(1)
The department of corrections and the University of Washington
may enter into a collaborative arrangement to provide improved
services for mentally ill offenders with a focus on prevention, treatment, and
reintegration into society. The participants in the
collaborative arrangement may develop a strategic plan within
sixty days after May 17, 1993, to address the management of mentally ill offenders within the correctional system,
facilitating their reentry into the community and the mental
health system, and preventing the inappropriate incarceration of mentally ill individuals. The collaborative arrangement may also
specify the establishment and maintenance of a corrections mental
health center located at McNeil Island corrections center. The
collaborative arrangement shall require that an advisory panel of
key stakeholders be established and consulted throughout the
development and implementation of the center. The stakeholders
advisory panel shall include a broad array of interest groups
drawn from representatives of mental health, criminal justice,
and correctional systems. The stakeholders advisory panel shall
include, but is not limited to, membership from: The department
of corrections, the department of social and health services
mental health division and division of juvenile rehabilitation,
regional support networks, local and regional law enforcement
agencies, the sentencing guidelines commission, county and city
jails, mental health advocacy groups for the mentally ill, developmentally disabled, and traumatically brain-injured, and
the general public. The center established by the department of
corrections and University of Washington, in consultation with
the stakeholder advisory groups, shall have the authority to:
(a) Develop new and innovative treatment approaches for
corrections mental health clients;
(b) Improve the quality of mental health services within the
department and throughout the corrections system;
(c) Facilitate mental health staff recruitment and training
to meet departmental, county, and municipal needs;
(d) Expand research activities within the department in the
area of treatment services, the design of delivery systems, the
development of organizational models, and training for
corrections mental health care professionals;
(e) Improve the work environment for correctional employees
by developing the skills, knowledge, and understanding of how to
work with offenders with special chronic mental health
challenges;
(f) Establish a more positive rehabilitative environment for
offenders;
(g) Strengthen multidisciplinary mental health collaboration
between the University of Washington, other groups committed to
the intent of this section, and the department of corrections;
(h) Strengthen department linkages between institutions of
higher education, public sector mental health systems, and county
and municipal corrections;
(i) Assist in the continued formulation of corrections
mental health policies;
(j) Develop innovative and effective recruitment and
training programs for correctional personnel working with mentally ill offenders;
(k) Assist in the development of a coordinated continuum of
mental health care capable of providing services from corrections
entry to community return; and
(l) Evaluate all current and innovative approaches developed
within this center in terms of their effective and efficient
achievement of improved mental health of inmates, development and
utilization of personnel, the impact of these approaches on the
functioning of correctional institutions, and the relationship of
the corrections system to mental health and criminal justice
systems. Specific attention should be paid to evaluating the
effects of programs on the reintegration of mentally ill offenders into the community and the prevention of
inappropriate incarceration of mentally ill persons.
(2) The corrections mental health center may conduct
research, training, and treatment activities for the mentally ill offender within selected sites operated by the
department. The department shall provide support services for
the center such as food services, maintenance, perimeter
security, classification, offender supervision, and living unit
functions. The University of Washington may develop, implement,
and evaluate the clinical, treatment, research, and evaluation
components of the mentally ill offender center. The institute of [for] public
policy and management may be consulted regarding the development
of the center and in the recommendations regarding public policy.
As resources permit, training within the center shall be
available to state, county, and municipal agencies requiring the
services. Other state colleges, state universities, and mental
health providers may be involved in activities as required on a
subcontract basis. Community mental health organizations,
research groups, and community advocacy groups may be critical
components of the center's operations and involved as appropriate
to annual objectives. Mentally ill clients may be drawn from throughout the
department's population and transferred to the center as clinical
need, available services, and department jurisdiction permits.
(3) The department shall prepare a report of the center's
progress toward the attainment of stated goals and provide the
report to the legislature annually.
[1993 c 459 § 1.]
NOTES:
Effective date -- 1993 c 459: "This act is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety, or support of the state government and its existing public institutions, and shall take effect immediately [May 17, 1993]." [1993 c 459 § 2.]