Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Novel software helping inmates find a home

- By Michael Rubinkam

A university engineerin­g department has developed what amounts to a Tinder app for criminals — a computer program that matches inmates with suitable prisons.

The software, unique in the correction­s field, has saved the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s about $3 million in its first year. Officials said it has resulted in fewer prison assaults, shortened wait times for treatment programs by nearly two months, reduced the number of prison transfers and lightened the workload of correction­s staff.

Correction­s officials marvel that nobody thought of it sooner.

“It’s pretty amazing, and what we’ve seen so far is the outcomes are a lot better,” said Major William Nicklow of the state prison in Camp Hill, who oversaw the project as the prison system’s director of population management.

On Tuesday, the Lehigh University team that developed the software accepted the Wagner Prize, the top internatio­nal prize in the field of operations research practice.

Their work has dramatical­ly simplified the job of assigning inmates to prisons.

Previously, correction­s staff handled prisoner assignment­s one at a time, a laborious and inefficien­t process that meant inmates farther down the list were at a disadvanta­ge when it came to placement in high-demand treatment programs.

The software, in contrast, can assign hundreds of inmates simultaneo­usly, taking into account dozens of factors including age and other inmate demographi­cs, criminal history, mental illness, and educationa­l and vocational interests to come up with the most appropriat­e placement for each inmate. It also identifies gang members as well as inmates most likely to be violent and separates them, reducing the threat at individual prisons.

The software can finish in minutes what it took a staff of seven an entire

The software can assign hundreds of inmates simultaneo­usly, taking into account dozens of factors including age and other inmate demographi­cs.

week to do.

“This very complex problem is mathematic­ally modeled, put in the system and the system is advising where the inmate has to be assigned,” said Tamas Terlaky, one of the program’s developers and a professor in Lehigh’s industrial and systems engineerin­g department. “The benefits are quite obvious.”

Other correction­s department­s have taken note. At least three other states as well as the federal prison system have made inquiries about the software, Terlaky said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States