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Swift and Certain Sanctions

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This website is under construction. Please send questions or comments to bjanttac@usdoj.gov.

Questions?

20150620-82031-75

Submitted by Ms. Kelly A Smith on

The Swift Certain Fair Resource Center is hosting a free one-day workshop  for all SCF/HOPE stakeholders, including probation and parole officers, law-enforcement officers, judges, administrators, treatment providers, and policymakers in state, local, territorial, and tribal jurisdictions.

20150620-80948-09

Submitted by Ms. Kelly A Smith on

The Swift Certain Fair Resource Center is hosting a free one-day workshop  for all SCF/HOPE stakeholders, including probation and parole officers, law-enforcement officers, judges, administrators, treatment providers, and policymakers in state, local, territorial, and tribal jurisdictions.

20140512-115030-NY

Submitted by James Lah on

DOCCS is requesting technical support to help create and implement a unique recidivism reduction effort. This new model will reshape the way that community supervision is being conducted in the state of New York. Significant agency resources will be used to implement the model as a pilot in three geographically diverse locations throughout New York.

20130227-112136-WA

Submitted by Joselle Shea on

Washington State Department of Corrections (DOC) requests TA for the implementation of a probation model of community supervision that employs “swift-and-certain” sanctions as established by law in 2012. This assistance will allow the DOC to develop outcome and fidelity measures that inform an evidence-based response to violations of probation. It will also assist the DOC in its efforts to build a more integrated case-management model, balancing cognitive behavioral interventions with swift and certain sanctions.

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