SB-1095, As Passed Senate, March 26, 2008

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SUBSTITUTE FOR

 

SENATE BILL NO. 1095

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     A bill to make appropriations for the department of

 

corrections and certain state purposes related to corrections for

 

the fiscal year ending September 30, 2009; to provide for the

 

expenditure of the appropriations; to provide for reports; to

 

provide for the creation of certain advisory committees and boards;

 

to prescribe certain powers and duties of the department of

 

corrections, certain other state officers and agencies, and certain

 

advisory committees and boards; to provide for the collection of

 

certain funds; and to provide for the disposition of fees and other

 

income received by certain state agencies.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

PART 1

 

LINE-ITEM APPROPRIATIONS


 

     Sec. 101. Subject to the conditions set forth in this act, the

 

amounts listed in this part are appropriated for the department of

 

corrections for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2009, from the

 

funds indicated in this part. The following is a summary of the

 

appropriations in this part:

 

DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS

 

APPROPRIATION SUMMARY:

 

   Average population............................. 51,841

 

   Full-time equated unclassified positions......... 16.0

 

   Full-time equated classified positions....... 17,063.3

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $  2,054,215,200

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

Total interdepartmental grants and intradepartmental

 

   transfers............................................         1,277,200

 

ADJUSTED GROSS APPROPRIATION........................... $  2,052,938,000

 

   Federal revenues:

 

Total federal revenues.................................        10,350,200

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Total local revenues...................................           430,300

 

Total private revenues.................................                 0

 

Total other state restricted revenues..................        63,894,700

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $  1,978,262,800

 

   Sec. 102. EXECUTIVE

 

   Full-time equated unclassified positions......... 16.0

 

   Full-time equated classified positions............ 5.0

 

Unclassified positions--16.0 FTE positions............. $      1,067,900

 

Executive direction--5.0 FTE positions.................         1,033,700


 

Legislative corrections ombudsman......................           500,000

 

Criminal justice reform study..........................            50,000

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $      2,651,600

 

    Appropriated from:

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $      2,651,600

 

   Sec. 103. PLANNING AND COMMUNITY SUPPORT

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........... 73.0

 

Planning, community development and research--33.0

 

   FTE positions........................................ $      2,709,000

 

Mental health awareness training.......................           100,000

 

Prisoner reintegration programs........................        33,173,700

 

Telephone fee and commission refunds...................        10,800,000

 

Community corrections administration--17.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................         1,475,700

 

Substance abuse testing and treatment services--23.0

 

   FTE positions........................................        20,938,100

 

Residential services...................................        17,253,300

 

Community corrections comprehensive plans and services.        13,633,000

 

Public education and training..........................            50,000

 

Regional jail program..................................               100

 

Felony drunk driver jail reduction and community

 

   treatment program....................................         1,740,100

 

County jail reimbursement program......................        12,272,100

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    114,145,100

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

DOJ-OJP, Byrne grants..................................           729,600


 

DOJ-OJP, RSAT..........................................           142,800

 

DOJ, prisoner reintegration............................         1,035,000

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Civil infraction fees..................................         7,514,400

 

Telephone fees and commissions.........................        10,800,000

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     93,923,300

 

   Sec. 104. OPERATIONS SUPPORT ADMINISTRATION

 

   Full-time equated classified positions.......... 156.9

 

Operations support administration--55.0 FTE positions.. $      4,117,500

 

New custody staff training.............................        12,743,400

 

Compensatory buyout and union leave bank...............               100

 

Worker's compensation..................................        15,629,000

 

Bureau of fiscal management--69.9 FTE positions........         4,939,800

 

Office of legal services--22.0 FTE positions...........         1,895,100

 

Internal audit services................................           518,600

 

Internal affairs--10.0 FTE positions...................           802,400

 

Rent...................................................         1,629,000

 

Equipment and special maintenance......................         2,425,500

 

Administrative hearings officers.......................         3,820,500

 

Judicial data warehouse user fees......................            50,000

 

Sheriffs' coordinating and training office.............           500,000

 

Prosecutorial and detainer expenses....................         4,051,000

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $     53,121,900

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG-MDSP, Michigan justice training fund...............           698,400

 

   Special revenue funds:


 

Local corrections officer training fund................           500,000

 

Correctional industries revolving fund.................           108,300

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     51,815,200

 

   Sec. 105. FIELD OPERATIONS ADMINISTRATION

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........ 1,867.9

 

Field operations--1,718.9 FTE positions................ $    153,612,100

 

Parole board operations--58.0 FTE positions............         4,270,300

 

Parole/probation services..............................         2,867,300

 

Intensive probation pilot program......................           980,000

 

Community re-entry centers--51.0 FTE positions.........        15,212,200

 

Electronic monitoring center--40.0 FTE positions.......         8,644,000

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    185,585,900

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Local - community tether program reimbursement.........           430,300

 

Re-entry center offender reimbursements................           135,000

 

Parole and probation oversight fees....................       10,795,100

 

Parole and probation oversight fees set-aside..........         3,267,300

 

Public works user fees.................................           249,400

 

Tether program, participant contributions..............         6,033,800

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    164,675,000

 

   Sec. 106. CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES ADMINISTRATION

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........ 1,399.7

 

Correctional facilities administration--42.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................ $      6,855,800

 

Prison food service--494.0 FTE positions...............        85,903,600

 

Transportation--243.7 FTE positions....................        25,431,900


 

Central records--58.5 FTE positions....................         3,860,400

 

Inmate legal services..................................           704,900

 

Loans to parolees......................................           179,400

 

Housing inmates in federal institutions................           793,900

 

Prison industries operations--219.0 FTE positions......        19,973,900

 

Education services and federal education

 

   grants--10.0 FTE positions...........................         5,720,500

 

Federal school lunch program...........................           712,800

 

Leased beds and alternatives to leased beds............               100

 

Inmate housing fund....................................               100

 

MPRI education program--332.5 FTE positions............        36,673,900

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    186,811,200

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Interdepartmental grant revenues:

 

IDG-MDCH, forensic center food service.................           578,800

 

   Federal revenues:

 

DAG-FNS, national school lunch.........................           712,800

 

DED-OESE, title I......................................           521,900

 

DED-OSERS..............................................           101,300

 

DED-OVAE, adult education..............................         1,893,000

 

DED, adult literacy grants.............................           308,400

 

DED, vocational education equipment....................           277,400

 

DED, youthful offender/Specter grant...................         1,289,700

 

DOJ-BOP, federal prisoner reimbursement................           211,000

 

DOJ-OJP, serious and violent offender reintegration

 

   initiative...........................................         1,010,300

 

DOJ, prison rape elimination act grant.................         1,004,300


 

SSA-SSI, incentive payment.............................           124,100

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Correctional industries revolving fund.................        19,973,900

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    158,804,300

 

   Sec. 107. CONSENT DECREES

 

   Full-time equated classified positions.......... 236.5

 

DOJ, psychiatric plan - MDCH mental health services.... $     39,344,800

 

DOJ, psychiatric plan - MDOC staff and

 

   services--236.5 FTE positions........................        17,969,800

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $     57,314,600

 

    Appropriated from:

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     57,314,600

 

   Sec. 108. HEALTH CARE

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........ 1,229.6

 

Health care administration--20.0 FTE positions......... $      2,170,300

 

Hospital and specialty care services...................        80,274,900

 

Vaccination program....................................           691,200

 

Northern region clinical complexes--276.4 FTE

 

   positions............................................        38,823,900

 

Southeastern region clinical complexes--622.4 FTE

 

   positions............................................       101,058,300

 

Southwestern region clinical complexes--310.8 FTE

 

   positions............................................        45,062,300

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    268,080,900

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Prisoner health care copayments........................           332,400


 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    267,748,500

 

   Sec. 109. NORTHERN REGION CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES

 

   Average population............................. 15,855

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........ 3,905.0

 

Alger maximum correctional facility -

 

   Munising--321.5 FTE positions........................ $     31,232,500

 

   Average population................................ 849

 

Baraga maximum correctional facility - Baraga--387.1

 

   FTE positions........................................        36,860,700

 

   Average population.............................. 1,172

 

Chippewa correctional facility - Kincheloe--498.2

 

   FTE positions........................................        46,570,400

 

   Average population.............................. 2,282

 

Kinross correctional facility - Kincheloe--550.1 FTE

 

   positions............................................        54,595,400

 

   Average population.............................. 2,999

 

Marquette branch prison - Marquette--359.1 FTE

 

   positions............................................        36,823,400

 

   Average population.............................. 1,201

 

Newberry correctional facility - Newberry--280.4 FTE

 

   positions............................................        26,086,800

 

   Average population................................ 978

 

Oaks correctional facility - Eastlake--301.5 FTE

 

   positions............................................        30,502,600

 

   Average population.............................. 1,156

 

Ojibway correctional facility - Marenisco--258.7 FTE

 

   positions............................................        23,995,200


 

   Average population.............................. 1,378

 

Pugsley correctional facility - Kingsley--218.8 FTE

 

   positions............................................        20,277,200

 

   Average population.............................. 1,158

 

Saginaw correctional facility - Freeland--322.2 FTE

 

   positions............................................        31,075,200

 

   Average population.............................. 1,480

 

Standish maximum correctional facility -

 

   Standish--363.4 FTE positions........................        37,002,900

 

   Average population.............................. 1,202

 

Kincheloe area support and services -

 

   Kincheloe--44.0 FTE positions........................         2,987,800

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    378,010,100

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Public works user fees.................................         1,356,700

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    376,653,400

 

   Sec. 110. SOUTHEASTERN REGION CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES

 

   Average population............................. 16,637

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........ 4,239.8

 

Cooper Street correctional facility - Jackson--282.4

 

   FTE positions........................................ $     28,910,400

 

   Average population.............................. 1,752

 

G. Robert Cotton correctional facility -

 

   Jackson--415.1 FTE positions.........................        38,837,800

 

   Average population.............................. 1,854

 

Charles E. Egeler correctional facility -


 

   Jackson--368.6 FTE positions.........................        39,150,200

 

   Average population.............................. 1,108

 

Gus Harrison correctional facility - Adrian--483.3

 

   FTE positions........................................        47,121,600

 

   Average population.............................. 2,342

 

Huron Valley correctional complex - Ypsilanti--683.4

 

   FTE positions........................................        67,676,400

 

   Average population.............................. 1,872

 

Macomb correctional facility - New Haven--288.9 FTE

 

   positions............................................        27,268,500

 

   Average population.............................. 1,228

 

Mound correctional facility - Detroit--279.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................        26,106,400

 

   Average population.............................. 1,051

 

Parnall correctional facility - Jackson--266.2 FTE

 

   positions............................................        26,310,500

 

   Average population.............................. 1,712

 

Ryan correctional facility - Detroit--319.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................        28,621,700

 

   Average population.............................. 1,059

 

Robert Scott correctional facility - Plymouth--341.9

 

   FTE positions........................................        17,919,900

 

   Average population.............................. 1,040

 

Thumb correctional facility - Lapeer--295.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................        29,090,900

 

   Average population.............................. 1,219

 

Special alternative incarceration program - Cassidy


 

   Lake--120.0 FTE positions............................        11,103,900

 

   Average population................................ 400

 

Jackson area support and services - Jackson--97.0

 

   FTE positions........................................        17,481,400

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    405,599,600

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Federal revenues:

 

DOJ, state criminal alien assistance program...........           988,600

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Public works user fees.................................         1,508,400

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    403,102,600

 

   Sec. 111. SOUTHWESTERN REGION CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES

 

   Average population............................. 19,349

 

   Full-time equated classified positions........ 3,949.9

 

Bellamy Creek correctional facility - Ionia--396.9

 

   FTE positions........................................ $     36,800,900

 

   Average population.............................. 1,850

 

Earnest C. Brooks correctional facility -

 

   Muskegon--465.1 FTE positions........................        43,641,500

 

   Average population.............................. 2,440

 

Carson City correctional facility - Carson

 

   City--478.8 FTE positions............................        47,274,700

 

   Average population.............................. 2,440

 

Richard A. Handlon correctional facility -

 

   Ionia--229.6 FTE positions...........................        22,048,700

 

   Average population.............................. 1,320

 

Ionia maximum correctional facility - Ionia--313.2


 

   FTE positions........................................        29,545,600

 

   Average population................................ 707

 

Lakeland correctional facility - Coldwater--587.9

 

   FTE positions........................................        57,705,400

 

   Average population.............................. 3,102

 

Michigan reformatory - Ionia--419.5 FTE positions......        39,605,900

 

   Average population.............................. 2,538

 

Muskegon correctional facility - Muskegon--218.8 FTE

 

   positions............................................        23,275,100

 

   Average population.............................. 1,326

 

Pine River correctional facility - St. Louis--212.8

 

   FTE positions........................................        20,213,300

 

   Average population.............................. 1,200

 

St. Louis correctional facility - St. Louis--531.3

 

   FTE positions........................................        49,518,900

 

   Average population.............................. 2,426

 

Ionia area support and services - Jackson--96.0 FTE

 

   positions............................................        14,174,900

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $    383,804,900

 

    Appropriated from:

 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Public works user fees.................................           619,800

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $    383,185,100

 

   Sec. 112. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

 

Information technology services and projects........... $      19,089,400

 

GROSS APPROPRIATION.................................... $     19,089,400

 

    Appropriated from:


 

   Special revenue funds:

 

Correctional industries revolving fund.................           142,100

 

Parole and probation oversight fees set-aside..........           558,100

 

State general fund/general purpose..................... $     18,389,200

 

 

 

 

 

PART 2

 

PROVISIONS CONCERNING APPROPRIATIONS

 

GENERAL SECTIONS

 

     Sec. 201. Pursuant to section 30 of article IX of the state

 

constitution of 1963, total state spending from state resources

 

under part 1 for fiscal year 2008-2009 is $2,042,157,500.00 and

 

state spending from state resources to be paid to local units of

 

government for fiscal year 2008-2009 is $94,232,500.00. The

 

itemized statement below identifies appropriations from which

 

spending to local units of government will occur:

 

DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS

 

Field operations - assumption of county probation

 

staff................................................... $     47,677,800

 

Public service work projects...........................        11,858,600

 

Community corrections comprehensive plans and services.        13,633,000

 

Community corrections residential services.............        17,253,300

 

Community corrections public education and training....            50,000

 

Felony drunk driver jail reduction and community

 

treatment program.......................................         1,740,100

 

Community reentry centers..............................         2,019,600

 

Regional jail program..................................               100


 

TOTAL.................................................. $     94,232,500

 

     Sec. 202. The appropriations authorized under this act are

 

subject to the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1101

 

to 18.1594.

 

     Sec. 203. As used in this act:

 

     (a) "DAG" means the United States department of agriculture.

 

     (b) "DAG-FNS" means the DAG food and nutrition service.

 

     (c) "DED" means the United States department of education.

 

     (d) "DED-OESE" means the DED office of elementary and

 

secondary education.

 

     (e) "DED-OSERS" means the DED office of special education and

 

rehabilitative services.

 

     (f) "DED-OVAE" means the DED office of vocational and adult

 

education.

 

     (g) "Department" or "MDOC" means the Michigan department of

 

corrections.

 

     (h) "DOJ" means the United States department of justice.

 

     (i) "DOJ-BOP" means the DOJ bureau of prisons.

 

     (j) "DOJ-OJP" means the DOJ office of justice programs.

 

     (k) "FTE" means full-time equated.

 

     (l) "GED" means general educational development certificate.

 

     (m) "GPS" means global positioning system.

 

     (n) "HIV" means human immunodeficiency virus.

 

     (o) "IDG" means interdepartmental grant.

 

     (p) "IDT" means intradepartmental transfer.

 

     (q) "MDCH" means the Michigan department of community health.

 

     (r) "MDSP" means the Michigan department of state police.


 

     (s) "MPRI" means the Michigan prisoner reentry initiative.

 

     (t) "OCC" means the office of community corrections.

 

     (u) "RSAT" means residential substance abuse treatment.

 

     (v) "SSA" means the United States social security

 

administration.

 

     (w) "SSA-SSI" means SSA supplemental security income.

 

     Sec. 204. The civil service commission shall bill departments

 

and agencies at the end of the first fiscal quarter for the 1%

 

charge authorized by section 5 of article XI of the state

 

constitution of 1963. Payments shall be made for the total amount

 

of the billing by the end of the second fiscal quarter.

 

     Sec. 205. (1) A hiring freeze is imposed on the state

 

classified civil service. State departments and agencies are

 

prohibited from hiring any new full-time state classified civil

 

service employees and prohibited from filling any vacant state

 

classified civil service positions. This hiring freeze does not

 

apply to internal transfers of classified employees from 1 position

 

to another within a department.

 

     (2) The state budget director may grant exceptions to the

 

hiring freeze when the state budget director believes that this

 

hiring freeze will result in rendering a state department or agency

 

unable to deliver basic services, cause loss of revenue to the

 

state, result in the inability of the state to receive federal

 

funds, or necessitate additional expenditures that exceed any

 

savings from maintaining a vacancy. The state budget director shall

 

report quarterly to the chairpersons of the senate and house

 

standing committees on appropriations the number of exceptions to


 

the hiring freeze approved during the previous quarter and the

 

reasons to justify the exception.

 

     Sec. 206. The department shall not take disciplinary action

 

against an employee for communicating with a member of the

 

legislature or his or her staff.

 

     Sec. 208. The department shall use the Internet to fulfill the

 

reporting requirements of this act. This requirement may include

 

transmission of reports via electronic mail to the recipients

 

identified for each reporting requirement or it may include

 

placement of reports on an Internet or Intranet site. There shall

 

be at least 1 separate and distinct electronic file for each

 

section that includes a reporting requirement.

 

     Sec. 209. Funds appropriated in part 1 shall not be used for

 

the purchase of foreign goods or services, or both, if

 

competitively priced and comparable quality American goods or

 

services, or both, are available. Preference shall be given to

 

goods or services, or both, manufactured or provided by Michigan

 

businesses if they are competitively priced and of comparable

 

quality. In addition, preference shall be given to goods or

 

services, or both, that are manufactured or provided by Michigan

 

businesses owned and operated by veterans if they are competitively

 

priced and of comparable quality.

 

     Sec. 210. (1) Pursuant to the provisions of civil service

 

rules and regulations and applicable collective bargaining

 

agreements, individuals seeking employment with the department

 

shall submit to a controlled substance test. The test shall be

 

administered by the department.


 

     (2) Individuals seeking employment with the department who

 

refuse to take a controlled substance test or who test positive for

 

the illicit use of a controlled substance on such a test shall be

 

denied employment.

 

     Sec. 211. The department may charge fees and collect revenues

 

in excess of appropriations in part 1 not to exceed the cost of

 

offender services and programming, employee meals, parolee loans,

 

academic/vocational services, custody escorts, compassionate

 

visits, union steward activities, public work programs, and

 

services provided to units of government. The revenues and fees

 

collected are appropriated for all expenses associated with these

 

services and activities.

 

     Sec. 212. Preference should be given to purchasing produce

 

from Michigan growers and processors when their produce is

 

competitively priced and of comparable quality.

 

     Sec. 213. By February 15, 2009, the department shall provide

 

the members of the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on

 

corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state

 

budget director with a report detailing nongeneral fund/general

 

purpose sources of revenue, including, but not limited to, federal

 

revenues, state restricted revenues, local and private revenues,

 

offender reimbursements and other payments, revolving funds, and 1-

 

time sources of revenue, whether or not such revenues were

 

appropriated. The report shall include statements detailing for

 

each account the total amount of revenue received during fiscal

 

year 2007-2008, the amount by which the revenue exceeded any

 

applicable appropriated fund source, the amount spent during fiscal


 

year 2007-2008, the account balance at the close of fiscal year

 

2007-2008, and the projected revenues and expenditures for fiscal

 

year 2008-2009.

 

     Sec. 214. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

information technology, the department shall pay user fees to the

 

department of information technology for technology-related

 

services and projects. These user fees shall be subject to

 

provisions of an interagency agreement between the departments and

 

agencies and the department of information technology.

 

     Sec. 215. Amounts appropriated in part 1 for information

 

technology may be designated as work projects and carried forward

 

to support department of corrections technology projects under the

 

direction of the department of information technology. Funds

 

designated in this manner are not available for expenditure until

 

approved as work projects under section 451a of the management and

 

budget act, 1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1451a.

 

     Sec. 216. (1) Due to the current budgetary problems in this

 

state, out-of-state travel for the fiscal year ending September 30,

 

2009 shall be limited to situations in which 1 or more of the

 

following conditions apply:

 

     (a) The travel is required by legal mandate or court order or

 

for law enforcement purposes.

 

     (b) The travel is necessary to protect the health or safety of

 

Michigan citizens or visitors or to assist other states in similar

 

circumstances.

 

     (c) The travel is necessary to produce budgetary savings or to

 

increase state revenues, or both, including protecting existing


 

federal funds or securing additional federal funds.

 

     (d) The travel is necessary to comply with federal

 

requirements.

 

     (e) The travel is necessary to secure specialized training for

 

staff that is not available within this state.

 

     (f) The travel is financed entirely by federal or nonstate

 

funds.

 

     (2) If out-of-state travel is necessary but does not meet 1 or

 

more of the conditions listed in subsection (1), the state budget

 

director may grant an exception to allow the travel. Any exceptions

 

granted by the state budget director shall be reported on a monthly

 

basis to the senate and house standing committees on

 

appropriations.

 

     (3) Not later than January 1 of each year, each department

 

shall prepare a travel report listing all travel by classified and

 

unclassified employees outside this state in the immediately

 

preceding fiscal year that was funded in whole or in part with

 

funds appropriated in the department's budget. The report shall be

 

submitted to the chairs and members of the senate and house

 

standing committees on appropriations, the fiscal agencies, and the

 

state budget director. The report shall include the following

 

information:

 

     (a) The name of each person receiving reimbursement for travel

 

outside this state or whose travel costs were paid by this state.

 

     (b) The destination of each travel occurrence.

 

     (c) The dates of each travel occurrence.

 

     (d) A brief statement of the reason for each travel


 

occurrence.

 

     (e) The transportation and related costs of each travel

 

occurrence, including the proportion funded with state general

 

fund/general purpose revenues, the proportion funded with state

 

restricted revenues, the proportion funded with federal revenues,

 

and the proportion funded with other revenues.

 

     (f) A total of all out-of-state travel funded for the

 

immediately preceding fiscal year.

 

     Sec. 217. The director shall take all reasonable steps to

 

ensure businesses in deprived and depressed communities compete for

 

and perform contracts to provide services or supplies, or both. The

 

director shall strongly encourage firms with which the department

 

contracts to subcontract with certified businesses in deprived and

 

depressed communities for services, supplies, or both.

 

     Sec. 218. It is the intent of the legislature that no

 

expenditures for employee dry cleaning allowances be made or

 

obligations to pay employee dry cleaning allowances be incurred for

 

dry cleaning allowances in excess of the amounts authorized under

 

collective bargaining contracts in effect from January 1, 2002 to

 

December 31, 2004.

 

     Sec. 219. (1) The contract for prisoner telephone services

 

shall not include fees or commissions that are more than the fees

 

for calls placed from outside of correctional facilities, excluding

 

any fees necessary to meet special equipment costs. If a contract

 

for prisoner telephone services includes fees greater than this

 

amount, then the department shall refund these fees and commissions

 

to the persons who paid them.


 

     (2) The funds appropriated in part 1 for telephone fee and

 

commission refunds shall be used to refund persons who paid

 

telephone rates or surcharges that were higher than fees permitted

 

under subsection (1). Any telephone fee and commission revenue

 

collected in excess of the amount allowed in subsection (1) shall

 

be used for the sole purpose of providing telephone fee and

 

commission refunds.

 

     Sec. 221. (1) The department shall report no later than April

 

1, 2009 on each specific policy change made to implement a public

 

act affecting the department that took effect during the previous

 

calendar year to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees

 

on corrections, the joint committee on administrative rules, and

 

the senate and house fiscal agencies.

 

     (2) Funds appropriated in part 1 shall not be used to adopt a

 

rule that will apply to a small business and that will have a

 

disproportionate economic impact on small businesses because of the

 

size of those businesses if the department fails to reduce the

 

disproportionate economic impact of the rule on small businesses as

 

provided under section 40 of the administrative procedures act of

 

1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.240.

 

     (3) As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Rule" means that term as defined under section 7 of the

 

administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.207.

 

     (b) "Small business" means that term as defined under section

 

7a of the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL

 

24.207a.

 

     Sec. 222. Funds appropriated in part 1 shall not be used by a


 

principal executive department, state agency, or authority to hire

 

a person to provide legal services that are the responsibility of

 

the attorney general. This prohibition does not apply to legal

 

services for bonding activities and for those activities that the

 

attorney general authorizes.

 

     Sec. 223. (1) In addition to the funds appropriated in part 1,

 

there is appropriated an amount not to exceed $10,000,000.00 for

 

federal contingency funds. These funds are not available for

 

expenditure until they have been transferred to another line item

 

in this act under section 393(2) of the management and budget act,

 

1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1393.

 

     (2) In addition to the funds appropriated in part 1, there is

 

appropriated an amount not to exceed $5,000,000.00 for state

 

restricted contingency funds. These funds are not available for

 

expenditure until they have been transferred to another line item

 

in this act under section 393(2) of the management and budget act,

 

1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1393.

 

     (3) In addition to the funds appropriated in part 1, there is

 

appropriated an amount not to exceed $2,000,000.00 for local

 

contingency funds. These funds are not available for expenditure

 

until they have been transferred to another line item in this act

 

under section 393(2) of the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431,

 

MCL 18.1393.

 

     (4) In addition to the funds appropriated in part 1, there is

 

appropriated an amount not to exceed $2,000,000.00 for private

 

contingency funds. These funds are not available for expenditure

 

until they have been transferred to another line item in this act


 

under section 393(2) of the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431,

 

MCL 18.1393.

 

     Sec. 224. The department shall not approve the travel of more

 

than 1 departmental employee to a specific professional development

 

conference or training seminar that is located outside of this

 

state. The only exception to this travel restriction involves a

 

professional development conference or training seminar that is

 

funded by a federal or private funding source and requires more

 

than 1 person from a department to attend.

 

 

 

EXECUTIVE

 

     Sec. 301. For 3 years after a felony offender is released from

 

the department's jurisdiction, the department shall maintain the

 

offender's file on the offender tracking information system and

 

make it publicly accessible in the same manner as the file of the

 

current offender. However, the department shall immediately remove

 

the offender's file from the offender tracking information system

 

upon determination that the offender was wrongfully convicted and

 

the offender's file is not otherwise required to be maintained on

 

the offender tracking information system.

 

    Sec. 302. A report on the mental health study required under

 

section 302 of 2007 PA 124, together with any recommendations

 

contained in the study and response from the department, shall be

 

provided to the members of the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on corrections and community health, the senate and

 

house fiscal agencies, MDCH, and the state budget director no later

 

than 30 days after the receipt of the completed study. The report


 

also shall include a plan by the department to implement those

 

recommendations with which it agrees and an explanation of any

 

disagreements with recommendations.

 

     Sec. 303. It is the intent of the legislature that the

 

quantity of database systems in use by the department be optimal

 

for efficient data usage and communications. The department shall

 

report quarterly to the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies,

 

and the state budget director on the status of the plan to

 

implement secure, encrypted, Internet-based database systems that

 

can electronically communicate with each other and with other law-

 

enforcement-related databases by September 30, 2009. The department

 

shall provide the reports not more than 15 days after the end of

 

each quarter.

 

 

 

PLANNING AND COMMUNITY SUPPORT

 

     Sec. 401. The department shall submit 3-year and 5-year prison

 

population projection updates by February 1, 2009 to the senate and

 

house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate and

 

house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director. The report

 

shall include explanations of the methodology and assumptions used

 

in developing the projection updates.

 

     Sec. 402. It is the intent of the legislature that the funds

 

appropriated in part 1 for prisoner reintegration programs be

 

expended for the purpose of reducing victimization by reducing

 

offender recidivism through the following prisoner reintegration

 

programming:


 

     (a) The provision of employment and job training.

 

     (b) The provision of assistance in acquiring the documents

 

necessary to obtain a state identification card or operator's

 

license.

 

     (c) The provision of housing assistance.

 

     (d) Referral to mental health services.

 

     (e) Referral to substance abuse services.

 

     (f) Referral to public health services.

 

     (g) Referral to education.

 

     (h) Referral to any other services necessary for successful

 

reintegration.

 

     Sec. 403. (1) By April 1, 2009, the department shall provide a

 

report on prisoner reintegration programs to the members of the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director. At

 

a minimum, the report shall include all of the following

 

information:

 

     (a) Allocations and projected expenditures for each project

 

funded and for each project to be funded, itemized by service to be

 

provided and service provider.

 

     (b) An explanation of the objectives and results measures for

 

each program.

 

     (c) An explanation of how the programs will be evaluated.

 

     (d) A discussion of the evidence and research upon which each

 

program is based.

 

     (e) A discussion and estimate of the impact of prisoner

 

reintegration programs on reoffending and returns to prison.


 

     (f) A progress report on applicable results of each program,

 

including, but not limited to, the estimated bed space impact of

 

prisoner reintegration programs.

 

     (2) The department shall provide monthly reports to the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on the

 

status and recidivism levels of offenders who participated in the

 

MPRI and have been released. The data should be broken out by the

 

controlling sentence for the following 4 offender types: drug,

 

nonassaultive, assaultive, and sex.

 

     (3) By September 30, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director a

 

comparison of the overall recidivism rates and length of time prior

 

to prison return of offenders who participated in the MPRI with

 

those of offenders who did not. The report should disaggregate the

 

information by each site in order to compare the practices and

 

success rates of each site.

 

     (4) The department shall include prisoners nearing their

 

maximum sentence in the prison phases of the MPRI.

 

     (5) The MPRI shall include programming on understanding

 

conditions of parole, and each offender's transition accountability

 

plan shall include a plan for following conditions of parole. The

 

department shall ensure that each offender understands his or her

 

conditions of parole prior to release from prison.

 

     (6) The department shall provide monthly reports to the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate


 

and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

parolees who participated in the MPRI and have tested positive for

 

substance abuse in the previous month and since October 1, 2008.

 

The report shall include any sanctions imposed by the department in

 

response to the positive substance abuse test.

 

     (7) The department shall provide monthly reports to the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

parolees who participated in the MPRI and have a diagnosis of

 

mental illness or received mental health treatment while in prison.

 

The report shall include the number of offenders successfully

 

referred to the local community mental health agency, by county,

 

and number of parolees participating in treatment for mental

 

illness, by county.

 

     (8) The department shall ensure that each prisoner develops a

 

transition accountability plan at intake in order to successfully

 

reenter the community after release from prison.

 

     Sec. 404. (1) The department shall screen and assess each

 

prisoner for alcohol and other drug involvement to determine the

 

need for further treatment. The assessment process shall be

 

designed to identify the severity of alcohol and other drug

 

addiction and determine the treatment plan, if appropriate.

 

     (2) Subject to the availability of funding resources, the

 

department shall provide substance abuse treatment to prisoners

 

with priority given to those prisoners who are most in need of

 

treatment and who can best benefit from program intervention based

 

on the screening and assessment provided under subsection (1).


 

     Sec. 405. (1) In expending residential substance abuse

 

treatment services funds appropriated under this act, the

 

department shall ensure to the maximum extent possible that

 

residential substance abuse treatment services are available

 

statewide.

 

     (2) By April 1, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

the allocation, distribution, and expenditure of all funds

 

appropriated by the substance abuse testing and treatment line item

 

during fiscal year 2007-2008 and projected for fiscal year 2008-

 

2009. The report shall include, but not be limited to, an

 

explanation of an anticipated year-end balance, the number of

 

participants in substance abuse programs, and the number of

 

offenders on waiting lists for residential substance abuse

 

programs. Information required under this subsection shall, where

 

possible, be separated by MDOC administrative region and by

 

offender type, including, but not limited to, a distinction between

 

prisoners, parolees, and probationers.

 

     (3) By April 1, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

substance abuse testing and treatment program objectives, outcome

 

measures, and results, including program impact on offender

 

behavior and recidivism.

 

    Sec. 406. (1) By December 1, 2008, the department shall develop

 

uniform minimum standards for MPRI sites and the expenditure of


 

MPRI funds, including funds appropriated for prisoner reintegration

 

programs. At a minimum, the standards shall address all of the

 

following:

 

    (a) The acceptable range or ranges for administrative costs.

 

    (b) How local program results are to be reported and quantified.

 

    (c) The acceptable range or ranges for per-participant

 

expenditures.

 

    (d) Procedures for referral and follow up by the department on

 

the status of referrals to substance abuse treatment, health care,

 

and mental health treatment.

 

    (e) Any other standards determined by the department to be

 

consistent with good management practices and optimum program

 

results.

 

    (2) By March 1, 2009, the department shall report to the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on the

 

standards required by subsection (1). The report shall include

 

information explaining how each standard was determined and how it

 

is being implemented. The department shall implement these

 

standards after review by the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on corrections.

 

    Sec. 407. (1) By March 1, 2009, the department shall report to

 

the senate and house subcommittees on corrections, the senate and

 

house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on offenders

 

who have served their maximum sentence and been released from

 

prison in the last 5 years. The report shall include the following

 

information:


 

    (a) The number of offenders who were paroled and returned to

 

prison prior to serving their maximum sentence compared to the

 

number of offenders who served their maximum sentence without ever

 

having been paroled.

 

    (b) The number of offenders disaggregated by major offense type:

 

assaultive, nonassaultive, drug, and sex.

 

    (c) The educational history of those offenders, including how

 

many had a GED or high school diploma prior to incarceration in

 

prison, how many received a GED while in prison, and how many

 

received a vocational certificate while in prison.

 

    (d) A comparison of each offender's original offense to the

 

offender's new offense by major offense type: assaultive,

 

nonassaultive, drug, and sex, for offenders who have since returned

 

to prison with a new commitment after previously serving a maximum

 

sentence.

 

     (2) The department shall provide monthly reports to the senate

 

and house subcommittees on corrections, the senate and house fiscal

 

agencies, and the state budget director on offenders who have

 

served their maximum sentence and been released from prison in the

 

previous month. The reports shall include the following

 

information:

 

     (a) The number of offenders who were paroled and returned to

 

prison prior to serving their maximum sentence compared to the

 

number of offenders who served their maximum sentence without ever

 

having been paroled.

 

     (b) The number of offenders disaggregated by major offense

 

type: assaultive, nonassaultive, drug, and sex.


 

     (c) Each offender's adjudication history based on their

 

presentence investigation report.

 

     Sec. 408. As a condition of expending funds appropriated for

 

planning, community development and research, and prisoner

 

reintegration programs under part 1, the department shall by

 

January 31, 2009 provide a plan to reduce recidivism rates among

 

prisoners released from correctional facilities to the members of

 

the senate and house appropriations committees, the senate and

 

house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director. The plan

 

shall include detailed information on 3-year recidivism rates in

 

this state for the most recent 5-year period, a detailed comparison

 

of those rates to rates in other states and a national average, and

 

details on how the department plans to improve recidivism rates.

 

The plan also shall include details on how the department proposes

 

to measure the success of the plan.

 

     Sec. 409. The office of community corrections shall provide

 

and coordinate the delivery and implementation of services in

 

communities to facilitate successful offender reintegration into

 

the community. Programs and services to be offered shall include,

 

but are not limited to, technical assistance for comprehensive

 

corrections plan development, new program start-up funding, program

 

funding for those programs delivering services for eligible

 

offenders in geographic areas identified by the office of community

 

corrections as having a shortage of available services, technical

 

assistance, referral services for education, employment services,

 

and substance abuse and family counseling. As used in this act:

 

     (a) "Alternative to incarceration in a state facility or jail"


 

means a program that involves offenders who receive a sentencing

 

disposition that appears to be in place of incarceration in a state

 

correctional facility or jail based on historical local sentencing

 

patterns or that amounts to a reduction in the length of sentence

 

in a jail.

 

     (b) "Goal" means the intended or projected result of a

 

comprehensive corrections plan or community corrections program to

 

reduce prison commitment rates, to reduce the length of stay in a

 

jail, or to improve the utilization of a jail.

 

     (c) "Jail" means a facility operated by a local unit of

 

government for the physical detention and correction of persons

 

charged with or convicted of criminal offenses.

 

     (d) "Offender eligibility criteria" means particular criminal

 

violations, state felony sentencing guidelines descriptors, and

 

offender characteristics developed by advisory boards and approved

 

by local units of government that identify the offenders suitable

 

for community corrections programs funded through the office of

 

community corrections.

 

     (e) "Offender target population" means felons or misdemeanants

 

who would likely be sentenced to imprisonment in a state

 

correctional facility or jail, who would not increase the risk to

 

the public safety, who have not demonstrated a pattern of violent

 

behavior, and who do not have criminal records that indicate a

 

pattern of violent offenses.

 

     (f) "Offender who would likely be sentenced to imprisonment"

 

means either of the following:

 

     (i) A felon or misdemeanant who receives a sentencing


 

disposition that appears to be in place of incarceration in a state

 

correctional facility or jail, according to historical local

 

sentencing patterns.

 

     (ii) A currently incarcerated felon or misdemeanant who is

 

granted early release from incarceration to a community corrections

 

program or who is granted early release from incarceration as a

 

result of a community corrections program.

 

     Sec. 410. (1) The funds included in part 1 for community

 

corrections comprehensive plans and services are to encourage the

 

development through technical assistance grants, implementation,

 

and operation of community corrections programs that serve as an

 

alternative to incarceration in a state facility or jail. The

 

comprehensive corrections plans shall include an explanation of how

 

the public safety will be maintained, the goals for the local

 

jurisdiction, offender target populations intended to be affected,

 

offender eligibility criteria for purposes outlined in the plan,

 

and how the plans will meet the following objectives, consistent

 

with section 8(4) of the community corrections act, 1988 PA 511,

 

MCL 791.408:

 

     (a) Reduce admissions to prison of nonviolent offenders who

 

would have otherwise received an active sentence, including

 

probation violators.

 

     (b) Improve the appropriate utilization of jail facilities,

 

the first priority of which is to open jail beds intended to house

 

otherwise prison-bound felons, and the second priority being to

 

appropriately utilize jail beds so that jail crowding does not

 

occur.


 

     (c) Open jail beds through the increase of pretrial release

 

options.

 

     (d) Reduce the readmission to prison of parole violators.

 

     (e) Reduce the admission or readmission to prison of

 

offenders, including probation violators and parole violators, for

 

substance abuse violations.

 

     (2) The award of community corrections comprehensive plans and

 

residential services funds shall be based on criteria that include,

 

but are not limited to, the prison commitment rate by category of

 

offenders, trends in prison commitment rates and jail utilization,

 

historical trends in community corrections program capacity and

 

program utilization, and the projected impact and outcome of annual

 

policies and procedures of programs on prison commitment rates and

 

jail utilization.

 

     (3) Funds awarded for residential services in part 1 shall

 

provide for a per diem reimbursement of not more than $47.50.

 

     Sec. 411. The comprehensive corrections plans shall also

 

include, where appropriate, descriptive information on the full

 

range of sanctions and services that are available and utilized

 

within the local jurisdiction and an explanation of how jail beds,

 

residential services, the special alternative incarceration

 

program, probation detention centers, the electronic monitoring

 

program for probationers, and treatment and rehabilitative services

 

will be utilized to support the objectives and priorities of the

 

comprehensive corrections plans and the purposes and priorities of

 

section 8(4) of the community corrections act, 1988 PA 511, MCL

 

791.408. The plans shall also include, where appropriate,


 

provisions that detail how the local communities plan to respond to

 

sentencing guidelines found in chapter XVII of the code of criminal

 

procedure, 1927 PA 175, MCL 777.1 to 777.69, and the use of the

 

county jail reimbursement program under section 414. The state

 

community corrections board shall encourage local community

 

corrections advisory boards to include in their comprehensive

 

corrections plans strategies to collaborate with local alcohol and

 

drug treatment agencies of the MDCH for the provision of alcohol

 

and drug screening, assessment, case management planning, and

 

delivery of treatment to alcohol- and drug-involved offenders,

 

including, but not limited to, probation and parole violators who

 

are at risk of revocation.

 

     Sec. 412. (1) As part of the March biannual report specified

 

in section 12(2) of the community corrections act, 1988 PA 511, MCL

 

791.412, that requires an analysis of the impact of that act on

 

prison admissions and jail utilization, the department shall submit

 

to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on

 

corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state

 

budget director the following information for each county and

 

counties consolidated for comprehensive corrections plans:

 

     (a) Approved technical assistance grants and comprehensive

 

corrections plans including each program and level of funding, the

 

utilization level of each program, and profile information of

 

enrolled offenders.

 

     (b) If federal funds are made available, the number of

 

participants funded, the number served, the number successfully

 

completing the program, and a summary of the program activity.


 

     (c) Status of the community corrections information system and

 

the jail population information system.

 

     (d) Data on residential services, including participant data,

 

participant sentencing guideline scores, program expenditures,

 

average length of stay, and bed utilization data.

 

     (e) Offender disposition data by sentencing guideline range,

 

by disposition type, number and percent statewide and by county,

 

current year, and comparisons to the previous 3 years.

 

     (2) The report required under subsection (1) shall include the

 

total funding allocated, program expenditures, required program

 

data, and year-to-date totals.

 

     Sec. 413. (1) The department shall identify and coordinate

 

information regarding the availability of and the demand for

 

community corrections programs, jail-based community corrections

 

programs, and basic state-required jail data.

 

     (2) The department is responsible for the collection,

 

analysis, and reporting of state-required jail data.

 

     (3) As a prerequisite to participation in the programs and

 

services offered through the department, counties shall provide

 

basic jail data to the department.

 

     Sec. 414. (1) The department shall administer a county jail

 

reimbursement program from the funds appropriated in part 1 for the

 

purpose of reimbursing counties for housing in jails felons who

 

otherwise would have been sentenced to prison.

 

     (2) The county jail reimbursement program shall reimburse

 

counties for housing and custody of convicted felons if the

 

conviction was for a crime committed on or after January 1, 1999


 

and 1 of the following applies:

 

     (a) The felon's sentencing guidelines recommended range upper

 

limit is more than 18 months, the felon's sentencing guidelines

 

recommended range lower limit is 12 months or less, the felon's

 

prior record variable score is 35 or more points, and the felon's

 

sentence is not for commission of a crime in crime class G or crime

 

class H under chapter XVII of the code of criminal procedure, 1927

 

PA 175, MCL 777.1 to 777.69.

 

     (b) The felon's minimum sentencing guidelines range minimum is

 

more than 12 months.

 

     (3) State reimbursement under this section for prisoner

 

housing and custody expenses per diverted offender shall be $43.50

 

per diem for up to a 1-year total.

 

     (4) From the funds appropriated in part 1 for the county jail

 

reimbursement program, the department shall conduct an ongoing

 

study to determine the impact of the new legislative sentencing

 

guidelines. The study shall analyze sentencing patterns of

 

jurisdictions as well as future patterns in order to determine and

 

quantify the population impact on prisons and jails of the new

 

guidelines as well as to identify and define felon or crime

 

characteristics or sentencing guidelines scores that indicate a

 

felon is a prison diversion. The department shall conduct a local

 

and statewide study for this purpose and provide periodic reports

 

regarding the status and findings of the study to the house and

 

senate appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the house and

 

senate fiscal agencies, and the state budget director.

 

     (5) The department, the state budget office, the Michigan


 

association of counties, and the Michigan sheriffs' association

 

shall review the periodic findings of the study required in

 

subsection (4) and, if appropriate, recommend modification of the

 

criteria for reimbursement contained in subsection (2) at meetings

 

convened by the chairs of the house and senate appropriations

 

subcommittees on corrections.

 

     (6) The department shall reimburse counties for offenders in

 

jail based upon the reimbursement eligibility criteria in place on

 

the date the offender was originally sentenced for the reimbursable

 

offense.

 

     (7) County jail reimbursement program expenditures shall not

 

exceed the amount appropriated in part 1 for the county jail

 

reimbursement program. Payments to counties under the county jail

 

reimbursement program shall be made in the order in which properly

 

documented requests for reimbursements are received. A request

 

shall be considered to be properly documented if it meets MDOC

 

requirements for documentation. The department shall by October 15,

 

2008 distribute the documentation requirements to all counties.

 

     Sec. 415. (1) As a condition of receipt of the funds

 

appropriated in part 1 for community corrections plans and services

 

and residential services, the department shall only award those

 

funds requested under a properly prepared and approved

 

comprehensive corrections plan submitted under section 8 of the

 

community corrections act, 1988 PA 511, MCL 791.408, or directly

 

applied for under section 10 of the community corrections act, 1988

 

PA 511, MCL 791.410.

 

     (2) The department shall only halt funding for an entity


 

funded under section 8 of the community corrections act, 1988 PA

 

511, MCL 791.408, in instances of substantial noncompliance during

 

the period covered by the plan.

 

     Sec. 416. (1) Funds included in part 1 for the felony drunk

 

driver jail reduction and community treatment program are

 

appropriated for and may be expended for any of the following

 

purposes:

 

     (a) To increase availability of treatment options to reduce

 

drunk driving and drunk driving-related deaths by addressing the

 

alcohol addiction of felony drunk drivers who otherwise likely

 

would be sentenced to jail or a combination of jail and other

 

sanctions.

 

     (b) To divert from jail sentences or to reduce the length of

 

jail sentences for felony drunk drivers who otherwise would have

 

been sentenced to jail and whose recommended minimum sentence

 

ranges under sentencing guidelines established under chapter XVII

 

of the code of criminal procedure, 1927 PA 175, MCL 777.1 to

 

777.69, have upper limits of 18 months or less, through funding

 

programs that may be used in lieu of incarceration and that

 

increase the likelihood of rehabilitation.

 

     (c) To provide a policy and funding framework to make

 

additional jail space available for housing convicted felons whose

 

recommended minimum sentence ranges under sentencing guidelines

 

established under chapter XVII of the code of criminal procedure,

 

1927 PA 175, MCL 777.1 to 777.69, have lower limits of 12 months or

 

less and who likely otherwise would be sentenced to prison, with

 

the aim of enabling counties to meet or exceed amounts received


 

through the county jail reimbursement program during fiscal year

 

2002-2003 and reducing the numbers of felons sentenced to prison.

 

     (2) Expenditure of funds included in part 1 for the felony

 

drunk driver jail reduction and community treatment program shall

 

be by grant awards consistent with standards developed by a

 

committee of the state community corrections advisory board. The

 

chairperson of the committee shall be the board member representing

 

county sheriffs. Remaining members of the committee shall be

 

appointed by the chairperson of the board.

 

     (3) In developing annual standards, the committee shall

 

consult with interested agencies and associations. Standards

 

developed by the committee shall include application criteria,

 

performance objectives and measures, funding allocations, and

 

allowable uses of the funds, consistent with the purposes specified

 

in this section.

 

     (4) Allowable uses of the funds shall include reimbursing

 

counties for transportation, treatment costs, and housing felony

 

drunk drivers during a period of assessment for treatment and case

 

planning. Reimbursements for housing during the assessment process

 

shall be at the rate of $43.50 per day per offender, up to a

 

maximum of 5 days per offender.

 

     (5) The standards developed by the committee shall assign each

 

county a maximum funding allocation based on the amount the county

 

received under the county jail reimbursement program in fiscal year

 

2001-2002 for housing felony drunk drivers whose recommended

 

minimum sentence ranges under the sentencing guidelines described

 

in subsection (1)(c) had upper limits of 18 months or less.


 

     (6) Awards of funding under this section shall be provided

 

consistent with the local comprehensive corrections plans developed

 

under the community corrections act, 1988 PA 511, MCL 791.401 to

 

791.414. Funds awarded under this section may be used in

 

conjunction with funds awarded under grant programs established

 

under that act. Due to the need for felony drunk drivers to be

 

transitioned from county jails to community treatment services, it

 

is the intent of the legislature that local units of government

 

utilize funds received under this section to support county sheriff

 

departments.

 

     (7) As used in this section, "felony drunk driver" means a

 

felon convicted of operating a motor vehicle under the influence of

 

intoxicating liquor or a controlled substance, or both, third or

 

subsequent offense, under section 625(9)(c) of the Michigan vehicle

 

code, 1949 PA 300, MCL 257.625, or its predecessor statute,

 

punishable as a felony.

 

     Sec. 417. (1) By April 1, 2009, the department shall report to

 

the members of the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on

 

corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state

 

budget director on each of the following programs from the previous

 

fiscal year:

 

     (a) The county jail reimbursement program.

 

     (b) The felony drunk driver jail reduction and community

 

treatment program.

 

     (c) The alternatives to prison jail and treatment programs.

 

     (d) Any new initiatives to control prison population growth

 

funded or proposed to be funded under part 1.


 

     (2) For each program listed under subsection (1), the report

 

under subsection (1) shall include information on each of the

 

following:

 

     (a) Program objectives and outcome measures.

 

     (b) Expenditures by location.

 

     (c) The impact on jail utilization.

 

     (d) The impact on prison admissions.

 

     (e) Other information relevant to an evaluation of the

 

program.

 

     Sec. 418. (1) The department shall ensure that each prisoner

 

make all reasonable efforts to obtain the documents necessary to

 

obtain a state operator's license or state identification card

 

prior to a prisoner's discharge or parole hearing. The process for

 

prisoners to acquire this documentation shall be part of the

 

department's operating procedure.

 

     (2) The department shall cooperate with MDCH to maintain a

 

process by which prisoners can obtain their birth certificates. By

 

April 1, 2009, the department shall report to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate and house

 

fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on the process

 

developed under this section.

 

     Sec. 419. (1) The department shall provide weekly electronic

 

mail reports to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees

 

on corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state

 

budget director on prisoner, parolee, and probationer populations

 

by facility, and prison capacities.

 

     (2) The department shall provide monthly electronic mail


 

reports to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on

 

corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state

 

budget director. By November 1, 2008, the department shall provide

 

monthly reports for March 2006 through September 2007. The reports

 

shall include information on end-of-month prisoner populations in

 

county jails, the net operating capacity according to the most

 

recent certification report, identified by date, and end-of-month

 

data, year-to-date data, and comparisons to the prior year for the

 

following:

 

     (a) Community residential program populations, separated by

 

centers and electronic monitoring.

 

     (b) Parole populations.

 

     (c) Probation populations, with identification of the number

 

in special alternative incarceration.

 

     (d) Prison and camp populations, with separate identification

 

of the number in special alternative incarceration and the number

 

of lifers.

 

     (e) Parole board activity, including the numbers and

 

percentages of parole grants and parole denials.

 

     (f) Prisoner exits, identifying transfers to community

 

placement, paroles from prisons and camps, paroles from community

 

placement, total movements to parole, prison intake, prisoner

 

deaths, prisoners discharging on the maximum sentence, and other

 

prisoner exits.

 

     (g) Prison intake and returns, including probation violators,

 

new court commitments, violators with new sentences, escaper new

 

sentences, total prison intake, returns from court with additional


 

sentences, community placement returns, technical parole violator

 

returns, and total returns to prison and camp.

 

     Sec. 420. The department shall report to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate and house

 

judiciary committees, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the

 

state budget director on the status of the department's response to

 

the fiscal year 2007-2008 performance audits by the office of the

 

auditor general on the department's staffing, health care services,

 

food service and prisoner transportation, mental health care

 

services, and pharmaceuticals. The department shall provide the

 

reports within 30 days after each audit's official release date.

 

     Sec. 421. Of the funds appropriated in part 1, $100,000.00 is

 

appropriated for the purpose of providing an interdepartmental

 

grant to the Michigan state police for the purpose of providing

 

grants for training teams of law enforcement officers and mental

 

health treatment providers. The teams shall be trained in effective

 

and safe ways of assisting people with mental illness during law

 

enforcement contacts and directing people with mental illness to

 

treatment programs. It is the intent of the legislature that mental

 

health awareness training be incorporated into continuing education

 

for all law enforcement officers in the state.

 

     Sec. 422. It is the intent of the legislature that MPRI

 

programs become standard operating procedure in the department by

 

the end of fiscal year 2008-2009.

 

     Sec. 423. (1) The department shall design and implement a

 

pilot project that has as its goal the reduction of criminal

 

behavior and of returns to prison of female technical parole


 

violators. The pilot project shall be of a design that is based on

 

evidence-based practices proven in other jurisdictions to reduce

 

criminal behavior.

 

     (2) By May 1, 2009, the department shall report to the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on the

 

extent to which the program described in subsection (1) has been

 

successful, as evidenced by a reduction in the number of female

 

technical parole violator returns to prison compared to prior year

 

returns, and the extent to which any of the parolees enrolled in

 

the pilot project have either been convicted of new offenses or

 

have new pending charges upon return compared to paroles with

 

similar characteristics.

 

     Sec. 424. (1) Offenders entering prison who are enrolled in

 

Medicaid shall have their Medicaid benefits suspended while in

 

prison. The department shall assist prisoners who may be eligible

 

for Medicaid benefits after release from prison with the Medicaid

 

enrollment process 6 months before the prisoners' release from

 

prison.

 

     (2) The department, in consultation with MDCH, shall prepare a

 

cost-benefit analysis on the impact of suspending rather than

 

terminating the Medicaid status of a recipient with serious mental

 

illness or serious emotional disturbance who becomes incarcerated

 

in a state correctional facility. The department shall provide a

 

written copy of the analysis and recommendations to the senate and

 

house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate and

 

house appropriations subcommittees on community health, the senate


 

and house fiscal agencies, the governor, and the state budget

 

director not later than April 1, 2009.

 

 

 

OPERATIONS AND SUPPORT ADMINISTRATION

 

     Sec. 501. From the funds appropriated in part 1 for

 

prosecutorial and detainer expenses, the department shall reimburse

 

counties for housing and custody of parole violators and offenders

 

being returned by the department from community placement who are

 

available for return to institutional status and for prisoners who

 

volunteer for placement in a county jail.

 

     Sec. 502. Funds included in part 1 for the sheriffs'

 

coordinating and training office are appropriated for and may be

 

expended to defray costs of continuing education, certification,

 

recertification, decertification, and training of local corrections

 

officers, the personnel and administrative costs of the sheriffs'

 

coordinating and training office, the local corrections officers

 

advisory board, and the sheriffs' coordinating and training council

 

under the local corrections officers training act, 2003 PA 125, MCL

 

791.531 to 791.546.

 

     Sec. 504. Of the funds appropriated in part 1, $50,000.00 is

 

appropriated to provide an interdepartmental grant to the judiciary

 

for use of the judicial data warehouse by department employees.

 

     Sec. 505. The department shall train all custody staff in

 

effective and safe ways of handling prisoners with mental illness

 

and referring prisoners to mental health treatment programs. Mental

 

health awareness training shall be incorporated into the training

 

of new custody staff.


 

 

 

FIELD OPERATIONS ADMINISTRATION

 

     Sec. 601. From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 

department shall conduct a statewide caseload audit of field

 

agents. The audit shall address public protection issues and assess

 

the ability of the field agents to complete their professional

 

duties. The results of the audit shall be submitted to the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections and the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget office by

 

February 15, 2009.

 

     Sec. 602. (1) Of the amount appropriated in part 1 for field

 

operations, a sufficient amount shall be allocated for the

 

community service work program and shall be used for salaries and

 

wages and fringe benefit costs of community service coordinators

 

employed by the department to supervise offenders participating in

 

work crew assignments. Funds shall also be used to cover motor

 

transport division rates on state vehicles used to transport

 

offenders to community service work project sites.

 

     (2) The community service work program shall provide offenders

 

with community service work of tangible benefit to a community

 

while fulfilling court-ordered community service work sanctions and

 

other postconviction obligations.

 

     (3) As used in this section, "community service work" means

 

work performed by an offender in an unpaid position with a

 

nonprofit or tax-supported or government agency for a specified

 

number of hours of work or service within a given time period.

 

     Sec. 603. (1) All prisoners, probationers, and parolees


 

involved with the electronic tether program shall reimburse the

 

department for costs associated with their participation in the

 

program. The department may require community service work

 

reimbursement as a means of payment for those able-bodied

 

individuals unable to pay for the costs of the equipment.

 

     (2) Program participant contributions and local community

 

tether program reimbursement for the electronic tether program

 

appropriated in part 1 are related to program expenditures and may

 

be used to offset expenditures for this purpose.

 

     (3) Included in the appropriation in part 1 is adequate

 

funding to implement the community tether program to be

 

administered by the department. The community tether program is

 

intended to provide sentencing judges and county sheriffs in

 

coordination with local community corrections advisory boards

 

access to the state's electronic tether program to reduce prison

 

admissions and improve local jail utilization. The department shall

 

determine the appropriate distribution of the tether units

 

throughout the state based upon locally developed comprehensive

 

corrections plans under the community corrections act, 1988 PA 511,

 

MCL 791.401 to 791.414.

 

     (4) For a fee determined by the department, the department

 

shall provide counties with the tether equipment, replacement

 

parts, administrative oversight of the equipment's operation,

 

notification of violators, and periodic reports regarding county

 

program participants. Counties are responsible for tether equipment

 

installation and service. For an additional fee as determined by

 

the department, the department shall provide staff to install and


 

service the equipment. Counties are responsible for the

 

coordination and apprehension of program violators.

 

     (5) Any county with tether charges outstanding over 60 days

 

shall be considered in violation of the community tether program

 

agreement and lose access to the program.

 

     Sec. 604. Community-placement prisoners and parolees shall

 

reimburse the department for the total costs of the program. As an

 

alternative method of payment, the department may develop a

 

community service work schedule for those individuals unable to

 

meet reimbursement requirements established by the department.

 

     Sec. 605. (1) Of the funds appropriated in part 1, $980,000.00

 

is appropriated to provide an interdepartmental grant to the

 

judiciary. The funds shall be utilized by the state court

 

administrative office to administer a pilot program targeting

 

nondangerous offenders who are at significant risk of committing

 

additional crimes. The pilot program shall include assessment,

 

treatment, and accountability, with the goal of reducing

 

expenditures for long-term incarceration.

 

     (2) The department shall participate in the pilot program

 

described in subsection (1). The circuit judge assigned to each

 

pilot project site shall select 1 or more circuit court probation

 

officers to supervise the caseload of the circuit court project.

 

Although the probation officer shall remain an employee of the

 

department, he or she shall report directly to the circuit judge.

 

     (3) The Michigan judicial institute shall provide appropriate

 

training for all personnel involved in the pilot program described

 

in this section.


Senate Bill No. 1095 as amended March 26, 2008

 

     Sec. 606. It is the intent of the legislature that the

 

department shall ensure that parolees and probationers may timely

 

contact their parole or probation agents and maintain procedures

 

that preclude any necessity for an offender to have access to an

 

agent's home telephone number or other personal information

 

pertaining to the agent.

<<Sec. 607. The department shall ensure that all parole or probation agent supervisors and parole or probation agent managers are assigned a caseload.>>

     Sec. 608. By April 1, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

the use of GPS electronic monitoring. At a minimum, the report

 

shall include all of the following:

 

     (a) Details on the failure rate of parolees for whom GPS

 

tether is utilized, including the number and rate of parolee

 

technical violations, including specifying failures due to

 

committing a new crime that is uncharged but leads to parole

 

termination, and the number and rate of parolee violators with new

 

sentences.

 

     (b) Information on the factors considered in determining

 

whether an offender is placed on active GPS tether, passive GPS

 

tether, radio frequency tether, or some combination of these or

 

other types of electronic monitoring.

 

     (c) Monthly data on the number of offenders on active GPS

 

tether, passive GPS tether, radio frequency tether, and any other

 

type of tether.

 

     Sec. 609. By April 1, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on


 

the use of kiosk reporting stations. At a minimum, the report shall

 

include all of the following:

 

     (a) Factors considered in determining whether an offender is

 

assigned to report at a kiosk.

 

     (b) Information on the location, costs, safety features, and

 

other features of kiosks used for offender reporting.

 

     (c) Information on pilot program outcome measures.

 

     (d) An evaluation of the kiosk reporting pilot program,

 

including any need for improvement and an assessment of the

 

potential for expanded use of kiosk reporting stations.

 

     Sec. 611. The department shall prepare by April 1, 2009

 

individual reports for the community re-entry program, the

 

electronic tether program, and the special alternative to

 

incarceration program. The reports shall be submitted to the house

 

and senate appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the house

 

and senate fiscal agencies, and the state budget director. Each

 

program's report shall include information on all of the following:

 

     (a) Monthly new participants by type of offender. Community

 

re-entry program participants shall be categorized by reason for

 

placement. For technical rule violators, the report shall sort

 

offenders by length of time since release from prison, by the most

 

recent violation, and by the number of violations occurring since

 

release from prison.

 

     (b) Monthly participant unsuccessful terminations, including

 

cause.

 

     (c) Number of successful terminations.

 

     (d) End month population by facility/program.


 

     (e) Average length of placement.

 

     (f) Return to prison statistics.

 

     (g) Description of each program location or locations,

 

capacity, and staffing.

 

     (h) Sentencing guideline scores and actual sentence statistics

 

for participants, if applicable.

 

     (i) Comparison with prior year statistics.

 

     (j) Analysis of the impact on prison admissions and jail

 

utilization and the cost effectiveness of the program.

 

     Sec. 612. (1) The department shall review and revise as

 

necessary policy proposals that provide alternatives to prison for

 

offenders being sentenced to prison as a result of technical

 

probation violations and technical parole violations. To the extent

 

the department has insufficient policies or resources to affect the

 

continued increase in prison commitments among these offender

 

populations, the department shall explore other policy options to

 

allow for program alternatives, including department or OCC-funded

 

programs, local level programs, and programs available through

 

private agencies that may be used as prison alternatives for these

 

offenders.

 

     (2) To the extent policies or programs described in subsection

 

(1) are used, developed, or contracted for, the department may

 

request that funds appropriated in part 1 be transferred under

 

section 393(2) of the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431, MCL

 

18.1393, for their operation.

 

     (3) The department shall continue to utilize parole violator

 

processing guidelines that require parole agents to utilize all


 

available appropriate community-based, nonincarcerative postrelease

 

sanctions and services when appropriate. The department shall

 

periodically evaluate such guidelines for modification, in response

 

to emerging information from the pilot projects for substance abuse

 

treatment provided under this act and applicable provisions of

 

prior budget acts for the department.

 

     (4) The department shall provide monthly reports to the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on the

 

number of all parolees returned to prison and probationers

 

sentenced to prison for either a technical violation or new

 

sentence during the preceding calendar month. The reports shall

 

include the following information each for probationers, parolees

 

after their first parole, and parolees who have been paroled more

 

than once:

 

     (a) The numbers of parole and probation violators returned to

 

or sent to prison for a new crime with a comparison of original

 

versus new offenses by major offense type: assaultive,

 

nonassaultive, drug, and sex.

 

     (b) The numbers of parole and probation violators returned to

 

or sent to prison for a technical violation and the type of

 

violation, including, but not limited to, zero gun tolerance and

 

substance abuse violations. For parole technical rule violators,

 

the report shall list violations by type, by length of time since

 

release from prison, by the most recent violation, and by the

 

number of violations occurring since release from prison.

 

     (c) The educational history of those offenders, including how


 

many had a GED or high school diploma prior to incarceration in

 

prison, how many received a GED while in prison, and how many

 

received a vocational certificate while in prison.

 

     (d) The number of offenders who participated in the MPRI

 

versus the number of those who did not.

 

     (e) The unduplicated number of offenders who participated in

 

substance abuse treatment programs, mental health treatment

 

programs, or both, while in prison, itemized by diagnosis.

 

 

 

CONSENT DECREES

 

     Sec. 701. Funding appropriated in part 1 for consent decree

 

line items is appropriated into separate control accounts created

 

for each line item. Funding in each control account shall be

 

distributed as necessary into separate accounts created for the

 

purpose of separately identifying costs and expenditures associated

 

with each consent decree.

 

 

 

HEALTH CARE

 

     Sec. 801. The department shall not expend funds appropriated

 

under part 1 for any surgery, procedure, or treatment to provide or

 

maintain a prisoner's sex change unless it is determined medically

 

necessary by the chief medical officer of the department.

 

     Sec. 802. (1) As a condition of expenditure of the funds

 

appropriated in part 1, the department shall provide the senate and

 

house of representatives appropriations subcommittees on

 

corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state

 

budget director with all of the following:


 

     (a) Quarterly reports on physical and mental health care

 

detailing the average number of days between a prisoner's diagnosis

 

and commencement of treatment for that diagnosis, quarterly and

 

fiscal year-to-date expenditures itemized by vendor, allocations,

 

status of payments from contractors to vendors, and projected year-

 

end expenditures from accounts for prisoner health care, mental

 

health care, pharmaceutical services, and durable medical

 

equipment.

 

     (b) Not more than 1 week after receiving the final findings

 

and recommendations of the national commission on correctional

 

health care, a report with regard to the following:

 

     (i) Bureau of health care services organizational structure,

 

administration, and management.

 

     (ii) Timeliness, appropriateness, and quality of the following

 

services:

 

     (A) Clinical services provided through the department,

 

including nursing, dental, and clinical support services.

 

     (B) Clinical psychological services provided through the

 

department, including intake processing, assaultive offender

 

program, and sex offender treatment program.

 

     (C) Mental health services to treat the seriously mentally ill

 

provided through the department of community health, including

 

inpatient care, rehabilitative treatment, residential treatment,

 

crisis stabilization, and outpatient mental health treatment.

 

     (D) Primary on-site medical services, on-site inpatient

 

medical services, specialty services, and utilization review

 

procedures provided by the state's health care contractors.


 

     (2) It is the intent of the legislature that, in the interest

 

of providing the most efficient and cost-effective delivery of

 

health care, local health care providers shall be considered and

 

given the opportunity to competitively bid as vendors under future

 

managed care contracts.

 

     Sec. 804. (1) The department shall report quarterly to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

prisoner health care utilization. The report shall include the

 

number of inpatient hospital days, outpatient visits, and emergency

 

room visits in the previous quarter and since October 1, 2007, by

 

facility.

 

     (2) By April 1, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

prisoners receiving off-site inpatient medical care that would have

 

received care in a state correctional facility if beds were

 

available. The report shall include the number of prisoners

 

receiving off-site inpatient medical care and average length of

 

stay in an off-site facility during the period they would have

 

received care in a state correctional facility if beds were

 

available, by month and correctional facilities administration

 

region.

 

     Sec. 805. The bureau of health care services shall develop

 

information on Hepatitis C and HIV prevention and the risks

 

associated with exposure to Hepatitis C and HIV. The health care

 

providers shall disseminate this information verbally and in


 

writing to each prisoner at the health screening and full health

 

appraisal conducted at admissions, at the annual health care

 

screening 30 days before or after a prisoner's birthday, and prior

 

to release to the community by parole, transfer to community

 

residential placement, or discharge on the maximum sentence.

 

     Sec. 806. (1) From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 

department shall require a Hepatitis C antibody test and an HIV

 

test for each prisoner prior to release to the community by parole,

 

transfer to community residential placement, or discharge on the

 

maximum sentence. The department shall require an HIV test and a

 

Hepatitis C risk factor screening for each prisoner at the health

 

screening at admissions. If Hepatitis C risk factors are

 

identified, the department shall offer the prisoner a Hepatitis C

 

antibody test. An explanation of results of the tests shall be

 

provided confidentially to the prisoner, and if appropriate based

 

on the test results, the prisoner shall also be provided a

 

recommendation to seek follow-up medical attention.

 

     (2) By March 1, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on community health,

 

the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director

 

on the number of offenders tested and the number of offenders

 

testing positive for HIV, the Hepatitis C antibody, or both at

 

prison admission and parole, transfer to community residential

 

placement, or discharge on the maximum sentence. The department

 

shall keep records of those offenders testing positive for HIV, the

 

Hepatitis C antibody, or both at prison admission, parole, transfer


 

to community residential placement, and discharge. These records

 

shall clearly state the date each test was performed.

 

     (3) As a condition of expenditure of the funds appropriated in

 

part 1, the department shall keep records of the following:

 

     (a) The number of offenders testing positive for the Hepatitis

 

C antibody who do not receive treatment, by reason for not

 

participating.

 

     (b) The number of offenders achieving a sustained viral

 

response from Hepatitis C treatment.

 

     (c) Cost and duration of treatment by offender.

 

     Sec. 807. The department shall ensure that all medications for

 

a prisoner be transported with that prisoner when the prisoner is

 

transferred from 1 correctional facility to another. Prisoners

 

being released shall be provided with a supply of medication to

 

allow for continuity of care in the community.

 

     Sec. 808. There are sufficient funds and FTEs appropriated in

 

part 1 to provide a full complement of nurses for clinical

 

complexes working regular pay hours, and it is the intent of the

 

legislature that sufficient nurses be hired or retained to limit

 

the use of overtime other-than-holiday pay.

 

     Sec. 809. The department, in conjunction with efforts to

 

implement the MPRI, shall cooperate with the MDCH to share data and

 

information as they relate to prisoners being released who are HIV

 

positive or positive for the Hepatitis C antibody. By April 1,

 

2009, the department shall report to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate and house

 

fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on all of the


 

following:

 

     (a) Programs and the location of programs implemented as a

 

result of the work under this section.

 

     (b) The programs' potential impact on the state budget.

 

     (c) The number of prisoners released to the community by

 

parole, discharge on the maximum sentence, or transfer to community

 

residential placement who are HIV positive, positive for the

 

Hepatitis C antibody, or both.

 

     (d) The number of offenders successfully referred to the local

 

public health department, by county, and the number of parolees

 

participating in treatment for Hepatitis C, HIV, or both after 6

 

months in the community, by county.

 

     Sec. 811. The department shall provide to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate and house

 

fiscal agencies, and the state budget director a copy of the bureau

 

of health care services quality assurance report not more than 1

 

week after its completion, but not later than September 30, 2009.

 

The report shall include recommendations for quality improvements

 

and a plan to implement those recommendations.

 

 

 

CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES ADMINISTRATION

 

     Sec. 901. The department shall make all department facilities

 

and camps tobacco-free no later than March 1, 2009.

 

     Sec. 902. From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 

department shall allocate sufficient funds to develop a pilot

 

children's visitation program. The pilot program shall teach

 

parenting skills and arrange for day visitation at these facilities


 

for parents and their children, except for the families of

 

prisoners convicted of a crime involving criminal sexual conduct in

 

which the victim was less than 18 years of age or involving child

 

abuse.

 

     Sec. 903. Except as otherwise provided in this section, the

 

department shall prohibit prisoners' access to or use of the

 

Internet or any similar system. Under adequate supervision and with

 

security precautions that ensure appropriate computer use by

 

prisoners, the department may allow a prisoner access to or use of

 

the Internet for the purposes of educational programming,

 

employment training, job searches, or other Internet-based programs

 

and services consistent with programming objectives, efficient

 

operations, and the safety and security of the institution.

 

     Sec. 904. Any department employee who, in the course of his or

 

her job, is determined by a physician to have had a potential

 

exposure to the Hepatitis B virus, shall receive a Hepatitis B

 

vaccination upon request.

 

     Sec. 905. (1) The inmate housing fund shall be used for the

 

custody, treatment, clinical, and administrative costs associated

 

with the housing of prisoners other than those specifically

 

budgeted for elsewhere in this act. Funding in the inmate housing

 

fund is appropriated into a separate control account. Funding in

 

the control account shall be distributed as necessary into separate

 

accounts created to separately identify costs for specific

 

purposes.

 

     (2) Quarterly reports on all expenditures from the inmate

 

housing fund shall be submitted by the department to the state


Senate Bill No. 1095 as amended March 26, 2008

 

budget director, the senate and house appropriations subcommittees

 

on corrections, and the senate and house fiscal agencies.

 

     Sec. 906. (1) The department shall establish a uniform rate to

 

be paid by public and private agencies that benefit from public

 

work services provided by special alternative incarceration

 

participants and prisoners.

 

     (2) It is the intent of the legislature that to the degree

 

consistent with public safety and the safety and security of the

 

institutions, public works projects be continued at the level

 

provided in 2006 PA 331.

 

     (3) It is the intent of the legislature that public works fee

 

schedules be revised to halve the rates in effect on September 30,

 

2008.

<<(4) The department shall maintain a list of the number of prisoners available for public works crews at each department facility, and the number of prisoners necessary to fulfill current public works contracts at each department facility. The department shall place the list on a publicly accessible Internet site and update the list weekly.>>

     Sec. 907. The department shall report monthly to the senate

 

and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate

 

and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

academic/vocational programs. The report shall provide information

 

relevant to an assessment of the department's academic and

 

vocational programs, including, but not limited to, the following:

 

     (a) The number of instructors and the number of instructor

 

vacancies, by program and facility.

 

     (b) The number of prisoners enrolled in each program, the

 

number of prisoners completing each program, the number of

 

prisoners who fail each program, the number of prisoners who do not

 

complete each program and the reason for not completing the

 

program, the number of prisoners transferred to another facility

 

while enrolled in a program and the reason for transfer, the number


 

of prisoners enrolled who are repeating the program by reason, and

 

the number of prisoners on waiting lists for each program, all

 

itemized by facility.

 

     (c) The steps the department has undertaken to improve

 

programs, track records, accommodate transfers and prisoners with

 

health care needs, and reduce waiting lists.

 

     (d) The number of prisoners not paroled at their earliest

 

release date due to lack of a GED, and the reason the prisoners do

 

not have their GED.

 

     (e) The number of prisoners paroled without a GED.

 

     (f) An explanation of the value and purpose of each program,

 

e.g., to improve employability, reduce recidivism, reduce prisoner

 

idleness, or some combination of these and other factors.

 

     (g) An identification of program outcomes for each academic

 

and vocational program.

 

     (h) An explanation of the department's plans for academic and

 

vocational programs.

 

     Sec. 908. (1) By February 1, 2009, the department shall report

 

to the senate and house appropriations subcommittees on

 

corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state

 

budget director, the percent of offenders included in the prison

 

population intake for fiscal years 2006-2007 and 2007-2008 who have

 

a high school diploma or a GED.

 

     (2) By February 1, 2009, the department shall provide the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director

 

with statistical reports on the efficacy of both department-


 

provided prison general education and vocational education programs

 

in reducing offender recidivism rates. At a minimum, the report

 

should compare the recidivism rates of the following groups of

 

offenders:

 

     (a) Offenders who completed a GED while in prison and

 

participated in the MPRI.

 

     (b) Offenders who completed a GED while in prison but did not

 

participate in the MPRI.

 

     (c) Offenders who completed a vocational education program

 

while in prison and participated in the MPRI.

 

     (d) Offenders who completed a vocational education program

 

while in prison but did not participate in the MPRI.

 

     Sec. 909. As a condition of expending funds appropriated for

 

academic/vocational programs under part 1, the department shall by

 

January 31, 2009 provide a plan to increase certification rates

 

among prisoners enrolled in GED programs at correctional facilities

 

to the members of the senate and house appropriations committees,

 

the senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget

 

director. The plan shall include detailed information on

 

certification rates for the most recent 5-year period, a comparison

 

with prisoner certification rates in other states and a national

 

average, and details on how the department plans to improve

 

certification rates.

 

     Sec. 910. The department shall allow the Michigan Braille

 

transcribing fund program to operate at its current location. The

 

donation of the building by the Michigan Braille transcribing fund

 

at the G. Robert Cotton correctional facility in Jackson is


 

acknowledged and appreciated. The department shall continue to

 

encourage the Michigan Braille transcribing fund to produce high-

 

quality materials for use by the visually impaired.

 

     Sec. 911. (1) From the appropriations in part 1, the

 

department shall ensure that all prisoner activities shall include

 

the presence of a sufficient number of correctional officers needed

 

to maintain the safety and security of the institution.

 

     (2) By February 1, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director the

 

number of critical incidents occurring each month by type and the

 

number and severity of assaults occurring each month at each

 

facility during calendar year 2008.

 

     Sec. 912. The department shall report to the senate and house

 

appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the senate and house

 

fiscal agencies, and the state budget director by April 1, 2009 on

 

the ratio of correctional officers to prisoners for each

 

correctional institution, the ratio of shift command staff to line

 

custody staff, and the ratio of noncustody institutional staff to

 

prisoners for each correctional institution.

 

     Sec. 913. The department shall develop and maintain a

 

statewide waiting list for offenders referred for assessment for

 

the assaultive offender program for parole eligibility and, if

 

possible, shall transfer prisoners into facilities where assaultive

 

offender programs are available in order to facilitate timely

 

participation and completion prior to parole eligibility hearings.

 

Nothing in this section should be deemed to make parole denial


 

appealable in court.

 

     Sec. 914. Funds appropriated in part 1 for transportation are

 

appropriated for costs incurred by the department in transporting

 

offenders. It is the intent of the legislature that costs of

 

offender transportation be met through expenditure of the line item

 

for transportation, and that any costs in excess of the amount

 

expressly appropriated for transportation be met solely through

 

transfers into that line item under section 393(2) of the

 

management and budget act, 1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1393.

 

     Sec. 915. Funds appropriated in part 1 for prison food service

 

are appropriated for costs incurred by the department in providing

 

food to prisoners, to department employees as provided by

 

collective bargaining agreements, and to governmental agencies as

 

provided by interagency agreements and contracts. It is the intent

 

of the legislature that costs of prison food service be met through

 

expenditure of the line item for prison food service, and that any

 

costs in excess of the amount expressly appropriated for prison

 

food service be met solely through transfers into that line item

 

under section 393(2) of the management and budget act, 1984 PA 431,

 

MCL 18.1393.

 

     Sec. 916. From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 

department shall allocate $100,000.00 for the acquisition of stab-

 

proof vests, contingent on entering into a contract for the

 

construction or manufacture of stab-proof vests.

 

     Sec. 917. From the funds appropriated in part 1, the

 

department shall allocate $100,000.00 for evidence-based pilot

 

programs that change offenders' behaviors, values, beliefs, and


 

attitudes toward victims and the community.

 

     Sec. 918. Following receipt of an auditor general performance

 

audit on offender transportation, the department, in conjunction

 

with the department of management and budget, shall issue a request

 

for information on the possible bidding of all offender

 

transportation services. State employees shall be given the

 

opportunity to respond to a request for information on offender

 

transportation services. Any response to the request for

 

information shall include an explanation of how savings of at least

 

5% over existing costs of offender transportation would be

 

realized.

 

     Sec. 919. Following receipt of an auditor general performance

 

audit on prison food service, the department, in conjunction with

 

the department of management and budget, shall issue a request for

 

information on the possible bidding of all prison food service.

 

State employees shall be given the opportunity to respond to a

 

request for information on prison food service. Any response to the

 

request for information shall include an explanation of how savings

 

of at least 5% over existing costs of prison food service would be

 

realized.

 

     Sec. 920. The department shall make every effort to operate a

 

garden or horticultural operation at each correctional facility,

 

where practical, in order to provide food for correctional

 

facilities and not-for-profit organizations.

 

     Sec. 922. It is the intent of the legislature that all

 

prisoners work 40 hours per week in the correctional facility, as

 

part of a public works crew or in private enterprise, or


Senate Bill No. 1095 as amended March 26, 2008

 

participate in vocational or training programs. Prisoners may be

 

enrolled in GED or education programs in combination with

 

employment. Prisoners not employed shall be enrolled in GED or

 

other educational programs for not less than 20 hours per week.

 

This section does not apply to prisoners classified in level V or

 

administrative segregation.

 

     Sec. 923. The department shall cooperate with the department

 

of education to evaluate the feasibility of local school districts

 

providing education programming to targeted prisoners under the age

 

of 20 who have not received a high school diploma. By June 1, 2009,

 

the department shall report to the senate and house appropriations

 

subcommittees on corrections, the senate and house fiscal agencies,

 

and the state budget director on any plans or evaluations developed

 

under this section.

 

     Sec. 924. The department shall evaluate all prisoners at

 

intake for substance abuse disorders, developmental disorders, and

 

serious mental illness. <<

 

>>Prisoners with

 

serious mental illness <<

 

>>shall not be confined in administrative segregation<<

due to behavior that is symptomatic of serious mental illness>>.

 

Under the supervision of a mental health professional, a prisoner

 

with serious mental illness may be secluded in a therapeutic

 

environment for the safety of the prisoner or others. A prisoner in

 

seclusion shall be evaluated every 12 hours by a mental health

 

professional in order to remain in seclusion. As used in this

 

section:

 

     (a) "Administrative segregation" means confinement for


Senate Bill No. 1095 as amended March 26, 2008

 

maintenance of order or discipline to a cell or room apart from

 

accommodations provided for inmates who are participating in

 

programs of the facility.

 

     (b) "Serious mental illness" means that term as defined in

 

section 100d(3) of the mental health code, 1974 PA 328, MCL

 

330.1100d.

 

     Sec. 925. By March 1, 2009, the department shall report to the

 

senate and house appropriations subcommittees on corrections, the

 

senate and house fiscal agencies, and the state budget director on

 

the number of prisoners in administrative segregation <<between October

1, 2003 and September 30, 2008>>, and the

 

number of prisoners in administrative segregation <<between October 1,

2003 and September 30, 2008>> who at any time

 

during the current or prior prison term were diagnosed with serious

 

mental illness <<or have a developmental disorder>> and the number of

days each of the prisoners with

 

serious mental illness <<or a developmental disorder>> have been confined

to administrative

 

segregation. As used in this section:

 

     (a) "Administrative segregation" means confinement for

 

maintenance of order or discipline to a cell or room apart from

 

accommodations provided for inmates who are participating in

 

programs of the facility.

 

     (b) "Serious mental illness" means that term as defined in

 

section 100d(3) of the mental health code, 1974 PA 328, MCL

 

330.1100d.