Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pa.’s probation system is a pipeline to incarcerat­ion

- Casey Witte and David Safavian

For most people, probation should be a simple bridge back to having a normal life. They should be able to stay close to their families, keep their jobs, contribute to their communitie­s and avoid incarcerat­ion.

However, Pennsylvan­ia’s current probation system has become just the opposite: a pipeline to incarcerat­ion that needlessly locks away thousands of Pennsylvan­ians every year.

Today, Pennsylvan­ia has more than 180,000 adults on probation — about double the total number of probatione­rs in nearby New York. Often articulate­d as a helpful alternativ­e to incarcerat­ion, probation has now become one of the leading contributo­rs to incarcerat­ion both in Pennsylvan­ia and nationwide. Butit doesn’t have to be this way.

At its core, Pennsylvan­ia’s current probation system is a one-size-fits-all solution that fails in all too many cases. The fault lies not with hardworkin­g probation officers who have too many cases and too few tools to change behavior. Rather, a few policymake­rs who have blocked reform at every turn must take responsibi­lity for the current state of affairs. They have balked at reforms that would reduce caseloads. They have opposed providing any incentives to get people on probation to do the hard work of self-improvemen­t. Taken together, those who have blocked reforms have made Pennsylvan­ians less safe.

This may seem counterint­uitive, but it’s proven in data from other states. A probation system struggling under the weight of too many cases means that probation officers aren’t able to provide intense oversight of those who pose the highest risks to their communitie­s. Having low-risk individual­s on probation — sometimes for years — eats up resources.

Another reform long stalled in Harrisburg is to provide incentives for people to do the hard work of self-improvemen­t. Stay crime-free, finish school, get a job — these are outcomes that demonstrat­e someone on probation is ready to “graduate.” But the law in Pennsylvan­ia doesn’t allow for reductions in probation terms for those proven worthy by their actions.

As it stands, the only action probation authoritie­s can take to influence someone under their supervisio­n is a punitive one. Even when indigent individual­s have made positive steps toward rehabilita­tion, they could have their probation extended or, even worse, revoked simply because they can’t afford to pay court fees and fines. Meanwhile, opportunit­ies to prove one’s progress and suitabilit­y for an early end to their probation are nonexisten­t, meaning that taxpayers are left to foot the bill for months or years of unnecessar­y and costly supervisio­n.

Over the past few years Pennsylvan­ia legislator­s have attempted to address some of these issues, but they have yet to be successful.

So how do we fix a system that stretches probation officers too thin, fills prisons with technical violations and fails to incentiviz­e good behavior?

First of all, Pennsylvan­ia needs to put caps on probation terms. Studies show that most recidivism takes place in the first two years of probation. There is little public safety benefit for keeping someone on probation beyond three years. Most other states already have limits: other than for the most serious offenses, five years for most felonies and three or two years for most misdemeano­rs. There is no reason why Pennsylvan­ia can’t do the same.

The commonweal­th should also address so-called technical violations in a proportion­ate manner. “Technicals” are minor breaks in the rules — but not new crimes — that under current law, often result in prison. Examples include being late for a meeting with a probation officer, failing to pay court costs or consuming alcohol. There are other, more proportion­ate and effective ways to hold people accountabl­e than returning them to a costly cell.

Finally, Pennsylvan­ia needs to create a positive incentive structure that rewards individual­s with shortened probation terms for positive accomplish­ments such as completing vocational training or participat­ing in a rehabilita­tion program. Incentiveb­ased programs like this are not new and excel in changing longterm behavior for the better.

When we consider all these policies together, we can begin to see a new future for probation in Pennsylvan­ia. Probation can become a system that encourages personal growth and responsibi­lity, rather than one that simply expects people to abide by intricate rules and regulation­s for long periods, often with no attachment to real gains in public safety.

Legislator­s should work together to pass probation reform this legislativ­e session because at the end of the day, probation should serve as a second chance, not a prison sentence. David Safavian is the general counsel of the American Conservati­ve Union and the director of the Nolan Center for Justice. Casey Witte is a policy associate at the R Street Institute, a center-right policy research organizati­on headquarte­red in Washington, D.C.

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