Prison starts probation revocation program

Published 12:00 am Wednesday, May 5, 2004

VIDALIA &045;&045; Some people on probation are getting one more chance before having to serve time in jail thanks to a new program at the Concordia Parish Correctional Facility I.

Sheriff Randy Maxwell said the facility was selected as a site for the state to initiate a 90-day probation revocation program.

In the program, people on probation that violate the probation on a technicality or a minor violation such as not meeting with the parole officer or a minor altercation will be allowed to serve in a 90 day program. &uot;It’s not for anyone that goes out and truly commits another crime,&uot; Maxwell said.

Email newsletter signup

The program, for people on DOC probation from all across the state, includes counseling, job skills training and drug courses along with evaluations.

The small time frame gives the person a small time to regroup but enough time to find out &uot;what went wrong,&uot; Maxwell said.

The program relieves the person from having to serve the remainder of the sentence initially given them by the judge, getting them back into society much faster. &uot;We’re trying to stop the revolving doors&uot; and make the people contributors to society, Maxwell said.

It is easy to lock people up like they are in a warehouse, he said, but &uot;changing lives and keeping them out of jail is the challenge.&uot;

The benefit is not only to the person that violated their probation but to the state, keeping the amount of prisoners, and therefore the cost, down.

Maxwell said it costs $20,000 a year to incarcerate a prisoner, so keeping someone in jail for 90 days instead of a year or two of their original sentence is much cheaper. &uot;Hopefully this will cut down (the number of inmates) and save the state of Louisiana a lot of money,&uot; Maxwell said.

Right now the program serves about 40 people but the capacity is for 200 people.

Right now, more people have been hired to handle the extra people, mostly for counseling, but for everything else that goes with housing more inmates.

Also, a new building is being added to the facilities on Louisiana 15 for the state-funded program.

The building will be 10,000 sq. feet and include a chapel and classrooms.

The final date of completion is up in the air, Maxwell said, and will depend on the weather.