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The OIG’s Monitoring of the Delivery of the Reforms Identified by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation in Its Report Titled The Future of California Corrections: A Blueprint to Save Billions of Dollars, End Federal Court Oversight, and Improve the Prison System and Its Update. ublished by the Ofice of the Inspector Gener.
California Corrections: A Blueprint to Save Billions of Dollars, End Federal Court Oversight, and Improve the Prison System (the Blueprint). In January 2016, the department issued An Update to the Future of California Corrections (Update), which provides a summary of the goals
The Office of Research is responsible for producing a variety of reports, including projections of the adult, parole, and juvenile populations; statistical summaries of CDCR’s populations and recidivism reporting.
In the Blueprint, the department indicated its goal is to increase the percentage of inmates served in rehabilitative programs to 70 percent of the department’s target population prior to their release.
The first assessment, known as Correctional Ofender Management Profiling for Alternative Sanctions (COMPAS), measures an inmate’s need for CBT and vocational education. A second assessment, known as the Tests of Adult Basic Education (TABE), measures an inmate’s need for academic education programs.
The Blueprint built upon sweeping changes to the state correctional system made by 2011 Public Safety Realignment. Realignment legislation, Chapter 15, Statutes of 2011 (AB 109), was signed in April 2011, and implementation began in October 2011. This landmark legislation was intended to ease prison crowding and reduce state spending on prisons.
Future of California Corrections Blueprint . James C. Spurling. Office of the Inspector General . Second Report on CDCRs Progress Implementing its ’ Robert A. Barton . Inspector