- Programs For Probationers In Texas 2016
- Programs For Probationers In Texas County
- Programs For Probationers In Texas
- Jobs For Probationers In Texas
- Probationers are generally required to contribute to the community by participating in community service restitution programs-probationers who fail to comply with the conditions of community supervision can be incarcerated for the full term of imprisonment specified in the original sentence.
- CHARACTERISTICS OF COMMUNITY SERVICE PROGRAMS AND PROBATIONERS IN TEXAS Darrin D. Roberts, A.A.S., B.A. Thesis Prepared for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS August 2002 APPROVED: Gail A. Caputo, Committee Chair Tory J. Caeti, Committee Member Eric J. Fritsch, Committee Member.
These offices offer rental assistance programs like privately-owned subsidized housing, public housing, and housing choice vouchers. Rental assistance specific to Texas can also be found. You may also be able to find help from your state housing authority or your local public housing agency. Intensive Community Based Programs for Juvenile Offenders: Published by the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission A Report on the Implementation of Pilot Programs Established Under SB 103, FY 2008 January 2009 I Page 3 The One Stop Intervention Program provided services to non-compli ant probationers and their families. Intensive Community Based Programs for Juvenile Offenders: Published by the Texas Juvenile Probation Commission A Report on the Implementation of Pilot Programs Established Under SB 103, FY 2008 January 2009 I Page 3 The One Stop Intervention Program provided services to non-compli ant probationers and their families.

In the 1980s, faced with overcrowded prisons and probationers who often failed to pay their court-ordered fees and fines, some Texas counties came up with what sounded like a good idea: the Probationer Restitution Center (PRC). A PRC is essentially a group of dedicated jail beds used to incarcerate probationers on nights and weekends.
The idea was that a judge would order night-and-weekend incarceration until the probationer got caught up on their delinquent fines and fees. That way the courts could get their money without having to violate the probationer, which would keep them out of the state’s overcrowded prison system.
Collin County, Texas closed its PRC in November 2009. Although the program had a capacity of ten beds, soon be-fore it shut down it held only four probationers. Bob Hughes, director of Collin County’s probation department, said they had rarely used all available beds, which were located in the county jail.
This inefficiency partially explains the demise of the PRCs. There were once fourteen Probationer Restitution Centers in Texas. After the Collin County PRC closed, only seven remain. They are located in Cameron, Cass, El Paso, Hildago, San Patricio and Taylor Counties. Tarrant County opened a PRC in 1983 but closed it in 2001. Dallas County operated one from 1985 until 2004.
How do counties without a PRC deal with delinquent probationers? “We set up a whole collections department, and we work with our clients to put payment plans together,” stated Michael Noyes, director of Dallas County’s probation de-partment.
Neighboring Denton County never set up a PRC. “It takes a lot of money to run one of those,” said Mitch Liles, the county’s adult probation director. “I can remember when they started. They sprang up with good intentions. But when you factor in all the overhead costs .. it never added up to me.”
Indeed, Collin County expects collections from delinquent probationers to increase after their PRC closed. Why? Probationers in the PRC were required to pay $18 per day for housing and food costs. That money could otherwise be applied toward the fines and fees they owe. Furthermore, some probationers had a hard time getting a ride to work from the PRC where they were jailed at night.
“We’re going to try this and see if it’s more effective .. and saves a little bit of money for the county,” said state District Judge Chris Oldner.
The whole PRC concept is part of a mean-spirited philosophy that pervades Texas’ criminal justice system. The very idea of taking people too poor to pay their fees and fines and locking them up – and charging them for their incarceration – shows a lack of perspective. It also smacks of a return to the days of debtors’ prisons. Such coercive measures might work on rich or middle-class probationers who could pay up to avoid spending nights and weekends in a PRC; however, such people aren’t likely to risk going to jail by becoming delinquent in their payments to begin with.
The people who came up with this idea – prosecutors and judges – simply cannot imagine what it is like to be poor and unable (not unwilling) to pay fines and fees. Thus, PRCs have become an additional punishment laid on the already overburdened backs of impoverished probationers. The sooner the last PRC in Texas closes, the better.
Sources: Dallas Morning News, Collin County Probation Dept.
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More from this issue:
- The Prison Industries Enhancement Certification Program: Why Everyone Should be Concerned, by Bob Sloan
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- First Circuit Upholds $101,750,000 in Damage Awards in FBI Misconduct Case, by Matthew Clarke
- Less Than Equal: State officials, including prejudiced human-rights commissioners, block Prisoner complaints, by Lance Tapley
- Prison Labor Bails Out State and County Budgets, by Gary Hunter
- All Eyes On the Court: An Interview with Attorney and Federal Court Monitor Fred Cohen, by Todd Matthews
- Cook County Strip, Body Cavity Searches Held Unconstitutional; Other Suits Pending, by Brandon Sample
- California Cuts Funding for Prop 36 Drug Treatment Programs, by Michael Brodheim
- Michigan Study Shows Incarceration Can Cause Illness in Loved Ones, by Gary Hunter
- Sexual Victimization Widespread in U.S. Correctional Facilities, by Brandon Sample
- Certificate of Merit in Medical Malpractice Suits Unconstitutional in Washington State, by Jimmy Franks
- Illinois Prisoners Bilked Out of Millions Through DOC Commissary Surcharges, by Joseph R. Dole
- A Tight Leash: Judges Micromanage Federal Offenders After Release, by Brandon Sample
- Texas Counties Give Up on Probationer Restitution Centers, by Matthew Clarke
- Prisoner Transport Guards Accused of Forcing Prisoner to Perform Sex Acts, by Michael Brodheim
- Call Your Attorney from Jail, Go to Prison, by John Dannenberg
- Texas Youth Commission Causes Consternation, Conflict in State Legislature, by Gary Hunter
- Ninth Circuit Strikes Down BOP Rule Limiting Early Release for RDAP Participants, by Brandon Sample
- California Enacts Non-Revocable Parole And Increased Credits To Reduce Prison Population, by John Dannenberg
- New Orleans Jail Conditions Found Unconstitutional, by Jimmy Franks
- In Support of Ending Prosecutorial Misconduct, by Jimmy Franks
- South Carolina Prisoner Does Easy Time, by Gary Hunter
- Partial Summary Judgment Granted To PLN in FOIA Case against EOUSA, by Brandon Sample
- Shrinking Budgets Force States to Cut Corrections Spending, by Bob Williams
- Massachusetts GPS Program Upheld by State Supreme Court, by Mark Wilson
- Indiana DOC Directive Limiting Educational Credit to Only One Associate’s Degree Violates Ex Post Facto Clause, by Brandon Sample
- Assessment of Prison Account Without Seizure of Funds Implicates Due Process in Third Circuit, by Mark Wilson
- Tenth Circuit Reverses Dismissal of Failure to Protect Suit, by Brandon Sample
- Defendants Denied Qualified Immunity in Tennessee Jail Detainee’s Death, by Mark Wilson
- Ninth Circuit: California Jail Detainee’s Excessive Force Suit May Proceed, by John Dannenberg
- Eighth Circuit Rejects Debt Offset of EAJA Fees; Supreme Court to Hear Case, by Mark Wilson
More from Matthew Clarke:
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- $500,000 Settlement in Lawsuit Over Alcohol Withdrawal Death of Indiana Jail Prisoner, Aug. 6, 2019
- Federal Court Caps Attorney Fees in Suit Over Teen Girl Raped in Oklahoma Jail, Aug. 6, 2019
- Thomas Silverstein, America’s Most Isolated Prisoner, Dies at Age 67, Aug. 6, 2019
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- Habeas Petition Granted Over Failing Roof, Unsanitary Conditions at California Prison, Aug. 6, 2019
- Sixth Circuit Holds Chalking Car Tires for Parking Enforcement Constitutes a Search Under Fourth Amendment, July 16, 2019
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- “I Had Nothing”: How Parole Perpetuates a Cycle of Incarceration and Instability, July 2, 2019. Rehabilitation/Recidivism, Parole, Parole Conditions, Post-release, ex-offender, re-entry.
- Missouri Supreme Court Issues Writ of Prohibition Prohibiting Circuit Court From Revoking Probation After Probation Term Had Already Expired, June 17, 2019. Probation.
- Policing for Profit: Justice Reformers Chip Away at Civil Asset Forfeiture, June 17, 2019. Criminal justice system reform, Money/Property, Forfeiture.
- Modern-Day Gulag In the Golden State, June 6, 2019. Sex Offenders (Discrimination), Medical Records, Overdetention, Money/Property, Civil Commitment.
- Class Action Challenges Theft of Millions of Digital Music Files from Florida Prisoners, June 5, 2019. JPay, Inc., Money/Property, Seizure of Prisoner Funds, Prisoner Property, Tapes/Music.
- Fifth Circuit Affirms Dismissal of Texas Challenge to Forced Prison Labor, May 22, 2019. Work, Prison Labor, Money/Property, First Amendment, rights, Thirteenth Amendment, rights, Fourteenth Amendment, rights.
- Tennessee Legislature’s Investigation Finds Inadequate Supervision of Private Probation, May 16, 2019. Probation.
- Florida Fleeces Prisoners with High Canteen Prices, May 3, 2019. Private Prisons, Money/Property, Commissary.
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Convicted criminals typically serve a period parole between release and the end of their sentences. This supervised community corrections program is intended to aid their transition from convict to productive member of society. Parole is expensive; according to InsideCorrections.com, 4 out of 10 parolees are drug offenders and many suffer from mental health issues. Though no government agency awards grants directly to parolees, every state provides funds both for supervision and community grants that directly or indirectly benefit parolees.
State Money Grants
The departments of corrections and justice in most states have money grants earmarked to support agency and community programs for parolees. Connecticut awards funding to programs that are focused on designing and implementing enhanced supervision programs for sexual offenders and Texas awards $500,000 annually to assist municipalities with law enforcement needs, including programs for parolees. Guidelines and eligibility varies by state; however, all require grantees be 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations.
Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program
Awarded by the United States Department of Justice and administered by the state, the JAG program is the primary source of funding for law enforcement agencies across America. Edward Byrne grants fund facilities, personnel and programs for probationers and parolees, including supervision, drug and alcohol treatment, and educational and employment assistance. Contact your state justice department to obtain the guidelines and application deadline in your state.
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Project Safe Neighborhoods
Project Safe Neighborhoods, which was established in 2001 by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, funds projects that work to reduce gun violence and gang crime. This Bureau of Justice Assistance program awards grants in conjunction with state justice departments. Parole departments may be eligible for funding if they can demonstrate significant gang influence among the department's clients or in the neighborhoods where they live. Parole departments, community agencies and other law enforcement programs will receive more than $9 billion in PSN grants in 2011. PSN is state administered; your state department of justice can provide you with their program guidelines and deadline.
Private Foundations
Few foundations grants are available for programs serving adult parolees; however, the American Probation and Parole Association offers several grants, including the Curriculum and Training for DWI Supervision, Intermediate Training or Effective Case Management Practices for Tribal Probation Personnel and the Development of Risk Assessment Tools programs (see Resources). Private foundations often disburse grants in specific geographic areas; search a reputable website like the Foundation Center to locate local foundations supportive of law enforcement. (see Resources).
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About the Author
Based in Arlington, Texas, Michelle Diane has been writing business articles for six years. Her work has appeared in newspapers nationwide and on diverse digital outlets including Bounty, Breathe Again Magazine and LexisNexis. She is a University of Texas graduate and a presidential member of the National Society of Leadership.
Programs For Probationers In Texas 2016
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