City Hall construction project. He noted that Gareo is
making great progress on the radius wall project and noted that micro -piles were installed as well. The
Council Meeting Minutes, Formal: 09-26-23 Page 3 of 4
Approved by Council: 02-27-24
temporary roofrepairs have been completed an(] the building is safe for the winter weather. TI lie current
projection is to have the first council meeting of 2024 back in chambers,
10. Advance 6&q.nda — Mavor Maley
Councifinember Padden questioned if there were any enhancements being made regarding the Blake Fix
and [)eputy City Manager Lamb noted that staff was currently working on reviews and updates,
INFORMATION ONLY
The (11) Department Monthly Reports, and the (12) Fire Department Monthly Report were for information
only and were not reported or discussed.
COUNCIL COMMENTS
There were no further comments from Council.
,CITY MANAGER COMMENTS
Deputy City Manager Lamb stated that our exit e(mrficrence with the State Auditors went well rand that the
city did an excellent job. Mr. Lamb also stated that there was a Regional homeless meeting and that there
would be more in -formation to follow at an upcoming council meeting.
Executive Session: It was iiioi�edbyire ptilyMcij,oi-I-Itggiiis, ,vecoi7cledcii7diincinit)�iotiyll�cigreedio ae#ourn
into exec alive session.for 15 minutes to (fiscuss potential acquisilion oJ'real es -late, and that no action will
he 01(('17 IP017 refurn to open session, Council adjourned into executive session at 9: 10 p.m, At 9:25p.al.
Deputy Mayor Higgins declared Council out of executive session, at which time it was moved hy
Councilmember O'bodeircl, sec omled and ztnonimousl)r agreed to m-tiourn.
A
Marc'Ilcrson, City Clerk
Pam IWey, Mayo
Council Meeting Minutes, Formal: 09-26-23
Approved by Council: 02-27-24
Page 4 of 4
City Council Meeting 9-26-23
Good evening, My name is John Robertson and this is my wife Bridget Robertson
We have been around construction for most of our lives. My wife, Bridget, has worked with two different
construction companies for more than 40 years, My father retired from WADOT after 40 years as project
engineer. I am a volunteer on several building committees with different charitabie associations.
We reside at 11917 E 6" Ave Spokane Valley 99206 which is the corner of 6 th and Perrine. We have been
living here for 31 years and have taken extremely good care of the property and the landscaping as can
be seen in exhibits A, B, C, and D. The trees on the east side of our property were planted by the
previous owner approximately 10-15 years before we purchased the home. This means the trees are
between 40- 50 years old. We maintained them by pruning the dead limbs and cleaning up the needles
and pine cones 3-5 times a year as needed. We did not want to ruin the integrity of the trees or the view
for our neighbors across the street, There has never been an issue with the city in regards to these trees
over the 31 years, we have lived here, snow removal street sweeping and waste management have never
asked or complained about the trees.
Mid to late August, Avista came in and marked the utilities on Terrine and 61' Ave. 9-5-23 Avista started
maintenance work and finished 9-15. Exhibit E. Bridget came home every day to take care of our pets at
lunch time saw the construction taking place with digging and pipe replacement. She was, never
informed during those trips home that there was an issue with the trees. On 9-19 she came home to
seeing the pine trees limbed and the side yard completely wide open. She was very distraught to see this
invasion of our privacy and our property. Exhibit F. The trees were limbed about 20 feet up by a work
crew.
After doing some investigations we were told that Avista had asked that the trees be trimmed. When I
called Avista!, Tuesday, after Bridget called me about the issue, I was informed that there was no record
or notes in our file. I was forwarded to the manager of Forestry for Avista and I left a message, To date I
have not received a call yet.
Bridget spoke with our neighbors and discovered that it was Spokane Valley labeled trucks and 7 young
men that did the limbing. Our neighbor felt uncomfortable in asking them any questions as she was
intimidated by their derniner and appearance. The crew only had one pole saw to do the work and I do
not believe they are arborists based on the way the trees were trimmed.
We have lost our Privacy; Security and our neighbors have lost the aesthetics of looking at well -
maintained trees let alone the emotional distress that took place when the issue was discovered. I
personally would have called an Arborist in order to keep the integrity of the pine trees. Not only that
but pine trees should not be limbed in the: manner that took place on 9-18-23. Limbs will not grow back
in order to fill in the void that was created by improper limbing. There is also a good chance that the
trees will now be susceptible to disease and insect damage.
in closing I would like to know why the RCW 35.21,310 was not followed, this RCW states that the home
owner is to be given no less than five days' notice to make any changes or do any maintenance. Why was
a professional arborist not hired to do this job? Who was the crew and are we now susceptible to 1nore
theft or property damage? Who is now responsible for replacing our privacy, security and making the
property look better for our neighbors that look west from their yards, homes and drive up and down
the dead-end street? We were not given proper notice of any issues and I firmly believe that the trees
were over limbed and the job was improperly done making these things the responsibility of the City of
Spokane Valley. I believe the City has protocol in place based on the RCW's to prevent these things from
happening and as tax paying citizens have a hard time understanding why things like this take place.
11917 E 6th Ave A, /0
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RCW 35.21.310 Removal of overhanging or obstructing vegetation —
Removal, destroying debris, Any city or town may by general ordinance
require the owner of any property therein to remove or destroy all
trees, plants/ shrubs or vegetation, or parts thereof, which overhang
any sidewalk or street or which are growing thereon in such manner as
to obstruct or impair the free and full use of the sidewalk or street
by the public; and may further so require the owner of any property
-therein to remove or destroy all grass, weeds, shrubs, bushes, trees
or vegetation growing or which has grown and died, and to remove or
destroy all debris, upon property ,-)wned or occupied by them and which
are a fire hazard or a menace to public health, safety or welfare. The
ordinance shall require the proceedings therefor to be initiated by a
resolution of the governing body of the city or town, adopted after
not five days' notice to the owner, which shall describe the
_- 'Less than L -
property involved and the hazardous condition, and require the owner
to make such removal or destruction after notice given as required by
said ordinance. The ordinance may provide that if such removal or
destruction is not made by the owner after notice given as required by
the ordinance in any of the above cases, that the city or town will
cause the removal or destruction thereof and may also provide that the
cost to the city or town shall become a charge against the: owner of
the property and a lien against the property. Notice of the lien
herein authorized shall as nearly as practicable be in substantially
the same form, filed with the same officer within the same time and
manner, and enforced and foreclosed as is provided by law for liens
for labor and materials. al and additional to
The provisions of this section are supplement
any other powers granted or held by any city or town on the same or a
similar subject. [1969 c 20 § 1; 1965 c � § 35,21.310, Prior: 1949 c:
113 § 1; Rem, Supp. 1949 § 9213-10.)
Weeds, duty of city or town, extermination areas: RCW 17,04,160.
Certified an 9/1/2023 RCW 35.21,310 Page 1
When Halfway Houses Pose Full -Time
Problems
Loaded on ,TAN. 10, 2015 by Derek Gilna published in Prison Legal 2015, page Y
Filed under: Classification, VVork Release, Staff -Prisoner Assault, Prisoner -Prisoner Assault, Conimmnity Education
Centers, Contractor Misconduct, Prison Rebellion, Escapes, Failure to Protect (General), Relial>ilil,,ition/Rccidivisiu,
Alternative. Sentencing. Locations: Colorado, District of Coltnlibia, Florida, Iowa , Keniticl:y, New° terse.-, New Alexico,
Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington.
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When Halfway Houses Pose Full -Time Problems
by Derek Gilna
A recent interest among government officials in reducing prison populations as a way to cut costs,
stemming from the 200$ Great Recession that resulted in significant budget deficits, has placed
renewed emphasis on the importance of halfway houses. As more prisoners are released there is a
corresponding need for more post -release housing --- including reentry facilities.
Loosely defined as a "halfway" point for prisoners between incarceration and freedom, halfway
houses have experienced a number of problems that indicate the industry is in need of systemic
improvements. If states continue the trend of reducing their prison populations and more federal
prisoners are released due to sentencing reforms [see, e.g., PLN, Aug. 2014, p.26], then halfway
houses -- also known as Community Corrections Centers (CCCs) and Residential Reentry Centers
(RRCs) — will have to increase their capacity as well as the quantity and quality of the transitional
services they provide.
An Industry Plagued with Problems
Although some halfway houses are adequately managed and staffed with competent professionals,
others are operated more for profit than an interest in helping offenders successfully return to
society. Too many incidents involving poorly -supervised halfway house residents and indifferent, or
even criminal, behavior by employees have occurred in almost every state as well as the federal
prison system.
A well -managed halfway house provides a safe environment for soon -to -be released prisoners; some
may have been in jail for relatively shoat periods of time while others might have been locked up for
years or even decades. A halfway house's principal goal of providing a smooth transition back to
society provides the first line of defense against recidivism. Halfway house residents often have few
current ties to the community to which they are released, and even if they do, may not have family or
friends to assist them. They need viable reentry services, including job placement and housing
assistance, and often require substance abuse programs. Too often, though, halfivay houses are
viewed by their owners and operators as little more than a revenue source.
However poor a halfway house might be in providing effectual services and programs, many times it
is the only available option. For some state prisoners nearing release, placement in halfway houses is
mandatory; other states require no tune spent at a reentry facility. According to the non -partisan
Pew Charitable Trusts, prisoners in eight states are allowed to "max out" their sentences with no
reentry programs to smooth their return to the community. In those states, about 40% of prisoners
are released with no transitional services.
"Nov, policymakers on both sides of the aisle are starting to realize that if you're serious about public
safety, you need more effective strategies," observed Adam Gelb, director of Pew's Public Safety
Performance Project.
According to an April 2014 recidivism report by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, 49.7% of offenders
return to prison within three years after release and 55.1 % return IN ithin five years. Clearly, most
state and federal correctional facilities do a poor job of "correcting" prisoners and preparing them for
release, which puts an even greater burden on halfway houses to supply reentry services.
If the promise of the recent flurry of prison population reductions and sentencing reforms across the
nation is to be realized, halfway houses must adapt to new challenges and increased responsibilities.
Such reforms iNill be rendered meaningless if a large percentage of newly -released prisoners
re -offend and are re -incarcerated.
Despite this potential crisis, there is little sign that either state corrections officials or the Bureau of
Prisons (BOP) is addressing shortcomings in the current halfway house system. Many reentry
facilities are poorly -managed and monitored, with violence, drug use and escapes that are aggravated
by widespread indifference and misconduct by staff members.
Further, halfway house programs sometimes reflect a corrupt system that awards contracts on the
basis of political favoritism or cronyism rather than the ability to reduce recidivism; halfivay house
contracts are sometimes seers as way for government officials to reward political backers and
campaign contributors.
In any other business or industry, the level of failure and corruption present at some halfway houses
would result in wholesale employee terminations and changes in management, but as in many
correctional facilities, there is little accountability.
Some companies and organizations that operate halfway houses try to do their best to provide the
services that soon -to -be -released prisoners need. Dismas Charities, for example, which runs reentry
facilities nationwide, has a good reputation in the industry. While even Dismas has had its share of
problems, it seems to genuinely care about the quality of its transitional services.
According to Dismas, "Our history has taught us that, to be effective in the process of reintegration,
we need to focus on three critical areas that have proven to deliver the best results: Education,
Employment, and Support. Each program employs evidence -based practices, and the use of
validated risk/needs assessments to reduce recidivism." Additionally, "A critical component of all our
work is a focus on helping our residents obtain meaningful employment. Through employment, our
residents repay their debts to society and become responsible, independent citizens, taxpayers,
parents, and contributors to the community."
Unfortunately, not all halfway houses are focused on reentry services and programs. States that have
faced significant problems with halfway houses include New Jersey, Florida and Pennsylvania. The
federal prison system's use of contract halfway houses has also not been exempt from criticism.
CEC in New Jersey
New Jersey has embarked on a grand experiment, shifting thousands of prisoners from
expensive -to -run state prisons into less costly, privately -operated halfway houses. The state's prison
system has under 25,00o beds while approximately 3,500 offenders and parolees are housed in
around two dozen halfway houses. But the system is not without its problems; about 5,10o residents
have absconded from halfway houses since 2005, and former employees and residents report that
drug and alcohol use, crime and violence are rampant at some facilities.
The state's largest player in the private halfway house industry is Community Education Centers
(CEC), a New Jersey -based for -profit company that manages jails, prisons and transitional centers
throughout the United States. The firm operates six large halfway house facilities in New Jersey that
contain i,goo of the state's reentry beds. CEC also runs the goo -bed Albert M. `Bo" Robinson
Assessment and Treatment Center (Robinson Center), which functions as both a halfway house and
intake center for state prisoners transitioning into the halfway house system. Prisoners deemed low
risk by CEC are transferred from the Robinson Center to other halfway houses, including those
operated by other companies.
CEC is deeply enmeshed in New Jersey politics. The state's Governor, Chris Christie, was registered
as a lobb)dst for the company in 2000 and 2001. He later maintained close ties with CEC, visiting
and praising the company's facilities while serving as a U.S. Attorney — a position that has little to do
with state corrections.
Further, William J. Palatucci, a senior vice president at CEC, was Christie's close friend, political
advisor and former law partner. Palatucci served as co-chair of Christie's 2010 inaugural committee.
After Christie became governor in 2010, lie hired the son-in-law of John J. Clancy, GEC's founder
and CEO, to work as an assistant in the governor's office.
Such is CEC's political clout that, in the lggos, state regulators allowed the company to set up a
nonprofit organization called Education and Health Centers of America (EHCA) to skirt the state's
requirement that only nonprofit agencies receive contracts to operate halfway houses. EHCA, which
has a mere ten employees, contracts with New Jersey to provide halfway houses, which are then
managed by CEC. Clancy receives a $351,346 annual salary from EHCA, ,which is required to disclose
its financial reports, in addition to the salary he receives from CEC.
The primary purpose of EHCA appears to be to funnel the millions of dollars it gets from state and
county agencies to CEC as its sole "subcontractor" to operate halfway houses. Therefore, the vast
majority of the $71 million CEC received from the state and various New Jersey counties in fiscal
year 2011 came through EHCA. In 2011, New Jersey's Comptroller criticized the state's contracts
with halfway houses and singled out EHCA, citing its close connections to CEC. [See: PLN, July 2012,
p•241.
The total state and county budget for private halfway houses in New Jersey was $105 million in FY
2011. With so much money at stake, there are concerns whether reentry facilities are providing
competent and cost effective services. One persistent problem has been a high number of escapes by
halfway house residents.
n Epidermic of Escapes
"The system is a mess," declared Thaddeus B. Caldwell, a senior- state corrections investigator who
spent years tracking escapees from halfway houses. "No matter how many escaped, no matter how
many were caught, no matter how many committed heinous acts while they were on the run, they
still kept releasing more guys to halfway houses, and it kept happening over and over again."
The number of escapes from halfway houses astonished even people involved in the corrections
system --- 46 escapes in September 2011, 39 in October., 40 in November and 38 in December. After
be instituted reforms, Governor Christie bragged that "only" 181 residents absconded from halfway
houses in the first five months of 2012.
About 10,00o New Jersey state prisoners and parolees pass through halfway houses each year. CEC
officials have used that number to claim the escape rate from their facilities is "staggeringly low."
However, that argument holds little water when one compares the escape rate to that of the state
prison system or considers there are only about 3,500 offenders in reentry facilities at any given
time.
Halfway house officials complain that residents who return late from work release assignments or
who surrender after a few days of being absent are harmless, yet are often considered escapees. They
also point out that their employees are unarmed and without authority to stop an escape, and that
they depend on educating halfway house residents as the best option to prevent thern from
absconding.
Those points may have some validity, but ignore the fact that many of the escapes have occurred at
"locked -dowry" halfway houses — those with no work -release program — and few escapees are
prosecuted once caught. For example, the prosecution rate for residents who abscond in Essex
County has been around 10% since 2oo9.
Sometimes the low prosecution rate reflects a lack of interest by local prosecutors in pursuing a
relatively minor infraction that can be handled through the prison system's disciplinary process. Yet
law enforcement officials often don't even know a halfway house resident has escaped until they
commit another crime — and sometimes not even then.
Rafael Miranda absconded from a halfway house in December 2oog and was on the rum for four
months until he fatally shot a man in Newark. In 2010, David Goodell, imprisoned for assaulting his
ex -girlfriend, escaped from Logan Hall, a halfway house with one of the highest escape rates, and
murdered a woman who had broken off her relationship with him. Valeria Parziale escaped from a
Trenton halfway house in 2oog; nine days later she used a knife to cut off a man's ear in a liquor
store. She was charged with assault but not escape, because prosecutors were unaware she was an
escapee.
More recently, Jahmel Glanton, r9, walked away from the Robinson Center in December 2013, just
three days after he arrived at the facility; he was captured more than three weeks later on January 11,
2014 and charged v6th possession of crack cocaine and obstructing the administration of law.
Halfway houses run by the nonprofit Kintock Group have accounted for almost half the escapes in
New Mersey in recent years. CEC has used that fact to deflect criticism that there is something wrong
with the company's management of its halfway houses, but the Kintock Group pointed out that all of
the prisoners sent to its facilities first go through the CEC-run Robinson Assessment and Treatment
Center for evaluation. Only those deemed low -risk by CEC are transferred to Kintock halfway houses.
From 2009 through 2011, 16% of escapees absconded from CEC-operated facilities but another 43%
had first been evaluated as low -risk by CEC before fleeing from other halfway houses. Therefore, it
appears that improper evaluation by CEC was a contributing factor in at least some of the escapes.
Another explanation is the growth in the percentage of prisoners convicted of violent cringes being
sent to halfway houses. That figure increased from 12% in 2006 to 21% in 2012, and coincided with a
budget -savings -driven expansion in the use of halfway houses. It costs between $125 and $15o a day
to house a prisoner in a state prison, but only $60 to $75 to put the same prisoner in a reentry
facility.
Some former halfway house residents and workers have provided a different explanation for the high
number of escapes, saying reentry facilities are often violent, dangerous and gang -infested, rampant
with drugs and other contraband, and residents are not closely monitored.
"This industry just infuriates me," stated Nancy Wolff, director of the Center for Behavioral Health
Services and Criminal Justice Research at Rutgers University. "If you want to go there and sit in
peer -run groups — or hang out and smoke and play cards and have access to drugs — it's a great
place."
According to Vanessa Falcone, 32, there is a much darker side to halfway houses. Falcone was
assigned to a cleaning crew at the Robinson Center in 2009 when an employee ordered her into a
closet and forced her to perform oral sex.
"He took his pants off and grabbed my hair and pushed me down," she said. "That started a few
weeks of basically hell." After another staff member learned what was happening, Falcone was
moved to a different facility and the employee was fired but not prosecuted.
In a similar incident, a woman who escaped from the Robinson Center told police after being caught
that she was trying to get away from a counselor, Joseph A. Chase, who had repeatedly raped her.
When police searched Chase's car they found drugs; they then arrested hire on charges of sexual
assault and drug possession. CEC officials said it was an isolated incident.
Mass Escape from Logan Hall
Hurricane Sandy and a lack of preparation or training for unusual weather allowed residents at one
New Jersey halfway house to run rampant, resulting in the escape of fifteen prisoners.
Although designated a halfway house, Logan Hall, operated by CEC, is designed and run more like a
jail. Residents are locked into small rooms, the facility is surrounded by fences topped with razor
wire, and the doors and gates are electronically -controlled. When the power failed as a result of
Hurricane Sandy on October 29, 2012, all of the doors unlocked.
The opened doors allowed dozens of male residents at Logan Hall to get into the hallways. Once
there they destroyed furniture and vending machines, tore signs with messages such as "Stop Lying"
and "Admit When You Are Wrong" off the walls, and threatened employees and female residents.
The CEC workers were unable to organize an effective response to the mayhem. Poorly paid, trained
and equipped, none of them knew hoer to start the backup generator; they didn't even have a
flashlight.
One supervisor confronted a group of finale residents wearing improvised face masks who were
headed toward the rear of the building where the women were housed. While the supervisor kept the
men at bay, other staff members moved the female residents to a reception area that could be
manually locked. They stayed there until the police arrived.
Thwarted in their efforts, the masked men grabbed chairs and blankets to scale the perimeter fence
and left Logan Hall through the unlocked front door. They quickly discovered that the front gate was
open, too.
Of the t5 residents who escaped, six were recaptured within three days, another six were caught
between three and six days later, two eluded authorities for about a week and only one remained free
after two weeks.
Governor Christie was strangely silent about the events at Logan Hall during Hurricane Sandy.
Assemblyman Charles Mainor, chairman of the Law and Public Safety Committee, was troubled by
the administration's failure to disclose the incident.
"I did not know. Of course, they would not want me to know," said Mainor, referring to Christie's
strong support for CEC and his close friend, CEC vice president William J. Palatucci, who left the
company in November 2012 after extensive news coverage about problems at CEC-run halfway
houses.
Fifty officers from four law enforcement agencies, including the Essex County Sheriff's Department,
Essex County Correctional Department, Newark Police Department and New Jersey Parole Board,
responded to the incident at Logan Hall. Newark Mayor Cory A. Booker said it was "obviously a
serious event." Joe Amato, president of the Essex County guards union and an opponent of
privately -operated halfway houses, took it a step further.
"The place was turned upside down," he said. "The inmates basically rioted."
Arnato's take may be an exaggeration since no one was injured at Logan Hall. But it is probably not
an exaggeration to agree with one of the responding law enforcement officers who, on the condition
of anonymity, said there were moments when the situation at the facility could have spiraled out of
control.
None of the state or county -run jails and prisons in New Jersey experienced disturbances or escapes
during Hurricane Sandy.
Violence, Drugs and Gangs
Both prisoners and former employees have described the Robinson Center as dangerous — especially
at night. Residents are housed in barracks -style rooms with only one or two staff members to oversee
each 170-bed unit. Some employees are so afraid they refuse to patrol the halls. Thus, at night, the
rides of the jungle prevail — with robberies, sexual assaults and the weals being preyed upon by the
strong. Employees have said many prisoners ask to be returned to the state prison system because
they feel safer there.
"They definitely told me, `I want to go back to prison,"' said former Robinson Center GED teacher
Assenka Okiloff. "They would tell me that all the time."
"It's not a safe environment, not safe for inmates or for staff," agreed Robert Brumbaugh, former
deputy director of security at the Robinson Center and a 25-year veteran of the corrections system.
"It was horrendous."
The purpose of the Robinson Center and other halfway houses is to provide resources and programs
to help prisoners succeed following their release. How could it be, then, that when Mercer County
conducted a surprise drug test of 75 county prisoners held at the Robinson Center in August 2009,
55 (73%) tested positive?
The facility is "like the projects," stated Matthew Leibe, who was housed at the Robinson Center in
2011. "I'm walking down the hallway from mess and I'm getting approached by everybody selling
everything — `I've got batteries, T-shirts, weed, heroin, coke."'
One explanation given by former employees for the prevalence of drugs at the halfway house was
rampant falsification of prisoner records. The records reported drug treatment and other classes as
well as drug tests, all of which never occurred. And when classes were provided, they were given in a
haphazard manner or by untrained employees who merely read the program materials to a group of
residents.
Denette Pasqualini, 40, was hired as a counselor at the Robinson Center in .Tune 2011. She had what
she thought was relevant experience working security at Six Flags, but soon found things were very
wrong at the facility. Supervisors drank whiskey hidden in soda bottles, counselors were having sex
with residents and when she tried to intervene after one resident stabbed another with a pen, other
prisoners held her back. She also observed counselors warning residents of upcoming drug tests,
allowing them to take urine cups into the bathroom without supervision and simply doctoring test
results so they showed prisoners passing drug tests who had not been tested.
"The staff is from the Trenton area and know the inmates from the streets," said Pasqualini. "They
say: `I'm not going to give her a drug test. I know her. I'll let it go."'
Cynthia Taylor, 55, another former Robinson Center counselor, falsified records and saw others
falsify them after she was hired despite having no previous counseling experience. She was told to
give lectures on drug treatment and parenting.
"We all understood it was a numbers game," she said. "[CEC] made money not on how many people
were rehabilitated. `How many bodies can we get in here and keep here for a certain amount of time?'
That's what they were interested in."
When these kinds of problems are brought to the state's attention they are often ignored, according
to Bronislaw Szulc, formerly a senior state official in charge of investigating halfway houses. Szulc
said he submitted extensive documentation concerning drugs, violence, escapes and poor security at
the Robinson Center and other halfway houses before retiring in 201o. But state officials rarely held
the operators of the facilities accountable, instead demanding that he soften the criticism in his
reports.
"I was told to stand down and ease up — not to go after things so hard," he said.
The influence of gangs explains some of the prevalence of violence and drugs at halfway houses.
"Beyond outright threats and shakedowns, even time on a facility's pay phone was found to be
controlled and sold by gang members," said Lee C. Seglem, assistant director of the State
Commission of Investigation, which reviewed the influence of gangs in New Jersey's corrections
system in 2oog. The commission found that gangs were a much greater problem in halfway houses
than prisons.
Some reentry facilities have a form of work release, which might account for the presence of drags
and other contraband. The Robinson Center is not one of them; rather, it's a locked -down facility.
Despite its locked -down status there have been at least nine escapes since 20og, and drug use is
rampant.
CEC's hiring standards may also contribute to contraband problems in its halfway houses. Dana
Vetrano, who was hired as a counselor at the Robinson. Center, had done time for robbery — and
wasn't the only ex -con employed by the company.
"They were from the streets," she said of other staff members with criminal records. "They needed a
job, they came in from the street, they were hired --- that was it. They had no qualifications, nothing."
So what is Governor Christie's administration doing to reign in the anarchy and escapes at the state's
halfway houses? According to David W. Thomas, executive director of New Jersey's parole board, his
agency conducted an inquiry. But Thomas refused to provide any details of the inquiry and, when
asked for a copy of the findings, said "There is no actual document."
In July 2012, the New Jersey legislature held two days of hearings into gang activity, violence and
drug use at halfway houses. The hearings were prompted by a New York Times expose that revealed
problems at reentry facilities, based on a ten-month investigation by the paper. Afterwards,
lawmakers vowed to introduce bills to increase oversight of halfway houses and improve contracting
procedures.
In August 2012, $45,000 in fines was levied for nine escapes from six halfway houses, two of which
were operated by CEC. That was the largest sanction unposed on privately -run halfway houses; the
only other fines amounted to $30,000 in April 2012 for six escapes (including four at CEC facilities).
At the same time the state was imposing fines for repeated escapes, the Christie administration was
working to reduce halfway house oversight. In June 2012, Governor Christie issued a line -item veto
to curtail new disclosure requirements and, two months later, significantly weakened a requirement
for audits of halfway house contracts.
In July 2012, Christie signed a bill to expand the state's drug court program by making it mandatory
for non-violent offenders, which was expected to vastly increase the number of people entering drug
treatment. As such programs are provided at halfway houses, the legislation grill likely increase the
state's halfway house population, benefiting CEC and other reentry facility contractors.
"You'll see an expansion of halfway houses, an expansion of opportunities in the state when they
know there'll be more people who are available to enter these programs," Governor Christie said. "So
I think you'll see an expansion of them beyond where they are now."
Litigation Over Halfway Houses
Lawsuits have further highlighted problems with halfway houses in New Jersey. The union that
represents Essex County guards filed suit in state Superior Court in August 2012, alleging that the
largest halfway house in the state, the 1,2oo-bed CEC-run Delaney Hall in Newark, has been
operating for more than a decade without legal authority.
The suit, filed by the Policemen's Benevolent Association, claims that EHCA is "a sham nonprofit
corporation engaged solely in activities designed to generate income" for CEC. In addition to the
funding it receives for housing state prisoners and parolees, CEC also received a $130 million
contract in December 2011 to house Essex County prisoners at Delaney Hall. The county, in turn,
rents its jail beds to federal authorities to house federal prisoners and immigration detainees, at a
substantial profit.
"We need to get a judge's opinion on whether or not it's illegal," said union local president Joe
Amato, a named plaintiff in the lawsuit. "When you incorporate profits into corrections, that's when
corners are cut, because everyone is worried about the bottom line instead of safety."
Further, former CEC chief financial officer David N.T. Watson filed suit against the company in 2011.
Watson claimed that CEC's founder and CEO, John J. Clancy, lied about the company's financial
condition when recruiting hint; he also alleged he was improperly fired. Documents in the lawsuit
revealed that CEC was in crisis as early as 2009. The records showed the firm had defaulted on its
debts in January 2010 and contemplated bankruptcy that same year.
CEC's fiscal problems began when it expanded in states like Alabama and Texas; the company
borrowed heavily for the expansion but was reportedly tenable to make its payments. To avoid a debt
crisis and have enough money to pay its employees, CEC laid off staff. More than 15 former workers
told The New York Times that the lower staffing levels resulted in reduced reentry services for
halfway house residents.
In December 2010, CEC obtained $235 million in financing with an interest rate of 15.25%, which
served as a temporary band -aid for the company's debt crisis. The following year the firm received
$71 million from state and local governments and had expenditures that exceeded $105 million. To
forestall bankruptcy, CEC gave "investors without substantial experience in corrections a role in
running the company," according to the Times.
LLR Partners, a Philadelphia -based private equity firm, and other investors contributed $53 million
to CEC, largely due to then-6ce president William Palatucci's close relationship with Governor
Christie. The company has evidently weathered the financial storm, as it remains in business and
hasn't filed for bankruptcy protection.
Watson's lawsuit against CEC was resolved in October 2012 under undisclosed terms. See: Watson V.
CEC, U.S.D.C. (D. NJ), Case No. 2:11-ev-04855-WJM-MF.
Halfway Houses in the Sunshine State
According to a 2012 report by Florida's Tampa Bay Torres, it appears that halfway houses in that
state also have significant problems, including failure to properly screen those who operate reentry
facilities. One such operator, Troy Anthony Charles, had an extensive criminal record before he went
into the halfway house business. He claimed to offer addicts and alcoholics a safe, sober place to stay
while helping them find jobs and get counseling.
However, a former resident, John Lees, said the program was "a scam" and Charles was "using the
money he gets from funding to purchase drugs," according to a February 2012 St. Petersburg police
report. Shortly thereafter, Charles fatally shot one of his halfway house residents and returned to jail
to face murder charges. The incident revealed that almost anyone can open a reentry facility in
Florida as there is minimal regulation; the sheer volume of people being released from prisons and
jails every day creates a huge market opportunity for unscrupulous halfway house operators.
Transitional housing offers the promise of a bed, meals, job placement assistance and an opportunity
for substance abuse treatment. According to the Tampa Bay Times, many halfway houses "are large,
professionally managed facilities that generally deliver what they promise. But many others are little
more than flophouses that cram residents two or three to a room in dingy quarters with no job
assistance, no trained staff and no support."
Many of the latter halfway houses are operated by individuals " tOth serious criminal records,
including robbery, sexual assault and drug trafficking. One operator was permanently barred from a
federal housing program because of improper billing, yet started a new halfway house that is getting
thousands of dollars from the same program," the Times reported. Drug abuse is Aidespread, with
residents being taken to the hospital or even dying from overdoses.
Incredibly, state officials do not require reentry facilities to be licensed, thus it is impossible to track
such incidents. In fact, without licensing, there is no way to know how many halfway houses are
actually operating in Florida.
"We've been told there are several thousands of those around the state at any one tune," said Darran
Duchene, who oversaw federally -funded halfway houses when he worked for the Florida Department
of Children and Families (DCF). "They should be regulated from a business standpoint and then
from a social service standpoint."
Many halfway houses are ordinary -looking homes on quiet suburban streets. According to the Times,
"There are halfway house programs in apartment complexes, old motels and buildings once used as
assisted living facilities for the elderly. Few have signs out front."
"[Halfway houses] keep popping up," said Ramona Schaefer, a Pinellas County sheriffs supervisor
who helps find housing for released prisoners. "My concern is, what are their intentions? There are a
lot of people who truly want to help. Then there are others whose intentions are not so pure."
The amount of funding available for transitional housing has fueled problems with halfway houses in
Florida, as has the increase in addictions caused by prescription drug abuse. Real estate investors
stung in the housing market bust have realized they can reap larger profits by operating such
facilities, noting that with two people per room, a three -bedroom house can produce a cash flow of
up to $3,000 per month — all paid for by the government.
Starting in 2003, a well-intentioned federal program known as Access to Recovery (ATR) put $150
million into treatment for recovering addicts, which helped drive the trend. As noted by the Times,
130 million in federal funds has gone to Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco and several other Florida
counties, much of it for transitional housing. Almost 30o halfway houses initially qualified for the
money.
William Garrison, a former crack user, opened New Birth Abundant Life Ministry and received more
than $300,000 in ATR funds before being barred from the program. According to residents,
Garrison made them pay $5o a week for food even though he received federal funding for meals.
They also said Garrison cursed and touched there non -consensually iN ith "strong sexual overtones," a
state report found.
The House of Hope in St. Petersburg, another program that qualified for ATR funds, was operated by
Patrick Jay Banks, who served eight years in Texas for robbery and forgery. According to
investigators, Banks was involved in the "most egregious case of fraud, waste and abuse" among
Florida halfivay houses, submitting bills for residents even before they arrived at the homes he
managed. He collected over $110,00o before being kicked out of the federal ATR program.
However, Banks told the Times that he had opened a new reentry facility, Agape House, which had
received $55,000 in federal funds. Banks' name did not appear on Agape's ATR application.
DCF, which oversees the federal ATR program, said it was unaware of Banks' involvement in Agape
House and would investigate. To qualify for federal funding, halfway house owners and staff have to
undergo criminal background checks and the houses must meet certain codes. The majority of
reentry facilities in Florida receive no federal funds, though, and are thus poorly regulated.
Emily Rifkin was one of at least three people who overdosed and died in Tampa Bay halfway houses.
In November 2010, Rifkin, 25, was still struggling iAith an addiction that had sent her to prison for
eight months. A judge allowed her to go to a halfway house while she waited for an opening in a
residential treatment program.
Rifkin violated rules at the first facility and was moved to a house on Okaloosa Street, where she was
supposed to have more supervision. But according to the Times, a police report indicated "that
obvious signs of trouble were ignored the day she died." One roommate thought Rifkin seemed "kind
of out of it," but did nothing to help. Six hours later the house manager — herself a drug addict — saw
Rifkin sitting on the bathroom floor yet failed to intervene. It wasn't until after Rifltin had stopped
breathing that a roommate called grr, but by then it was too late. Rifkin died due to an accidental
overdose of oxycodone.
Shelton Jones, the house's owner, had converted it into a reentry facility with assistance from Linda
Walker, who runs the nonprofit Hillsborough House of Hope, a transitional program for women.
Walker also runs a for -profit business to help people establish halfway houses. Walker and Jones
said they weren't responsible for Rifkin's death. "I feel bad she died," Walker stated, "but a lot of
people die in recovery."
There were no trained staff at the Okaloosa Street house and no routine testing for drugs and
alcohol. A year before Riflcin's death, two male residents died after overdosing on methadone in
another unregulated halfway house.
Following a suicide attempt and a brief stay at a private mental health facility, Leisha Simpson
needed a safe residence. She decided to go to Still Standing in St. Petersburg, as the program's
website said it provided a "safe haven" with counseling and 12-step meetings.
Instead, Simpson paid $50o a month for a bed in a roach -infested house with up to four other
women, one of whom used drugs and had sex vrith men in the shared bedroom. She filed police
reports after her TV, credit cards and medications were stolen. Another resident assaulted her.
Rev. Edward Leftwich, who founded Still Standing, said he couldn't maintain a sober living program
as he got older and federal fiends ran out. He admitted he should not have left his website up with
inaccurate information.
One halfway house operator, Pamela Dixon, visited detox facilities and public agencies in Pinellas to
promote her program, A New Direction for Women and Men. Public defender Bob Dillinger began
sending clients with alcohol problems to Dixon's facility, unaware that it required residents to have
their prescriptions filled at a pharmacy that also sells wine and beer. The pharmacy and the New
Direction house were owned by the same Tampa -based group.
"1 do find it questionable," Dillinger stated when informed about the connection. He said Dixon
agreed to not deal i�rith the pharmacy.
Florida officials have found it's difficult to oversee the thousands of halfway houses in the state given
the current law and lax regulations. "We regulate thousands of child care facilities across the state
with no problem," noted DCF spokeswoman Erin Gillespie. "We are certainly up to the task if the law
were ebanged."
However, there has been little political will to monitor halfway houses and ensure they deliver the
programs and sei vices they promise. A bill introduced by Florida state Senator Jeff Clemens to
regulate sober houses and halfway houses, SB 582, died in committee in April 2014; a similar bill
introduced the previous year had also failed to pass.
Thus, it is easy for people like Troy Anthony Charles, a convicted felon, to get into the halfivay house
business. Charles served three years for aggravated assault in Arizona before moving to Florida and
starting Back to Life Outreach Recovery Services. He rented a house, put bunk beds in the living
room and charged $125 a week.
One resident, John Lees, had served time in jail for drug -related offenses. "At first it was presented
to rue, like, if you need a place to stay and recover from addiction, you can stay there," lie stated.
"Then he tried to get me to sell drugs to him." Lees also said Charles used cocaine and discussed
getting girls hooked on drugs so he could turn them into prostitutes.
Lees moved out but later returned to pick up some personal property. Charles accused Lees and
Samuel Harper, a resident at the house, of burglary. Prosecutors declined to file charges against the
men and, during a subsequent confrontation in April 2012, Charles fatally shot Harper in the head.
Charles, who reportedly had an interest in Harper's girlfriend which may have contributed to the
shooting, was convicted of first -degree murder in July 2014. He received a life sentence witbout
parole.
Problems at Pennsylvania Halfway Houses
The State of Pennsylvania has had its own problems with halfway houses, particularly the high rate
of recidivism of those who cycle through reentry facilities. Incredibly, a 2013 study by the
Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (PDOC) found that prisoners sent to halfway houses were
actually more likely to re -offend than those released directly from prison. According to the study,
67% of prisoners sent to transitional facilities were rearrested or returned to prison within three
years, compared to 60% of offenders released to the streets. The study examined 38
privately -operated and 14 state -run halfway houses, and the results were similar for both categories.
[See: PLN, April 2013, p.441.
PDOC Secretary John E. Wetzel stated, "The focus has been on filling up beds. It hasn't been on
producing good outcomes."
The latter would require halfway house employees trained to assist prisoners in substance abuse
treatment, job training and other programs designed to improve their transition back to society ---- a
commitment to service that many reentry facilities apparently lack.
This failure to successfully reintegrate released offenders has had an impact on correctional costs in
Pennsylvania. Expenses per• halfway house resident are approximately two-thirds the cost of keeping
someone in prison, but those savings are lost if a resident is re -incarcerated. Thus, the PDOC study's
findings have prompted a major change in the Garay Pennsylvania contracts with privately -operated
halfway houses, linking their success at rehabilitating offenders, in the form of reduced recidivism,
rates, to increased payments. Conversely, higher recidivism rates may result in the loss of state
contracts. [See: PLN, Sept. 2014, p.501.
"It's not unreasonable for us to expect them to have an impact on crime, because that's what we're
paying there to do," Wetzel said.
He complained that corrections officials often showed poor judgment in assigning prisoners to
halfway houses. "They could be from Philadelphia, getting out of a prison in north -central
Pennsylvania, and go to a Pittsburgh halfway house," he noted. "We are setting up [halfway house]
vendors for failure. It's really just a cheaper prison bed. We need to set up true community centers."
Wetzel used the 2013 recidivism study to change the trajectory of halfway houses in Pennsylvania,
calling the goals set forth in the report the "new normal."
"To get a true picture of whether our state prison system is meeting its goal of reducing fixture crime,
we need to look at more than just the re -incarceration of an individual," he said. "We need to look at
re -arrests as well to see the whole picture of how and when individuals come into contact again with
the criminal justice system.... The `new normal' is to expect and require quantifiable results based
upon a corrections system that helps offenders to help themselves and a system that is based on
research rather than anecdotal stories and innuendo."
One Pennsylvania community that experienced serious problems with a halfway house was Hazleton,
in Luzerne County. Community Education Centers was advised in June 2013 that its transitional
facility contract in Hazleton would not be renewed — news that received the approval of community
leaders and the Greater Hazleton Chamber of Commerce, due to crimes linked to residents at the
CEC-run facility. According to law enforcement records, offenders from the company's halfway house
released on passes, or who settled in the area after serving their sentences, had been involved in
murders, bank robberies and numerous other crimes.
Mayor Joseph Yannuzzi said that when the Hazleton facility closes it will be "one step toward
restoring our reputation and the perception of downtown." Hazleton's Police Chief, Frank DeAndrea,
observed, "The community is going to be left with the scars of this facility. For quite some time, the
people who have moved into and located into our area and the illegal businesses they set up will
remain," citing drug sales, theft rings, prostitution and gangs as types of activities that resulted from
the halfway house's presence. "I recognize that this facility brought a ton of ugliness and black marks
to our community, but if we can use it to better or, possibly, save another community that's what it's
all about," he added.
Trouble in Other Jurisdictions
A number of other states and the federal Bureau of Prisons have reported various problems with
halfway houses, ranging from escapes and lack of oversight to corrupt employees and sexual abuse.
Colorado
In Colorado, Michael Angelo Hernandez, 28, had been arrested several tinges for stealing cars,
break-ins, fights and DUI. Assigned to the Minnequa Community Corrections halfway house in
Pueblo, he walked away from the facility in September 2013 — one of five residents who escaped that
month.
The same half vay house has had problems with residents using drugs. The body of Adam
Beauchamp, 27, was found at Minnequa on the morning of November 21, 2011; his cause of death
was found to be acute Fentanyl toxicity. Adam's mother conceded that her son had struggled with
drug addiction and served time on a methamphetamine charge, but wondered how lie obtained the
drug in a supposedly secure transitional facility.
"If he was on the streets and he would have done this, okay," she said. "But not in a facility like this. I.
believe something is wrong."
Colorado's Division of Criminal Justice ranked Minnequa Community Corrections and Crossroads
Turning Points as the top two reentry facilities in the state that posed the greatest risk to the public.
The Minnequa facility closed in December 2013.
Another halfway house, the Arapahoe County Treatment Center, should be added to that list. In June
2013, Francis Javier Pizzo, 47, a former resident who had escaped, returned to the facility and
opened fire with a rifle, wounding two people. Pizzo fled but was captured; he was sentenced in
August 2014 to 288 years in prison.
According to the Deaver Post, offenders with higher average criminal history scores are increasingly
being placed in Colorado halfway houses, partly as a cost -saving measure by state officials.
The Coloradoan reported last month that 62 residents had escaped from a halfway house in Larimer
County in 2014. Gary Darling, director of the county's criminal justice services, attributed the high
number of escapes to difficulties that offenders face upon their release.
"Usually, they get frustrated," be said. "They can't find full-time employment or they can't fired any
employment."
District of CO1r1r1rbia
District of Columbia halfway houses have experienced a number of problems, especially the facility
known as Hope Village. The District is plagued by high unemployment among minorities and even
higher unemployment among former prisoners. Joseph Willis was hopeful that Hope Village, where
he stayed after his release from the DC jail, would help him succeed. However, the facility could not
even assist him with basic needs.
According to the Washington Post, Willis found Hope Village's "job -training services lacking and
access to mental -health services anemic. It was difficult to get money to ride Metro to job
interviews," and the facility lacked Internet access.
"They [didn't] let me help myself, and they [didn't] help me at all," Willis said. Consequently, he
called the halfway house "Hopeless Village."
His views were reflected in a 2013 report by the DC Corrections Information Council (CIC), which
found that staff at the facility lacked the ability to help residents find housing and employment, and
hindered them from accessing mental health services. Residents said they felt unsafe and the halfway
house did not have an effective system to handle grievances. "The CIC heard on multiple occasions
that incarcerated DC residents would prefer to stay at secure [Bureau of Prisons] facilities than
reenter DC through Hope Village," the report stated.
"I would say that there are some things that are obviously dysfunctional," said Michelle Bonner,
then -chair of the CIC.
Ionia
Iowa halfway houses have had trouble with escapes and residents committing new crimes. Ceneca R.
Johnson had been busted three times after robbing banks at gunpoint. When arrested again in
August 2012, he was supposed to be in the custody of the Iowa Department of Corrections, but had
absconded from the department's Davenport halfway house. His escape was one of 67 reported over
the previous two years.
Jim Wayne, Director of Iowa's halfway house program, said, "It's a consistent trend. We're going to
see a number of failures in the processing of this many people ... that goes with the territory. It's a
minimum security program."
He added, "We're in a strange business because sometimes failure can be success. Part of what we
attempt to do iN ith services that give people more freedom — work release, or parole — is to give
people an opportunity to succeed, but also identify those who won't be able to succeed so we can get
them back to prison."
For their part, Davenport police officials said the number of escapes from the facility was barely a
blip on their radar, with most escapees turning themselves in or not causing any serious problems.
Kentucky
When looking for halfway houses that are competently run, Dismas Charities comes to mind.
Dismas, a nonprofit, operates residential reentry facilities in over a dozen states, including Texas,
Tennessee, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and Kentucky. But even an organization with a good
reputation is not without its faults.
Dismas manages halfway houses in Kentucky pursuant to an agreement with the state Department of
Corrections, which allows residents to perform volunteer work at ,job assignments for time off their
sentences. Most of the work is performed in the Louisville area for city agencies and nonprofits.
The organization was the subject of an investigation into alleged sexual trysts, drug use and thefts
involving residents while on the job at Louisville Metro Animal Services and the Kentucky Humane
Society. A spot-check of Dismas workers at various agencies found that several had violent criminal
records which should have barred them from those positions, including jobs at the Louisville Zoo.
"We are extremely disappointed with Dismas for not following our agreed upon policy for volunteer
selection and will require Dismas to tighten up its practices to ensure this ,"rill not happen again,"
stated zoo director John Walczak.
Dismas programs had been well -received for decades, providing transitional services to released
prisoners and low-cost labor. However, the agencies using the organization's workers performed no
background checks, and Louisville mayoral spokesman Phil Miller said Dismas' "stated policy is that
the program itself does not accept workers with a violent criminal background. So we expect them to
follow that policy, and that was an important policy for us, in terms of allowing this to go forward."
For its part, Dismas said that if the Kentucky Department of Corrections deems prisoners worthy of
being sent to their halfway houses, they have no problem sending them to work for city agencies.
"If they're qualified for `community custody' and they meet all the requirements that we set down,
yeah, they go," stated Bob Yates, Disnlas' vice president of public relations.
That policy was confirmed by Todd Henson, public information director at the Kentucky Department
of Corrections' contract management division, who said Dismas was required to accept any prisoner
classified as community custody. Louisville officials were apparently unaware that they could
perform their own background checks and refuse to accept Dismas workers 1Arith violent criminal
records.
Miller confirmed that "even though we're concerned over [incidents involving some halfway house
residents], the big picture is that it has been a remarkable incident -free and trouble -free program, as
far as city government is concerned." He added, "They're not paid and are doing this as part of their
community service commitment. And they really provide a lot of good services that in some cases we
might otherwise have to pay for."
One disturbing incident involved Dismas resident Todd Duke, who worked at the Kentucky Humane
Society. In April 2012 he pushed a female employee into a room, locked the door, then tried to
sexually assault her. He was arrested and charged with attempted sodomy and attempted rape; the
Humane Society quickly terminated its agreement to employ Dismas workers.
Additionally, Dismas was criticized for spending over $155,000 on "luxury seats" at sports events
plus $15,000 to $20,000 on a "hospitality train car" for football games, according to an April 2011
report by Kentucky's State Auditor. The 77-page report cited problems at the organization ranging
from high compensation for Dismas executives and lack of access by the Department of Corrections
to Dismas' records to poor compliance monitoring and no cost analysis performed by the state.
"Dismas Charities must ensure that the public money it receives is used in a responsible and
transparent manner that serves the interests of both the recipients of its services and the taxpayers
who ultimately fund the service," said State Auditor Crit Luallen,
New Mexico
A former halfway house executive in New Mexico might have to make use of services similar to those
she used to offer. Robin Cash, 56, the executive director of La Pasada Halfivay House in
Albuquerque, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in 2013 to a seven -count indictment charging her
with four counts of theft from programs receiving federal funds and three counts of willful failure to
file a tax return.
Cash was sentenced in January 2014 to 24 months in prison and three ,years of supervised release,
and ordered to pay $202,775.18 in restitution. La Pasada provides housing for federal defendants,
including those awaiting trial and returning to the community after serving time in prison.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma has turned over its entire halfway house system to private contractors. Jerry Massie, a
spokesman for the Oklahoma Department of Corrections, said the state contracts with eight halfway
houses for male prisoners, including five in Oklahoma City, two in Tulsa and one in Enid. All are
operated by private companies and house from 40 to over 300 residents.
Massie said prisoners who complete their sentences at halfway houses save the state thousands of
dollars due to lower supervision costs. In -prison costs average around $4,5 per day, while prisoners
at halfway houses cost approximately $32 a day. He also noted that halfway house residents are
expected to work and contribute at least part of their earnings to the expenses of the facility.
"It helps them build up a nest egg, if you will, and they have to pay back some of that to the state,
which helps defer the cost to the state," Massie said. He stated that while escapes are not uncommon,
they rarely result in a threat to local communities.
"The way the system is set up, it kind of flows from higher security to lower security," Massie
observed. "As people are getting closer to being released, the hope is they behave until that time
3)
comes.
One of the problems facing Oklahoma and other states is the reluctance of communities to welcome
halfway houses into their neighborhoods. "People tend to freak out when they hear they're going to
build a halfway house, or a prison for that matter, in their area," said Massie. "It's normal. It's
expected."
Based upon an October 24, 2014 article by Oklahoma Watch, such concerns are entirely justified.
The public interest news organization reported that "Serious violations by inmates plagued
Oklahoma's two largest halfway houses for three years before the state tools action in January by
removing all inmates from one and later demanding a corrective plan at the other."
Both facilities were operated by Avalon Correctional Services, Inc. At one of the halfway houses,
employees reportedly sanctioned fights between residents for sport and as a means of imposing
discipline; one of the fights was video recorded on a cell phone. Despite temporarily removing all 212
residents from the facility, the state later renewed its contract with Avalon after the company agreed
to make changes.
Meanwhile, a reentry facility for female offenders in Turley, also operated by Avalon, is facing a
lawsuit that alleges staff failed to report incidents of sexual abuse by work release employers and
retaliated against residents who reported such incidents.
Texas
Texas has experienced problems with halfway houses that include high -profile escapes; in October
2012, for example, a rapist absconded from the Southeast Texas Transitional Center. Thomas Lee
Elkins, 55, convicted of aggravated kidnapping and sexual assault, was the sixth offender to escape
from Southeast in a 24-manth period.
Formerly known as the Ben A. Reid Community Correctional Facility, Southeast is operated by the
Florida -based GEO Group, the nation's second-largest for -profit prison company. Despite its
appalling track record in Texas and elsewhere, GEO continues to receive state contracts. That track
record includes repeated escapes, such as when Anthony Ray Ferrell fled from the Reid facility on
October 25, 2010; a few weeks later he murdered a college student at a gas station. [See: PLN, May
2011, p.11.
Such incidents sparked outrage among Texas lawmakers. "I will have a hearing to discuss what can
be done to prevent this, and it alight include doubling down on security and expecting more of this
private [company]," said state Senator John Whitmire, who chairs the Senate's Criminal Justice
Committee.
"I've never been happy with the current status of halfway houses in the state," he added. "The general
concept of a halfivay house needs to be revisited."
Senator Whitmire's remarks followed the Januaiy 2013 escape of convicted sex offender John
Michael Enard, 58, from the Southeast Texas Transitional Center. Enard had removed his GPS
tracking device and climbed over a fence at the facility.
His escape brought to light the fact that over a 27-111011th period from 2011 to 2013, 719 residents
were listed as absconders from the halfway house. Although most were recaptured, almost too
remain missing. The GEO-run facility also houses civilly -committed sex offenders, three of wThoin
have escaped, including Enard.
Texas contracts with seven reentry facilities that provide transitional housing for around 1,800
offenders — a small fraction of the 82,000 prisoners released from state prisons each year. Other
privately -run halfway houses are available, but the quality of services and programs vary widely.
"It's a problem," acknowledged Jorge Renaud, a policy analyst with the Texas Criminal Justice
Coalition. "There is nowhere near the amount of transitional housing that we need."
Ylrashington
Caitlan T. Grassi, a former case manager at the Pioneer Fellowship House, a halfway house in
Seattle, Washington, was accused in 2011 of having a sexual relationship with a resident and giving
him money to buy heroin. The resident, Christopher S. Webb, a notorious bank robber, later fled
from the facility, saying he would fail a drug test. He then offered to present evidence against Grassi,
whom he said forced him to have sex. Other employees at the halfway house also made accusations
against the former case manager, with one saying she had done "whorey things." [See: PLN, May
2012, P.381.
Grassi pleaded guilty on September 28, 2012 to concealing a person from arrest and conspiracy to
possess controlled substances; she was sentenced in February 2013 to five years' probation and 200
hours of community service.
The Feds
The federal prison system has not been exempt from criticism of its contract halfway houses. One of
the Bureau of Prisons' largest halfway house operators is the Salvation Ariny, which runs a 210-bed
residential reentry center in Chicago, Illinois. Although walkaways are not uncommon, the presence
of U.S. Marshals several blocks from the halfway house is well-known and acts as a deterrent.
However, drug use, theft and violence still occur at the facility.
Where many halfway houses in the federal system fall short is in the areas of job placement and
mental health treatment. While the budgets for the Chicago facility and other halfway houses always
seem to accommodate large salaries for management staff, computers for residents to use to prepare
resumes or search for jobs are in short supply, and mental health services are virtually non-existent.
Employees often seem more concerned about providing documentation to their superiors that
offenders are adhering to BOP directives in their job search, and ensuring that residents — who
frequently work at minimum wage — pay 25% of their gross pay to the facility or risk violating the
terms of their supervised release.
Further, some halfivay houses are situated in older, functionally obsolete buildings, as in Chicago,
where the reentry facility is located in a YVIrCA/YMCA center built during the 1920s. In the harsh
winter of 2012-2013, the facility's boiler was non-functional for several weeks, forcing many
residents to sleep in their coats as indoor temperatures dropped to almost 4o degrees.
In November 2o11, the former director of a West Virginia halfivay Douse pleaded guilty to having sex
x� ith a federal prisoner. Carrie L. Cockrell, 36, charged with sexual abuse of a ward, was sentenced on
February 1, 2012 to five months in prison and five years of supervised release, including five months
on home confinement. She had been the director of Bannurn Place, a federally -contracted reentry
facility in Clarksburg.
Conclusion
Sadly, it is too much to expect that all prisoners will be motivated to obey the law after their release
to halfivay houses, especially if they are not given the tools they need to succeed. Many of the horror
stories of crimes committed by halfivay house residents could have been avoided by proper
pre-release screening and supervision by corrections officials, as well as better monitoring and
regulation of reentry facilities.
It is clear that too many halfivay houses are run more iA4th an eye on profit than on the services and
programs that prisoners need to ensure a successful transition back into society ---- a process that
should begin when offenders first enter the prison system, not just a short time before they get out.
Other than Pennsylvania's recent efforts to tie halfway house contracts to reductions in recidivism
rates, there has been little interest in ensuring that reentry facilities meet the many challenges faced
by soon -to -be -released prisoners.
Politics has also played a damaging role in the halfivay house industry, as contracts are sometimes
influenced by political connections and lobbying rather than outcomes or performance measures.
Government officials appear to be more interested in reducing expenses by placing offenders in
halfway houses rather than investing in the resources necessary to ensure stable post -release housing
and employment.
Too often, states have been lured by promises of cost savings by halfivay house operators, but such
savings have generally been accomplished by reducing staff to dangerously -loin levels and skimping
on important programs and services that residents need to successfully return to their communities.
In fact, costs maybe higher in the long terra if offenders released from reentry facilities re -offend
and are re -incarcerated.
On the federal level, the Bureau of Prisons needs to develop its own initiatives for improving its use
of halfivay houses. The federal government, v6th its ability to capture data not only from the BOP but
also from state prison systems relative to successful reentry programs, has even less of an excuse for
the current state of its contract halfivay houses.
Local, state and federal corrections officials must make the same commitment of resources to
transitional reentry services that they devote to locking up approximately 2.3 million prisoners each
year, otherwise, without addressing the deficiencies associated with halfway houses, offenders sent
to such facilities are being set up for failure and an eventual return to prison.
Meanwhile, problems with halfivay houses continue to occur. In December 2014, Juancho Tango
Andres, the former manager of a reentry facility in San Leandro, California, pleaded guilty to filing
fraudulent federal tax returns. He recruited people to participate in the scheme at the halfway house,
at drug treatment centers and among the homeless and low income communities, And on December
17, 2014, FBI and IRS agents raided two halfway houses in Delray Beach, Florida, removing evidence
from administrative offices. They did not comment on the reason for the raid.
Note: The author was assigned to a federally -contracted haUivay house following his release front
the Bureau of Prisons in 2013. PLN writers Matt Clarke and Paresh Patel contributed to this article.
Sources: www.dismas.eom, tvtvtv.tampabay.com, ivtvw.wfla.com, wwtv.zzj.com,
www.r-rorthjersey.com, The New York Times, http://lancasterorzline.corn, Palm Beach Post,
tvtvtv.citizensvoice.coin, wwtv.cori-rectro7isoile.cor72, www.prnewstvire.com, www.cor.state.pa.its,
www.texasprisonbidness.org, Houston Chronicle, wwtvl.koaa.com, http://gcthnes.com,
wtvtv.newsok.com, www.leoweekly.com, Washington Post, Texas Tribune, www.seattlepi.com,
http://ohsonline.coni, www.tvvgazette.com, wwtv.wptv.com, www.auditor.ky.gov,
toww.pageonekentucky.conz, www.patch.com, Oklahoma Watch, tvww.myfoxhoustorr.com,
http://usnetvs.nbcnews.coni, Denver Post, www.coloradoan.com, tvww.statesman.com,
http://staridardspeaker.com
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