SB-0016, As Passed Senate, February 2, 2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SENATE BILL No. 16

 

 

January 18, 2017, Introduced by Senators PROOS, O'BRIEN, COLBECK, KNOLLENBERG, JONES, BOOHER, HORN, BRANDENBURG, SCHUITMAKER, HANSEN, KOWALL, GREGORY, JOHNSON and WARREN and referred to the Committee on Michigan Competitiveness.

 

 

     A bill to amend 1953 PA 232, entitled

 

"Corrections code of 1953,"

 

(MCL 791.201 to 791.285) by adding chapter IIIB.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

CHAPTER IIIB

 

     Sec. 58. This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the

 

"parole sanction certainty act".

 

     Sec. 58a. As used in this chapter:

 

     (a) "Confinement sanction" means a violation sanction

 

resulting in confinement in a departmental facility or local county

 

jail for not more than 30 days.

 

     (b) "Controlled substance" means that term as defined under

 

section 7104 of the public health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.7104.

 

     (c) "Evidenced-based practices" means a progressive,

 

organizational use of direct and current scientific evidence to


guide and inform efficient and effective correctional services that

 

have been shown to reduce recidivism.

 

     (d) "Nonconfinement sanction" means a violation sanction that

 

does not result in imprisonment in the custody of the department or

 

the county jail, including, but not limited to, any of the

 

following:

 

     (i) Extension of the period of supervision with the time

 

period provided by law.

 

     (ii) Additional reporting and compliance requirements.

 

     (iii) Testing for the use of controlled substances or alcohol.

 

     (iv) Counseling or treatment for behavioral health problems,

 

including substance abuse.

 

     (e) "Parole sanction certainty program" means the program

 

created under this chapter that utilizes a set of established

 

sanctions to supervise eligible offenders that have been placed on

 

parole.

 

     (f) "Parole sanction certainty supervision" means being placed

 

on parole subject to conditions and sanctions as set forth in the

 

parole sanction certainty program created under this chapter.

 

     (g) "Sanction" means any of a wide range of nonprison offender

 

accountability measures and programs, including, but not limited

 

to, electronic supervision tools, drug and alcohol testing or

 

monitoring, day or evening reporting centers, restitution centers,

 

forfeiture of earned compliance credits, rehabilitative

 

interventions such as substance abuse or mental health treatment,

 

counseling, reporting requirements to supervision officers,

 

community service or work crews, secure and unsecure residential


treatment facilities or halfway houses, and short-term or

 

intermittent incarceration.

 

     (h) "Supervised individual" means an individual who is placed

 

on parole subject to parole sanction certainty supervision under

 

this chapter.

 

     (i) "Supervising agent" means the parole agent assigned to

 

directly supervise an individual on parole sanction certainty

 

supervision.

 

     (j) "Validated risk and needs assessment" means a tool or

 

tools adopted by the department that have been validated as to the

 

effectiveness of the tool in determining a supervised individual's

 

likely risk of reoffense, violent reoffense, or both, as well as

 

the offender's criminogenic needs.

 

     Sec. 58b. (1) By January 1, 2018, the department shall adopt a

 

system of sanctions for violations of conditions of parole for

 

offenders supervised under the parole sanction certainty program.

 

The sanctions adopted under this section must utilize evidence-

 

based practices that have been demonstrated to reduce recidivism

 

and increase compliance with the conditions of parole based on the

 

identified risk and needs of the supervised individual as

 

determined by a validated risk and needs assessment. To the extent

 

possible, the system of sanctions must be uniform throughout the

 

state for all parolees subject to parole sanction certainty

 

supervision.

 

     (2) Subject to subsection (3), the department shall determine

 

which offenders shall be placed in the community on parole under

 

the parole sanction certainty program under this chapter.


     (3) The department shall implement the parole sanction

 

certainty program created in this chapter in the 5 counties in this

 

state in which the greatest number of individuals convicted of

 

criminal violations are sentenced to incarceration under the

 

jurisdiction of the department, as determined by the department's

 

annual statistical report.

 

     (4) The department shall consult with and seek recommendations

 

from local law enforcement agencies in the counties where the

 

parole sanction certainty program is implemented, including the

 

sheriff's departments, circuit courts, county prosecutor's offices,

 

and community corrections programs in developing a plan for

 

implementing the parole sanction certainty program in the county.

 

     Sec. 58c. (1) Subject to subsection (3), the parole sanction

 

certainty program described in section 58b must set forth a list of

 

presumptive sanctions for the most common types of supervision

 

violations, including, but not limited to, failing to report,

 

failing to participate in a required program or service, failing to

 

complete community service, or failing to refrain from the use of

 

alcohol or a controlled substance. The system of sanctions must

 

take into account factors such as the severity of the violation,

 

the impact of the violation on the safety or well-being of the

 

crime victim, if applicable, the supervised individual's previous

 

criminal record, the number and severity of any previous

 

supervision violations, the supervised individual's assessed risk

 

level, the supervised individual's needs as established by a

 

validated risk and needs assessment, and the extent to which

 

sanctions were imposed for previous violations. The system must


also define positive reinforcements that supervised individuals

 

will receive for complying with their conditions of supervision.

 

     (2) Subject to subsection (3), the department shall establish

 

a process to review and to approve or reject, before imposition,

 

sanctions that deviate from those that are otherwise prescribed

 

under subsection (1).

 

     (3) A supervised individual who violates the terms of his or

 

her parole sanction certainty supervision under this chapter, but

 

whose parole is not going to be revoked under section 40a as a

 

result of the violation, may be subject to a confinement sanction

 

and be confined in a correctional or detention facility for not

 

more than 30 days. After a supervised individual completes his or

 

her confinement under this subsection, he or she may be returned to

 

parole sanction certainty supervision under the same terms of

 

supervision under which he or she was previously supervised, or

 

under new parole sanction certainty supervision terms at the

 

discretion of the department.

 

     (4) Nothing in this chapter prevents the arrest of a parolee

 

under section 39 or the revocation of parole under section 40a.

 

     Sec. 58d. A supervised individual is subject to 1 of the

 

following for violating any condition of his or her parole sanction

 

certainty supervision:

 

     (a) A nonconfinement sanction.

 

     (b) A confinement sanction.

 

     (c) Parole revocation proceedings under section 40a and

 

possible incarceration for failure to comply with a condition of

 

supervision if that failure constitutes a significant risk to prior


victims of the supervised individual or the community at large and

 

the risk cannot be appropriately managed in the community.

 

     Sec. 58e. Before being placed on parole sanction certainty

 

supervision subject to sanctions, the supervised individual must be

 

informed in person of the conditions of that parole sanction

 

certainty supervision. The supervised individual shall also sign a

 

written agreement to abide by those conditions or to be immediately

 

subject to sanctions or to parole revocation under section 40a,

 

whichever is determined by the department to be appropriate.

 

     Sec. 58f. (1) The department may do either of the following if

 

an individual violates a condition of parole sanction certainty

 

supervision:

 

     (a) Modify the conditions of parole sanction certainty

 

supervision for the limited purpose of imposing sanctions.

 

     (b) Place the individual in a state or local correctional or

 

detention facility or residential center for a period specified in

 

the list of presumptive sanctions under section 58c(1) or as

 

otherwise provided under section 58c(2) and (3). If an individual

 

is to be placed in a local correctional or detention facility, he

 

or she must only be placed in a facility that agrees to take the

 

individual and with which the department has an existing

 

reimbursement agreement.

 

     (2) A supervising agent intending to modify the conditions of

 

parole sanction certainty supervision by imposing a sanction shall

 

issue to the supervised individual a notice of this intended

 

sanction. The notice must inform the supervised individual of each

 

violation alleged, the date of each violation, and the sanction to


be imposed.

 

     (3) The imposition of a sanction by a supervising agent shall

 

comport with the system of sanctions adopted by the department

 

under sections 58b and 58c. The failure of the supervised

 

individual to comply with a sanction constitutes a violation of

 

parole. Sanctions specified and imposed by an agent are immediately

 

effective.

 

     (4) A sanction that involves confinement in a correctional or

 

detention facility is subject to section 58c(3). If the supervised

 

individual is employed, the supervising agent shall, to the extent

 

feasible, impose the sanction for weekend days or other days or

 

times when the supervised individual is not working.

 

     (5) A sanction must not be imposed for any violation of parole

 

that may warrant an additional, separate felony charge. However, a

 

sanction may be imposed if the violation is only based upon the

 

individual's testing positive for a controlled substance.

 

     (6) If an individual successfully completes conditions imposed

 

under a sanction, the department shall not revoke the assigned term

 

of parole sanction certainty supervision or impose additional

 

sanctions for the same violation.

 

     (7) If a supervising agent modifies the conditions of parole

 

sanction certainty supervision by imposing a sanction, the

 

supervising agent shall do all of the following:

 

     (a) Deliver a copy of the modified conditions to the

 

supervised individual.

 

     (b) File a copy of the modified conditions with the

 

department.


     (c) Note the date of delivery of the copy in the supervised

 

individual's file.

 

     Sec. 58g. (1) The department shall appoint an individual from

 

within the department to review confinement sanctions recommended

 

by supervising agents in the 5 counties where the parole sanction

 

certainty program is implemented on a biannual basis to assess any

 

disparities that may exist among the agents' use of confinement

 

sanctions, evaluate the effectiveness of the sanction as measured

 

by the supervised individuals' subsequent conduct, and monitor the

 

impact on the agency's number and type of revocations for

 

violations of the conditions of supervision.

 

     (2) The individual appointed under subsection (1) shall report

 

all of the following on a biannual basis to the house and senate

 

committees concerned with corrections issues:

 

     (a) The number of supervised individuals completing parole

 

supervision and being discharged from parole.

 

     (b) The number of and type of parole violations, including

 

violations that do or do not result in parole revocation.

 

     (c) The number of parole revocations.

 

     (d) The number of parole violations specifically related to a

 

supervised individual's testing positive for controlled substances,

 

without a physician's prescription, or alcohol in violation of a

 

parole order, as applicable.

 

     (e) The number of parole violations specifically related to a

 

supervised individual's failure to appear at a scheduled meeting

 

with his or her supervising agent.

 

     Enacting section 1. This amendatory act takes effect 90 days


after the date it is enacted into law.