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8Welcome!e most remarkable characteristic of our corrections community is that we truly care about our cra. We care about: best practices, our work, learning, sharing, and improving our skills. is very spirit is the driving force behind our daily work at the American Probation and Parole Association, and this spirit is why we hold our annual training institutes: a friendly, valuable, and inspiring community learning event that helps us all become better at what we do.TABLE OF CONTENTSResource Expo ............................................................10Institute Sponsors .......................................................11APPA Corporate and Associate Members ..............12National Program Committee ..................................13 2017 APPA Award Winners ......................................14Opening Session .........................................................16Plenary Session ...........................................................18Closing Session ...........................................................20Special Session: Community Corrections Chase ...22Special Session: eater of War ................................23Special Session: Beyond e Wall ............................24Members Matter Campaign ......................................25Institute at a Glance ....................................................26Dennis Maloney Community Service Project ........32Intensive Sessions .......................................................34Workshops ...................................................................36Exhibit Hall Directory ...............................................48Exhibitors ....................................................................49Marriott Marquis Floorplans ....................................508
9https://guidebook.com/app/appa/Get the ocial app for APPA Training Institutes!!123Visit the above URL on your mobile device or search “APPA Institutes” in your app storeTap the “download” button to installthe free app for APPA Training InstitutesOpen the app to customize your schedule, evaluate sessions*, get notifications, and more*the app is now required to evaluate sessionsTABLE OF CONTENTSResource Expo ............................................................10Institute Sponsors .......................................................11APPA Corporate and Associate Members ..............12National Program Committee ..................................13 2017 APPA Award Winners ......................................14Opening Session .........................................................16Plenary Session ...........................................................18Closing Session ...........................................................20Special Session: Community Corrections Chase ...22Special Session: eater of War ................................23Special Session: Beyond e Wall ............................24Members Matter Campaign ......................................25Institute at a Glance ....................................................26Dennis Maloney Community Service Project ........32Intensive Sessions .......................................................34Workshops ...................................................................36Exhibit Hall Directory ...............................................48Exhibitors ....................................................................49Marriott Marquis Floorplans ....................................509
10Resource ExpoYour one-stop source for the latest products, innovative services, and technologies is in APPA’s Resource Expo. Discuss your specic needs with leading suppliers of drug testing products, electronic monitoring equipment, information management systems, training programs, information resources plus many more valuable products and services. RESOURCEEXPO HOURS Sunday, August 2709:30 am - 05:00 pm Exhibit Installation07:00 pm - 09:00 pm Expo Viewing and Opening Reception Sponsored by NCTIMonday, August 2807:00 am - 08:30 am *NEW* Expo Viewing and Continental Breakfast10:00 am - 01:30 pm Expo Viewing05:15 pm - 06:30 pm Executive Cocktail Reception (by invitation only)Tuesday, August 2907:00 am - 08:30 am *NEW* Expo Viewing and Continental Breakfast10:30 am - 01:45 pm Expo Viewing02:00 pm - 05:00 pm Exhibit Dismantling Location: Westside Ballroom, Fifth Floor10
11SponsorsTIER 2 ($5,000 TO $9,999)TIER 3 (LESS THAN $5,000) TIER 1 ($10,000+)11
12Corporate MembersAociate MembersCSSCorrections Software SolutionsADVENTFS BUDDI LIMITED NUMI FINANCIALPRECISION KIOSK TECHNOLOGIESTRACKtech, LLCby SECURUS TECHNOLOGIESTM
13National Program CommieeCHAIRHolly DormanManager, Community CorrectionsArizona Department of CorrectionsMesa, AZMichelle AguilarDistrict ManagerMultnomah County Community JusticePortland, ORTania ApplingManager, Professional Development UnitGeorgia Department of Juvenile JusticeDecatur, GAGene CotterDeputy Probation AdministratorNebraska Supreme Court Oce of Probation Administration Lincoln, NEJoycelyn DurkAssistant Division DirectorOrange County ProbationSanta Ana, CAStephanie GerstIT SpecialistCoconino County Adult ProbationFlagsta, AZVeronica GlueckProbation OcerWestchester County ProbationWhite Plains, NYFelecia HollowayDeputy Director, Field ServicesGeorgia Board of Pardons and ParolesAtlanta, GAWende JacksonManager, Community JusticeMultnomah County Community JusticePortland, ORDiane KincaidDeputy DirectorAPPALexington, KYKarla KutchSupervisorBrazoria County CSCDAngleton, TXJohn McVayManager, Community JusticeMultnomah County Community JusticePortland, ORSusan RiceChief Probation Ocer Miami County ProbationPeru, INShane StutzmanDirector, Field ServicesNebraska Probation AdministrationLincoln, NELisa SvobodaCommunity Corrections SupervisorArizona Department of CorrectionsPhoenix, AZJulie TruschelInternational Relations CommitteeBoulder, COStuart WalkerCriminal Justice ManagerMultnomah County Community JusticePortland, ORKristi WardProbation Division DirectorMaricopa County Adult ProbationScottsdale, AZ
14APPA AwardsScotia Knou Line Ocer of the YearAndre TurnerCSOIIDallas County CSCDDallas, TXAndre Turner has been employed by the Dallas County Community Supervision and Corrections Department for 22 years with much of that time working in Misdemeanor Domestic Violence Courts. Judge Roberto Cañas, Jr. credits Mr. Turner with being instrumental in making Dallas County Criminal Court #10 a Domestic Violence Mentor Court as named by the U.S. Dept. of Justice in 2013 and 2015. Mr. Turner founded A.L. Turner Academic Intervention, a non-prot focused on assisting young men to improve their decision-making process and quality of life. Supporters use words such as innovative, professional, genuine, and leader to describe Mr. Turner.Walter Dunbar Memorial AwardAndrew Molloy, Jr.Director, Community Corrections ServicesChestereld County/City of Colonial HeightsChestereld, VAAndrew “Drew” Molloy entered the eld of community corrections in 1977. roughout his 35 years in the eld he has served in many dierent positions representing both line sta and management across state and federal agencies. ese positions have provided Drew with a breadth of practical and policy experience that he has used to raise the visibility of community corrections and demonstrate its tremendous value to the justice system and the public. roughout his career, Drew has served on numerous state and national workgroups/task forces addressing corrections, reentry, oender supervision and treatment, and been an eective voice for community corrections professionals. In 2004-2005, Drew was the driving force behind assembling a group of community corrections professionals to develop the training video and document, “Building a 21st Century Community Corrections Workforce,” focused on the phenomenon of the multi-generational workforce, four distinct age groups co-existing and working together in community corrections, and strategies for successful outcomes. Drew is not only a past president of APPA, but he has also served as president-elect, vice president, and at-large representative to the Executive Committee. During his term as president, Drew greatly increased the focus on and inclusion of line sta at all training institutes. He worked to ensure the Board represented the diversity of APPA members in terms of experience, professional roles, and policies and practices.14THIS AWARD WILL BE PRESENTED AT THE OPENING SESSION, SUNDAY AUGUST 27THIS AWARD WILL BE PRESENTED AT THE OPENING SESSION, SUNDAY AUGUST 27
15APPA Member of the YearUrsula Lifoifoi-AldanChief Probation OcerCNMI Oce of Adult Probation Superior CourtSaipan, MPUrsula Lifoifoi-Aldan has been a member of APPA since 1995 and has served on the Board of Directors since 2006. She currently holds a lifetime membership in the association. Ursula is a staunch advocate for APPA and consistently promotes membership and involvement in the association. She advocated for several years the importance of providing a unique voice on the Board of Directors to the Mariana Islands, Palau, American Samoa, the Philippines, and Guam, and her tireless eorts achieved success when the new Region 17 was instituted. Ursula travels thousands of miles and many hours to attend the APPA institutes and works tirelessly to ensure support for many of her colleagues, judges, and government ocials to attend. is requires a signicant commitment of time and nancial support, but Ursula is committed to promoting support for community corrections and knows the importance of having the policy makers at the table and exposed to the latest research and information in our profession. Ursula’s passion, commitment, and unyielding positivity is a model of unmatched professionalism.University of Cincinnati AwardJames Tanner, Ph.D.PresidentKBSolutions, Inc.Boulder, CODr. Tanner has been a community corrections professional since 1970. He earned his Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Illinois with specialties in Cognitive Social Psychology, Sociology of Law, and Evaluation Research. During his illustrious career, he has served as a professor at two universities, was a supervising probation ocer, executive director of halfway houses, director of Boulder County Colorado’s Community Corrections Division, vice president of Correctional Management Incorporated, cyber crime analyst for the 20th Judicial District of Colorado, and president of KBSolutions, Incorporated. Dr. Tanner’s current work focuses on the adaptation of cognitive sciences in treatment of oender populations, cyber-crime analysis, and improving the ecacy of sex oender treatment. He is a nationally recognized authority on sex oender digital behavior, grooming strategies, and sex oender management.APPA President’s AwardNebraska Board of Parole, Research and Training TeamLincoln, NEIn 2015, Nebraska passed justice reinvestment legislation that required the NE Division of Parole Supervision to incorporate evidence-based practices and ensure on-going sta training on the use of risk and needs assessments, cognitive behavioral interventions, and the proper use of a matrix to include sanctions and incentives. roughout this process, the Research and Training team of the Division of Parole Supervision was instrumental in ensuring a smooth transition and implementation. At the same time this initiative was launched, the division was undergoing a transition from the Dept. of Correctional Services to the Board of Parole under new leadership. e Research and Training team’s approach to implementation while undergoing substantial transition can serve as a model for other agencies faced with similar challenges in becoming more evidence-based. THIS AWARD WILL BE PRESENTED AT THE PLENARY SESSION, MONDAY, AUGUST 28THIS AWARD WILL BE PRESENTED AT THE PLENARY SESSION, MONDAY, AUGUST 28THIS AWARD WILL BE PRESENTED AT THE PLENARY SESSION, MONDAY, AUGUST 2815
16Piper Kerman’s best-selling memoir Orange is the New Black: My Year in a Women’s Prison chronicles what the author calls her “crucible experience” – the 13 months she spent in the Federal Correctional Institute in Danbury, Connecticut. A brief dalliance with drug tracking while she was in her early twenties sent Kerman to prison ten years later on money laundering charges. In her compelling, moving, and oen hilarious book, she explores the experience of incarceration and the intersection of her life with the lives of the women she met while in prison: their friendships and families, mental illnesses and substance abuse issues, cliques and codes of behavior. What has stuck with her the most from her experience, Kerman says, is the power of women’s communities, “the incredible ability of women to step up for each other, and to be resilient and to share their resiliency with other people.”e book also raises provocative questions about the state of criminal justice in America, and how incarceration aects the individual and communities throughout the nation.Opening SeionPiper KermanAUTHORSunday, August 27; 5:30 pm - 7:00 pmBroadway Ballroom6th FloorPiper’s memoir was adapted into a critically acclaimed Netix series of the same name by Jenji Kohan. e Emmy and Peabody Award-winning show has been called “the best TV show about prison ever made” by e Washington Post, and it was lauded by Time’s TV critic James Poniewozik for “the stunningly matter-of-fact way it uses the prison to create one of TV’s most racially and sexually diverse – and as important, complex – dramas [and] contrasts the power and class dynamics inside the prison with those outside the prison.”Since her release, Kerman has worked tirelessly to promote the cause of prison and criminal justice reform. She works with nonprots, philanthropies, and other organizations working in the public interest and serves on the board of directors of the Women’s Prison Association and the advisory boards of InsideOUT Writers and JustLeadershipUSA. She has been called as a witness by the U.S. Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Human Rights to testify on solitary connement and women prisoners, and by the U.S. Senate Governmental Aairs and Homeland Security Committee to testify about the Federal Bureau of Prisons.16
17Notes______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
18Plenary SeionMichael P. JacobsenAUTHORGlenn E. MartinJUSTLEADERSHIPUSAPRESIDENT AND FOUNDERRocco PozziCOMMISSIONER WESTCHESTER COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PROBATIONMonday, August 28; 8:45 am - 10:00 amBroadway Ballroom6th FloorMost people know about Rikers Island through its portrayal in movies and television shows, including Law and Order. It has been the subject of many op-ed pieces, including those in e New York Times. We know very little about the operations of Rikers Island, and how it works within the corrections system. In February 2016, New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito called for the creation of an independent commission to review the criminal justice system in NYC and explore “how we can get the population of Rikers [Island] to be so small that the dream of shutting it down becomes a reality.” Each of our panelists were appointed to the commision of which members had backgrounds in law, law enforcement, academia, business, philanthropy, the nonprot sector, or they were individuals with personal experience being held in custody on Rikers Island.is panel will explore the ndings of the independent commission.
19Notes______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
20John Calhoun has spent his entire career working to improve both the lives of those who live on society’s edges and fragile families and neighborhoods from which they come. “Jack” helped found and direct Justice Resource Institute, an organization that pioneered Massachusetts’ pre-trial diversion and restorative justice initiatives. JRI wrote and saw through to passage the nation’s rst pre-trial diversion law. As Massachusetts’ Commissioner of the Department of Youth Service, where he chaired the Adolescent and State of the Family Task Forces, he helped to create a comprehensive, community-based juvenile justice system that cut the State’s recidivism rate to an astonishingly-low10%. In 1979 President Carter appointed him to serve as the U.S. Commissioner of the Administration for Children, Youth and Families, where he oversaw Head Start and programs addressing child abuse, foster care, adoption and domestic violence. He helped to write the landmark Child Welfare and Adoption Act of 1980. Subsequently, he served as Vice President of the Child Welfare League of America and the rst President and CEO of the National Crime Prevention Council.Closing SeionJohn CalhounAUTHORJack designed and ran the 13-California City Violence Prevention Network for the National League of Cities, and served as Senior Consultant to the U.S. Department of Justice to help create e National Forum on Youth Violence Prevention. He currently serves as Senior Advisor to Development Services Group for the Justice-Department-funded “Role of the Faith Community in Preventing Violence and Building Community.” President Obama’s Assistant Attorney General Karol Mason said, “More than any one person, Jack has shaped the Department of Justice’s approach to juvenile justice.”John Calhoun holds a BA from Brown University, a Master’s degree in eology from the Episcopal Divinity School, a Master’s degree with honors in Public Administration from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Heidelberg College. Wednesday, August 30; 10:45 am - 12:00 pmBroadway Ballroom6th Floor
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22Special Seion22Tuesday, August 29Marquis Theater Foyer3rd Floor11:30 amNOTE: YOU MUST BE PRE-REGISTERED FOR THE RACE.
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26Institute At A GlanceFRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 201705:30 pm – 08:30 pm Leadership Institute Opening Circle Manhattan Ballroom, 8th FloorSATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 201708:00 am – 05:00 pm Leadership Institute Liberty, 8th Floor08:30 am – 03:30 pm APPA Executive Committee Meeting Ziegfeld, 4th Floor09:00 am – 05:00 pm Registration 45th Street, 5th Floor03:30 pm – 04:30 pm Minds Against Crime Board Meeting Wilder 4th Floor04:30 pm – 05:30 pm Nominations Committee ONeill, 4th FloorSUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 201707:00 am – 08:00 pm Registration 45th Street, 5th Floor08:00 am – 12:00 pm Intensive Session: Collaboration for Results: Herald, 7th Floor e Marion County Reentry Coalition08:00 am – 12:00 pm Intensive Session: I Am Biased, How ‘Bout You? Gramercy, 7th Floor Understanding and Mitigating Implicit Bias in Community Corrections08:00 am – 12:00 pm Intensive Session: NeONizing Probation: Harlem, 7th Floor A Journey Towards Community Justice with the New York City Department of Probation08:00 am – 12:00 pm Intensive Session: Supervising Sex Oenders in the Olmstead, 7th Floor Community: Evidence-Based and Survivor-Response Strategies08:00 am – 12:00 pm Intensive Session: e Leadership Test: Astor Ballroom, 7th Floor Dealing with Critical Incidents and Helping the Helpers08:00 am – 05:00 pm Leadership Institute Liberty, 8th Floor08:30 am – 09:30 am Justice Involved Women and Girls Committee Empire, 7th Floor 08:30 am – 09:30 am Membership Committee Columbia, 7th Floor08:30 am – 09:30 am Regional Representatives Committee Manhattan Ballroom, 8th Floor08:30 am – 10:30 am Leadership Institute Meeting (Coordinators Only) Gotham, 7th Floor09:30 am – 10:30 am Aliates Committee Meeting Manhattan Ballroom, 8th Floor09:30 am – 10:30 am Awards Committee Chelsea, 7th Floor09:30 am – 11:00 am NAPE Board Meeting Empire, 7th Floor09:30 am – 11:30 am BJS Community Corrections Workgroup Ziegfeld, 4th Floor10:30 am – 11:30 am Committee Chairs Meeting Chelsea, 7th Floor10:30 am – 12:30 pm Past Presidents Committee Gotham, 7th Floor26
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28Discover a long-acting treatment for schizophreniaVisit Booth 306Reference: 1. National Institutes of Health. Schizophrenia. http://report.nih.gov/NIHfactsheets/ViewFactSheet.aspx?csid=67. Accessed February 2017.ALKERMES® is a registered trademark of Alkermes, Inc. ©2017 Alkermes, Inc. All rights reserved. UNB-001554 Printed in the U.S.A.Visit Booth 306 to learn more.Schizophrenia is a chronic and disabling brain disorder that affects an estimated 2.4 million American adults.1SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 201711:30 am – 12:30 pm 2018 Winter Program Committee Chelsea, 7th Floor11:30 am – 12:30 pm Diversity Committee Columbia, 7th Floor11:30 am – 12:30 pm Training Accreditation Committee Duy, 7th Floor11:30 am – 01:00 pm Technology Committee Empire, 7th Floor01:00 pm – 03:00 pm Board of Directors Meeting Manhattan Ballroom, 8th Floor01:00 pm – 05:00 pm Intensive Session: A Framework for Pretrial Justice: Olmstead, 7th Floor Essential Elements of an Eective Pretrial Justice System and Agency01:00 pm – 05:00 pm Intensive Session: How Being Trauma-Informed Herald, 7th Floor Improves Criminal Justice System Responses01:00 pm – 05:00 pm Intensive Session: It’s About the Journey: Gramercy, 7th Floor Probation Ocer Enhancement Training 01:00 pm – 05:00 pm Intensive Session: e Color of Justice Harlem, 7th Floor01:00 pm – 05:00 pm Intensive Session: e Goal-den Ticket: Astor Ballroom, 7th Floor Creating and Providing Quality Feedback on Case Plans03:00 pm – 04:00 pm Health and Safety Committee Chelsea, 7th Floor03:00 pm – 04:00 pm Juvenile Justice Committee Columbia, 7th Floor03:00 pm – 04:00 pm Victims’ Issues Committee Duy, 7th Floor03:00 pm – 04:00 pm Perspectives Editorial Meeting Empire, 7th Floor03:00 pm – 05:00 pm Issues, Positions, and Resolutions Committee Hudson, 7th Floor03:00 pm – 05:00 pm Leadership Alumni Meeting Ziegfeld, 4th Floor03:30 pm – 05:00 pm International Relations Committee Gotham, 7th Floor03:30 pm – 05:00 pm NIJ Focus Group Manhattan Ballroom, 8th Floor04:00 pm – 05:00 pm Research Committee Columbia, 7th Floor04:00 pm – 05:00 pm Tribal Issues Committee Duy, 7th Floor04:00 pm – 05:00 pm Project Safe Neighborhood Workgroup Chelsea, 7th Floor05:30 pm – 07:00 pm Opening Session Broadway Ballroom, 6th Floor07:00 pm – 09:00 pm Opening Reception in the Resource Expo Westside Ballroom, 5th FloorMONDAY, AUGUST 28, 201707:00 am – 08:30 am Continental Breakfast in the Resource Expo Westside Ballroom, 5th Floor07:00 am – 05:00 pm Registration 45th Street, 5th Floor08:00 am – 07:00 pm John Augustus Lounge Lobby, 6th Floor08:45 am – 10:00 am Plenary Session Broadway Ballroom, 6th Floor10:00 am – 01:00 pm Judicial Roundtable Liberty, 8th Floor10:00 am – 01:30 pm Resource Expo Westside Ballroom, 5th FloorCONTINUEDInstitute At A Glance28
29Discover a long-acting treatment for schizophreniaVisit Booth 306Reference: 1. National Institutes of Health. Schizophrenia. http://report.nih.gov/NIHfactsheets/ViewFactSheet.aspx?csid=67. Accessed February 2017.ALKERMES® is a registered trademark of Alkermes, Inc. ©2017 Alkermes, Inc. All rights reserved. UNB-001554 Printed in the U.S.A.Visit Booth 306 to learn more.Schizophrenia is a chronic and disabling brain disorder that affects an estimated 2.4 million American adults.129
30MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 201710:30am – 1:00pm Professional Development Tour: Manida NSP Juvenile Facility (Bronx)11:00 am – 12:00 pm Professional Development Tour: NYC Probation NeON (Neighborhood Opportunity Network)11:15 am – 12:00 pm Quick-re Sessions12:00 pm – 01:30 pm Lunch on your Own01:45 pm – 03:15 pm Workshops02:00 pm – 03:00 pm Professional Development Tour: NYC Probation NeON (Neighborhood Opportunity Network)02:00 pm – 04:00 pm Board of Directors Meeting (Special: Strategic Plan) Broadway Ballroom, 6th Floor03:30 pm – 05:00 pm WorkshopsTUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 201707:00 am – 08:30 am Continental Breakfast in the Resource Expo Westside Ballroom, 5th Floor07:00 am – 05:00 pm Registration Grand Salon/Promenade, Casino Level08:00 am – 07:00 pm John Augustus Lounge Lobby, 6th Floor09:00 am – 10:30 am Workshops09:30 am – 10:30 am Corporate Relations Committee (All Exhibitors are Encouraged to Attend) Westside Ballroom, 5th Floor10:00 am – 11:00 am Professional Development Tour: NYS Department Of Corrections and Community Supervision10:30 am – 01:45 pm Resource Expo Viewing Westside Ballroom, 5th Floor11:00 am – 12:30 pm OJJDP Focus Group on Supervision and Youth Development Empire, 7th Floor11:30 am – 12:30 pm Professional Development Tour: NYS Department Of Corrections and Community Supervision12:00 pm – 01:30 pm Lunch on Your Own12:00 pm – 05:00 pm Special Session: Community Corrections Chase (C3) (Pre Registration Required) Lobby, 3rd Floor02:00 pm – 03:00 pm Workshops03:15 pm – 04:15 pm Workshops04:30 pm – 05:15 pm Membership Meeting Manhattan Ballroom, 8th Floor05:30 pm – 07:30 pm Special Session: eater of War (NIC Production) Broadway Ballroom, 6th FloorWEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 201708:30 am – 09:30 am Special Session: Beyond the Wall Broadway Ballroom, 6th Floor09:45 am – 10:30 am Workshops09:45 am – 10:30 am NIC Demonstration: Community Corrections and Hudson/Chelsea, 7th Floor Academia Resource Micro Site10:45 am – 12:00 pm Closing Session Broadway Ballroom, 6th FloorThe World Leader in Alcohol Monitoring Technology1-800-880-3394smartstartinc.com• Immediate violation notifications• Monitors all client risk levels• Camera-equipped with facial detectionFor more information about Smart Start’s products & services, please visit us at booth CV4 and enter to win an Amazon Echo!• First in camera technology• Best-in-class reporting• GPS features availablePortable Alcohol Monitoring: S.M.A.R.T. Mobile™Ignition Interlock:SSI-20/30™Proud Corporate Member & SponsorCONTINUEDInstitute At A Glance30
31The World Leader in Alcohol Monitoring Technology1-800-880-3394smartstartinc.com• Immediate violation notifications• Monitors all client risk levels• Camera-equipped with facial detectionFor more information about Smart Start’s products & services, please visit us at booth CV4 and enter to win an Amazon Echo!• First in camera technology• Best-in-class reporting• GPS features availablePortable Alcohol Monitoring: S.M.A.R.T. Mobile™Ignition Interlock:SSI-20/30™Proud Corporate Member & Sponsor31
32DENNIS MALONEY COMMUNITY SERVICE PROJECTAt each training institute, APPA works with local volunteers to assist a charity in the host city. is is APPA’s way of giving something back to the community and gives national recognition to some of the wonderful community outreach work being done locally. APPA renamed its community service eort as the Dennis Maloney Community Service Project beginning at the Winter 2008 Training Institute in Phoenix, Arizona. Dennis Maloney was a professional faculty member at Oregon State University in Bend, and associate director of the Cascades Center for Community Governance. Mr. Maloney had over 30 years of experience in corrections and community corrections. For 16 years, he served as the director of the Deschutes County Department of Community Justice of Oregon, where he initiated a variety of juvenile and adult corrections programs that gained national attention. He served as juvenile court director starting in 1986. He was then community corrections director from 1990-1999, and community justice director from 1999-2001. He authored two books, one on probation, that is the most widely distributed journal in the history of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, and published over 30 articles.For the 42nd Annual Training Institute of APPA, two initiatives have been chosen for the Dennis Maloney Community Service Project. Both are spearheaded by the New York City Department of Probation (DOP). DOP CLOTHING CLOSETSe DOP Clothing Closets are in all ve boroughs and provide new and slightly used career clothing to clients and other community residents. Clothing donations provide relief and assistance to those on probation, family members in transition, and support for low income and disabled residents. THE DOP NEIGHBORHOOD OPPORTUNITY NETWORK (NEON)e DOP Neighborhood Opportunity Network (NeON). is nutrition kitchen is an eort to address the growing issue of food insecurity in communities underserved by aordable, nutritious food. e DOP worked in collaboration with the Mayor’s Fund to launch the kitchens in a unique initiative that goes beyond a typical food pantry. It provides healthy recipes, nutrition information, cooking demonstrations, and distributes food to DOP clients and communities once a week to improve their understanding of a healthy lifestyle and provide a service to the community. e goal is to assist clients with overcoming barriers, like hunger, to help to create a successful and productive life for those transitioning from the justice system. Since the launch of the kitchen during Probation Week 2015, food has been distributed to over 100,000 clients and community residents. Americans each discard an average of 68 pounds of clothes every single year per a WikiHow article. World Food Day USA estimates that 30-40% of the US food supply is wasted – which represents more than 20 pounds of food per person per month. Collection bins will be available for donated items in the Local Host area on the 5th floor.DENNIS MALONEYCOMMUNITY SERVICE PROJECTAmerican Probation and Parole AssociationCommunity ServiceSM32
33 Saves time developing curricula Practical tips, samples, and checklists Easy-to-use 16 page booklet format Use for class or as self-directed resourceSpecial Offer in Conference Bag Evidence-Based & Ready-to-goPerfect for reentry programs, counseling, & resource roomsCall 800.783.6743 www.lifeskillsed.com“I use other materials but the inmates really like your booklets. The covers are aracve so they get picked up and they say they’re also an easy read. We like the range of topics you have”. State Correctional Facility, FL Job Search Soft Skills Dislocated Worker Financial Management Reentry Military Wellness Substance Abuse Domestic Violence ParentingCommunity Service33
347thfloor7thfloorSunday, August 27, 2017 08:00 am – 12:00 pmI Am Biased, How ‘Bout You? Understanding and Mitigating Implicit Bias in Community Corrections Location: Gramercy, 7th FloorNeONizing Probation: A Journey Towards Community Justice with the New York City Department of ProbationLocation: Hudson/Chelsea,7th FloorSupervising Sex Oenders in the Community: Evidence-Based and Survivor-Responsive StrategiesLocation: Olmstead,7th FloorThe Leadership Test: Dealing with Critical Incidents and Helping the HelpersLocation: Astor Ballroom, 7th Floor Sunday, August 27, 201701:00 pm – 05:00 pmA Framework for Pretrial Justice: Essential Elements of an Eective Pretrial Justice System and AgencyLocation: Olmstead, 7th FloorHow Being Trauma-Informed Improves Criminal Justice System ResponsesLocation: Herald, 7th FloorIt’s About the Journey: Probation Ocer Enhancement TrainingLocation: Gramercy, 7th FloorThe Color of JusticeLocation: Hudson/Chelsea, 7th FloorThe Goal-den Ticket: Creating and Providing Quality Feedback on Case PlansLocation: Astor Ballroom, 7th FloorNOTE: YOU MUST BE PRE-REGISTERED TO ATTEND INTENSIVE SESSIONSIntensive SeionsPractitioners Helping PractitionersThe Carey Group and Carey Group Publishing provide training and technical assistance, and develop risk reduction tools, to enhance justice system outcomes 4:1 Behavior Management System™Software that supports the effective use of rewards and responses to noncompliance within agency parameters, and that provides robust data regarding client behavior and staff responsesSupervisor’s EBP BriefCASEAn 18-module curriculum to guide supervisors in coaching staff on evidence-based practices and core competenciesVisit Booth 307 in the Westside Ballroom to learn about these and other EBP-based resources and trainings:The Carey Group is proud to be a corporate member for APPA’s 2017 Summer InstituteVisit thecareygroup.com and careygrouppublishing.com for more information on our services and productsThe Carey GroupCarey Program Ad COLOR 2017.indd 1 7/6/17 12:11 PMPLEASE WEAR YOUR NAME BADGE AT ALL TIMES DURING THE TRAINING INSTITUTE.IT IS YOUR ONLY PASSPORT TO THE GENERAL SESSIONS, WORKSHOPS, AND RESOURCE EXPO. 34
35Practitioners Helping PractitionersThe Carey Group and Carey Group Publishing provide training and technical assistance, and develop risk reduction tools, to enhance justice system outcomes 4:1 Behavior Management System™Software that supports the effective use of rewards and responses to noncompliance within agency parameters, and that provides robust data regarding client behavior and staff responsesSupervisor’s EBP BriefCASEAn 18-module curriculum to guide supervisors in coaching staff on evidence-based practices and core competenciesVisit Booth 307 in the Westside Ballroom to learn about these and other EBP-based resources and trainings:The Carey Group is proud to be a corporate member for APPA’s 2017 Summer InstituteVisit thecareygroup.com and careygrouppublishing.com for more information on our services and productsThe Carey GroupCarey Program Ad COLOR 2017.indd 1 7/6/17 12:11 PM35
364thfloor7thfloor8thfloor9thfloorMonday, August 28, 201711:15 am – 12:00 pmCommunity Ocer Bias Toward LGBTILocation: Wilder, 4th Floor Graduated Reintegration: Early Release, Housing, and Supervision at the End of Prison and Jail TermsLocation: Ziegfeld, 4th FloorThe FBI’s Criminal Justice Rap Back Service: An Avenue for Launching Active Case Investigations and Supervision Cases to a New Level Location: ONeill, 4th FloorA Look into Bridges out of PovertyLocation: Astor Ballroom, 7th FloorPut a Fork in It: The Key to Collaboration with Stakeholders and Your Pretrial Services ProgramLocation: Duy/Columbia, 7th FloorReady, Set...Collaborate!Location: Hudson/Chelsea, 7th FloorShowcasing Our Talents: Perspectives, APPA’s Journal Location: Empire, 7th Floor Task Force Participation: To Do or Not to Do? That’s a Good Question!Location: Soho/Herald, 7th FloorTrack Jam: Juvenile Sex Tracking and System ResponseLocation: Gramercy/Olmstead, 7th FloorCareers for Probationers: A Case Study of a Job and Education Training Program Location: Manhattan Ballroom, 8th FloorRESETTING the Future of Parole in New York State Location: Marquis C, 9th Floor Second Chances: Improving Community Supervision and Re-Entry in the Juvenile Justice SystemLocation: Cantor/Jolson, 9th Floor Thinking for a Change 4.0 – It’s Dressed Up and Ready to Go!Location: Marquis A & B, 9th FloorWe Have the Data, Now What? Practical Applications of Data Analytics in Community CorrectionsLocation: Barrymore, 9th Floor© 2017 NCTI. All rights reserved.NCTI’s recognized, evidence-based curricula and the only APPA-accredited facilitator training in the eld comes with a complete system of powerful tools that helps you create an e ective path to Behavior Change. More than Curricula Alone. NCTI’s Complete Behavior Change System Evidence-Based Facilitator Curricula & Certi cation Training from NCTI in Partnership with APPANational Curriculum & Training Institute®, Inc. | 319 E. McDowell Road, Ste. 200 Phoenix, AZ 85004800.622.1644 | www.NCTI.org | info@NCTI.orgWorkshops36
37© 2017 NCTI. All rights reserved.NCTI’s recognized, evidence-based curricula and the only APPA-accredited facilitator training in the eld comes with a complete system of powerful tools that helps you create an e ective path to Behavior Change. More than Curricula Alone. NCTI’s Complete Behavior Change System Evidence-Based Facilitator Curricula & Certi cation Training from NCTI in Partnership with APPANational Curriculum & Training Institute®, Inc. | 319 E. McDowell Road, Ste. 200 Phoenix, AZ 85004800.622.1644 | www.NCTI.org | info@NCTI.org37
384thfloor7thfloor8thfloor9thfloorBe Careful What You Look For?? Search and Seizure of a Sex Oender in Maricopa County!!Location: ONeill, 4th FloorFun and Games: The Road to ChangeLocation: Wilder, 4th FloorMulti-Disciplinary Teams (MDT): From Surviving to ThrivingLocation: Ziegfeld, 4th FloorConnecting the Dots: Learn how Community Corrections is Catching Up with Today’s Big Data and Mobile Tech MovementLocation: Hudson/Chelsea, 7th FloorFrom Jail to Community: In-Custody Treatment to Community Day ReportingLocation: Soho/Herald, 7th FloorGet Moving: Workplace Fitness for Parole and Probation OcersLocation: Astor Ballroom, 7th FloorGetting Upstream - How the Upstream Investments Policy Initiative Is Moving the Needle in Sonoma CountyLocation: Empire, 7th FloorKentucky’s Juvenile Justice Reform: An Overview of Implementation and Evaluation EortsLocation: Duy/Columbia, 7th FloorMillennials on SupervisionLocation: Gramercy/Olmstead, 7th FloorTools of Drug Testing and the Deception of DilutionLocation: Gotham, 7th FloorBuilding Trust and Legitimacy Within Community CorrectionsLocation: Manhattan Ballroom, 8th FloorHow to be an Eective Witness (i.e., How not to Make a Fool of Yourself on the Stand)Location: Liberty, 8th FloorForward Motion: Westchester County DWI Female Oender Program--Thinking Outside the BoxLocation: Marquis C, 9th FloorMirror, Mirror on the Wall, Is There Fairness for Us All? Internal Procedural Justice as a Path to Community SupportLocation: Cantor/Jolson, 9th FloorUpdates from the Census of Adult Probation Supervising Agencies, and Exploring Findings from the Annual Surveys of Probation and ParoleLocation: Barrymore, 9th FloorMonday, August 28, 201701:45 pm – 03:15 pmWELCOME FIRST TIMERS!Individuals attending their rst APPA institute will be wearing VIP ribbons. Please give a warm welcome to our newest friends!ALKERMES and VIVITROL are registered trademarks of Alkermes, Inc. ©2016 Alkermes, Inc. All rights reserved. VIV-002771 Printed in U.S.A.www.vivitrol.comWHAT DO CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROFESSIONALS NEED TO KNOW ABOUT VIVITROL® ?(naltrexone for extended-release injectable suspension)Visit booth CV17 to learn more about VIVITROL.Workshops38
39Monday, August 28, 201701:45 pm – 03:15 pmALKERMES and VIVITROL are registered trademarks of Alkermes, Inc. ©2016 Alkermes, Inc. All rights reserved. VIV-002771 Printed in U.S.A.www.vivitrol.comWHAT DO CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROFESSIONALS NEED TO KNOW ABOUT VIVITROL® ?(naltrexone for extended-release injectable suspension)Visit booth CV17 to learn more about VIVITROL.39
404thfloor7thfloor8thfloor9thfloorImplementing and Sustaining Reform EortsLocation: Ziegfeld, 4th FloorInterstate Compact-Promoting a Single Standard of SupervisionLocation: Wilder, 4th FloorVicarious TraumaLocation: ONeill, 4th FloorCredible Messenger Mentoring: Enhancing Public Safety Through Eective Youth and Community EngagementLocation: Gotham, 7th Floor Deaf and Hard of Hearing Oenders in Community Corrections: Challenges and OpportunitiesLocation: Empire, 7th FloorImpaired Driving Assessment: Practical Implications, Technological Resources, and Next StepsLocation: Hudson/Chelsea, 7th FloorIs s/he “CRAZY”? Or Is It You? Mentally Ill Oenders 2.0.Location: Astor Ballroom, 7th FloorOne Universal Challenge: Community Engagement – Two Country Realities: The Republic of Ireland and SomaliaLocation: Soho/Herald, 7th FloorSmart Supervision: Implementation Strategies to Advance Quality SupervisionLocation: Duy/Columbia, 7th FloorPrison to Community: “Reset” - An Intensive Resettlement and Rehabilitation Project by the Probation Board for Northern IrelandLocation: Gramercy/Olmstead,7th FloorA Blueprint for Better Data: Panel Discussion of Model Data Project Pilot SitesLocation: Liberty, 8th FloorJustice for All: Court-Ordered Fines, Penalties, Fees, and Pretrial Release PoliciesLocation: Manhattan Ballroom, 8th FloorA National Perspective on Partnerships Between Juvenile Justice Community Supervision Agencies, Behavioral Health Providers, and Juvenile Court Judges Location: Marquis C, 9th FloorChanging Minds/Improving LivesLocation: Marquis A & B, 9th FloorImpaired Driving Pop QuizLocation: Barrymore, 9th FloorPower Through Partnerships and ChangeLocation: Cantor/Jolson, 9th FloorMonday, August 28, 201703:30 pm – 05:00 pm Increase your collections and improve your processes by adding Keefe's Secure Payments & Case Management services to your agency. Secure PaymentsUsers have many options for making payments, including phone, mobile app, internet, mail, lobby kiosk and walk-in locations.• Staff no longer need to handle cash or money orders.• Mail room and accounting staff workload is reduced.• You can build in revenue-generating features to cover other expenses.• There are no fees or charges for this service; we provide the technology, hardware and supplies.Case ManagementIncrease efficiency of corrections officers and counselors, and simultaneously equip program designers and executive management with strategic information needed to reduce recidivism, operate and fund the agency.Benefits • The software supports the entire supervision continuum (pretrial, presentence, probation, prison & parole)• Case planning• Assessment, Classification & Interventions• Rules administration and Board of Parole• Grievance Administration • Document Management• Offender Kiosks • Proven to reduce recidivism by over 10%.800.325.8998 keefegroup.comACCESS SECURE PAYMENTS PROCESSES MANY FINANCIAL OBLIGATIONS!Probation & Parole:Supervision Fees, Program Fees, Drug Screening, Monitoring FeesCourt Ordered Payments: Child Support, Fees & Fines, RestitutionThe same convenient service can be used for inmate deposit services.Workshops40
41Increase your collections and improve your processes by adding Keefe's Secure Payments & Case Management services to your agency. Secure PaymentsUsers have many options for making payments, including phone, mobile app, internet, mail, lobby kiosk and walk-in locations.• Staff no longer need to handle cash or money orders.• Mail room and accounting staff workload is reduced.• You can build in revenue-generating features to cover other expenses.• There are no fees or charges for this service; we provide the technology, hardware and supplies.Case ManagementIncrease efficiency of corrections officers and counselors, and simultaneously equip program designers and executive management with strategic information needed to reduce recidivism, operate and fund the agency.Benefits • The software supports the entire supervision continuum (pretrial, presentence, probation, prison & parole)• Case planning• Assessment, Classification & Interventions• Rules administration and Board of Parole• Grievance Administration • Document Management• Offender Kiosks • Proven to reduce recidivism by over 10%.800.325.8998 keefegroup.comACCESS SECURE PAYMENTS PROCESSES MANY FINANCIAL OBLIGATIONS!Probation & Parole:Supervision Fees, Program Fees, Drug Screening, Monitoring FeesCourt Ordered Payments: Child Support, Fees & Fines, RestitutionThe same convenient service can be used for inmate deposit services.41
424thfloor7thfloor8thfloor9thfloorWorkshopsLife Without Parole (LWOP): Perspectives Through an International LensLocation: ONeill, 4th FloorRevolutionizing Community Corrections with Collaboration Technologies Location: Ziegfeld, 4th FloorStructuring a Local Reentry Task Force–The Nuts and Bolts Beyond Evidence-Based PracticeLocation: Wilder, 4th FloorA Match Made in Heaven: When Practice and Research Unite! Location: Duy/Columbia, 7th FloorA New Look: Justice-Involved Women and the Chester County Women’s Reentry Assessment and Programming (WRAP) InitiativeLocation: Gramercy/Olmstead, 7th FloorGuiding Pretrial Release Decisions Using the Public Safety AssessmentLocation: Gotham, 7th FloorLeading with Purpose and Impacting the Future of Community CorrectionsLocation: Hudson/Chelsea, 7th FloorThe Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Tales of TrailblazersLocation: Soho/Herald, 7th FloorUndefinable Relationship: Bridging the Gap Between Victim and OenderLocation: Empire, 7th Floor Who (or What) Is Driving the Bus?Location: Astor Ballroom, 7th FloorAsk the Judge: Everything You Ever Wanted to Ask a Judge but Were Afraid to AskLocation: Liberty, 8th FloorDetox Your Work EnvironmentLocation: Manhattan Ballroom, 8th FloorCorrections in United Nations Peace Operations: Enhancing Political Stability, Peace and Security in Post-Conflict Settings Location: Marquis C, 9th FloorExpanding the Ever Shrinking Dollar: An AmeriCorps StoryLocation: Marquis A & B, 9th FloorThe Leadership Imperative: Ten Essential Principles of Implementation LeadershipLocation: Cantor/Jolson, 9th FloorThe Walking Dead on the Verge of going to Prison, The CURE Location: Barrymore, 9th FloorTuesday, August 29, 201709:00 am – 10:30 am
434thfloor7thfloor8thfloor9thfloorWorkshopsBridging the Gap: A Discussion on How to Improve the Community Corrections Curriculum at Universities to Maximize P&P Ocer Preparation for the FieldLocation: Wilder, 4th FloorPromoting Courage to Change: Best Practice Supervision for Youthful Oenders in Maricopa County and the Juvenile Transfer Oender Problem-Solving CourtLocation: ONeill, 4th FloorReaching the “Best 40”: Workload Allocation Among Iowa Community-Based Corrections StaLocation: Ziegfeld, 4th FloorApplying Continuous Evaluation Concepts for Enhanced Community Supervision StrategiesLocation: Gotham, 7th FloorDrug Court Graduations: From the Courtroom to the CommunityLocation: Empire, 7th FloorFor A Better World for You and Me, Let’s Celebrate DiversityLocation: Gramercy/Olmstead,7th FloorGPS and Remote Alcohol Monitoring–Increasing Compliance and Supervision Through Internal and External Collaborations Pre- and Post-DispositionLocation: Hudson/Chelsea, 7th FloorImproving the Experience of Clients, Communities, and Sta: Examples, Challenges, and Opportunities in Probation, Parole and Community Involvement in EuropeLocation: Soho/Herald, 7th FloorLet’s Talk about Supervision of Justice-Involved WomenLocation: Duy/Columbia, 7th FloorPretrial World Tour 2017Location: Astor Ballroom, 7th FloorASSET Management (Humans, Not $$)Location: Liberty, 8th FloorVirtual Integrated Mobile Oce (VIMO)Location: Manhattan Ballroom, 8th FloorBridging Facilities and Community Supervision: Tablet Technology Supporting Reentry Continuum of Service Location: Marquis A & B, 9th FloorClients, Communities, and Employees: Empowerment through PartnershipsLocation: Cantor/Jolson, 9th FloorGoing Home: Collaboration Is Key to Ensuring the Safe Return of Human Tracking Victims Location: Marquis C, 9th FloorReducing and Tailoring Conditions and Developing Measured and Consistent Responses to Violations – Critical Considerations in Eective Parole WorkLocation: Barrymore, 9th FloorTuesday, August 29, 201702:00 pm – 03:00 pmTuesday, August 29, 201709:00 am – 10:30 am
444thfloor7thfloor8thfloor9thfloorThe Importance of Risk Needs Assessments When Supervising Victims of Intimate Partner ViolenceLocation: ONeill, 4th FloorTransitioning from Referee to Coach: Changing the Way We Look at SupervisionLocation: Ziegfeld, 4th FloorYou Can Teach an Old Dog New Tricks! New Ways to Use GPS Tracking in the Field of SupervisionLocation: Wilder, 4th FloorFrom Corrections to Reducing Solitary Confinement by Creating a Client-Centered Treatment Approach: A Paradigm Shift for Post-Adjudicated Youth within Los Angeles County Probation DepartmentLocation: Gotham, 7th FloorHome Visits in Probation and Parole: New Research on Their Purpose, Goals, and EectivenessLocation: Empire, 7th FloorLions and Tigers and Oenders--Oh My! How Public Perception and Urban Mythology Regarding Oenders Can Derail Reentry EortsLocation: Hudson/Chelsea, 7th FloorMaking the Move to Data-Driven Decision-Making: A Practical Guide for Risk and Needs AssessmentLocation: Soho/Herald, 7th FloorThe Marijuana Experiment: Colorado Probation After Legalization Location: Astor Ballroom, 7th FloorThe Purpose of Involving Victims in Paroling/Reentry DecisionsLocation: Gramercy/Olmstead,7th FloorSupervision on the GoLocation: Duy/Columbia, 7th FloorGeneration Y: Can’t You Act Like Adults, Y Can’t We Figure You Out, and Y Should We Treat You Dierently?Location: Manhattan Ballroom, 8th FloorUnderstanding the Deportation Life CycleLocation: Liberty, 8th FloorCollaboration for Re-entry Success in New York StateLocation: Marquis C, 9th FloorCommunity Supervision and Behavior Change: Techniques that WorkLocation: Barrymore, 9th FloorCover Your Assets: Legally Defensible Training and Compliance RecordsLocation: Marquis A&B, 9th Floor Policing the Teen Brain, Community Policing and Youth EngagementLocation: Cantor/Jolson, 9th FloorTuesday, August 29, 201703:15 pm – 04:15 pmWorkshops44
45Tuesday, August 29, 201703:15 pm – 04:15 pmThank you to INDIVIDUAL members.Enjoy a relaxing atmosphere and the opportunity to network with other individual members in the John Augustus Lounge! This retreat has comfortable furniture to take a breather from your day at the Institute. JOHN AUGUSTUSLOUNGE***MEMBERS ONLY***Where: Sixth FloorMonday, August 28; 08:00 am - 07:00 pmTuesday, August 29; 08:00 am - 07:00 pm45
465thfloor8thfloor9thfloorA Game of Balance: Onboarding, EBP Skills, Safety… How does an Organization do it All?Beyond Prison Probation and ParoleLocation: Julliard Complex,5th FloorAddressing Mental Health Issues in the Criminal Justice Process: Improving Early Identification and Treatment Linkage Location: Salon 3, 5th FloorCalifornia Parole Succession Development ProgramLocation: Salon 4, 5th Floor Eye in the Sky: Using GPS in the Community-Based Supervision of High-Risk Oenders Location: Lyceum Complex,5th Floor Federal Pretrial to Probation: A Gateway to SuccessLocation: Salon 2, 5th FloorWomen in Probation and Parole: The Physical Strength and Mental FortitudeLocation: Salon 1, 5th FloorThe Garfield Probation Center: Won’t You Be my Neighbor?Location: Liberty, 8th FloorThe Power of One: Aligning Law Enforcement Priorities with Re-Entry AdvocacyLocation: Manhattan Ballroom, 8th FloorOpiate Abuse: Probation’s Role in Curbing the Epidemic (STUDENT PRESENTED WORKSHOP) Location: Barrymore, 9th FloorWednesday, August 30, 201709:45 am – 10:30 amFree Up Your Probation Offi cers and Staff by Automating Check Ins The AB Kiosk is a stand-alone system that fully automates probation check-ins and pre-trial services by combining two secure components: • An interactive kiosk that delivers customized questionnaires to offenders and records time-coded video of each check in;• And a robust offender-management software program that enables your offi ce to manage its entire offender population, store their records and issue reports. The AB Kiosk can handle 40 check ins per hour, and provides immediate notifi cations to staff of complete and incomplete check ins. Michael Noel mnoel@precisionkiosktech.com offi ce: 651-383-1215 mobile: 612-940-8000© 2017 Copyright Precision Kiosk Technologies precisionkiosktech.com Please contact us today to arrange a free demo. Ad Trim Size = 3.75 x 8.25 Document bleed allowance for 3 sides = 3.875 x 8.25 Workshops46
47Wednesday, August 30, 201709:45 am – 10:30 amFree Up Your Probation Offi cers and Staff by Automating Check Ins The AB Kiosk is a stand-alone system that fully automates probation check-ins and pre-trial services by combining two secure components: • An interactive kiosk that delivers customized questionnaires to offenders and records time-coded video of each check in;• And a robust offender-management software program that enables your offi ce to manage its entire offender population, store their records and issue reports. The AB Kiosk can handle 40 check ins per hour, and provides immediate notifi cations to staff of complete and incomplete check ins. Michael Noel mnoel@precisionkiosktech.com offi ce: 651-383-1215 mobile: 612-940-8000© 2017 Copyright Precision Kiosk Technologies precisionkiosktech.com Please contact us today to arrange a free demo. Ad Trim Size = 3.75 x 8.25 Document bleed allowance for 3 sides = 3.875 x 8.25 47
48Exhibit Ha
49ExhibitorsCV18 3M Electronic Monitoring, Inc.CV17 Alkermes - VivitrolCV26 AnyTrax CV27 averhealthCV19 cFIVECV7 Connectrex CorporationCV4 Corrections Soware SolutionsCV9 CorrectTechCV8 Envisage TechnologiesCV16 GeicoCV14 GEO CareCV23 Geosatis SACV28 IntoxalockCV15 Journal TechnologiesCV5 NCTI, Inc.CV21 Satellite Tracking of People LLCCV24 Scram SystemsCV6 Smart Start Inc.CV2 Track Group407 ACCI Life Skills208 Acivilate, Inc.204 Adventfs306 Alkermes Aristada312 American Addiction Centers415 American Bio Medica Corp405 American Drug Screen Corporation212 Bauman Consulting Group, LLC104 Benchmark Animal Cruelty Prevention and Education Program106 Blackinton413 Buddi411 CaseloadPRO114, 116 CI Technologies109 CNT Infotech318 Conrm BioSciences408 Core Systems 314 Cornerstone of Medical Arts403 Corriso, LLC108 Crystal Meth Anonymous217 Equivant110 FBI/N-DEx111 FBI/Rap Back Services Team205 Justice Benets, Inc.404 Justice Technology Information Center304 Justice Tools203 Keefe Group315 Kidspeace National Centers309 Marquis Soware Development Inc.409 Mercedes Medical207 MHS, Inc.211 Minnesota Multistate Contracting Alliance for Pharmacy417 National Association of Pretrial Services Agencies105, 107 National Institute of Corrections310 NCJRS - Oce of Justice Programs103 Noble Soware Group316 Numi Financial206 OraSure Technologies, Inc.305 Orbis Partners, Inc.115 PAS Systems International, Inc.302 Precision Kiosk Technologies317 Premier Biotech419 Prescient Medicine406 Recovery Healthcare Corporation214 Relias Learning303 RemoteCOM410 Rite of Passage 213 Rocky Mountain Oender Management System402 Safe Community Institute102 Sentinel Oender Services LLC215 Stetson School, Inc.311, 313 SuperCom, Inc.202 Telmate, LLC414 TestNotice307 e Carey Group209 e Change Companies210 e Learning House, Inc. BOOTH #BOOTH #BOOTH #
50Floorplans1/18/20171/1New York Marrio鐱 Marquis1535 BroadwayNew York, New York 10036 USAPhone: +1‐212‐398‐1900Sales: +1‐212‐398‐1900Fax: +1‐212‐704‐8930Sales fax: +1‐212‐704‐8969Toll‐Free ReservaĀonCenter:1‐800‐843‐4898Floor Plans
5112/27/20161/1New York Marrio徹 Marquis1535 BroadwayNew York, New York 10036 USAPhone: +1‐212‐398‐1900Sales: +1‐212‐398‐1900Fax: +1‐212‐704‐8930Sales fax: +1‐212‐704‐8969Toll‐Free Reserva쌮onCenter:1‐800‐843‐4898Floor PlansFloorplans
5212/27/20161/1New York Marrio Marquis1535 BroadwayNew York, New York 10036 USAPhone: +1‐212‐398‐1900Sales: +1‐212‐398‐1900Fax: +1‐212‐704‐8930Sales fax: +1‐212‐704‐8969Toll‐Free ReservaonCenter:1‐800‐843‐4898Floor PlansFloorplans
5312/27/20161/1New York Marrio Marquis1535 BroadwayNew York, New York 10036 USAPhone: +1‐212‐398‐1900Sales: +1‐212‐398‐1900Fax: +1‐212‐704‐8930Sales fax: +1‐212‐704‐8969Toll‐Free ReservaonCenter:1‐800‐843‐4898Floor PlansFloorplans
541/18/20171/1New York Marrio酈 Marquis1535 BroadwayNew York, New York 10036 USAPhone: +1‐212‐398‐1900Sales: +1‐212‐398‐1900Fax: +1‐212‐704‐8930Sales fax: +1‐212‐704‐8969Toll‐Free Reserva쭏onCenter:1‐800‐843‐4898Floor PlansFloorplans
551/18/20171/1New York Marrio읃 Marquis1535 BroadwayNew York, New York 10036 USAPhone: +1‐212‐398‐1900Sales: +1‐212‐398‐1900Fax: +1‐212‐704‐8930Sales fax: +1‐212‐704‐8969Toll‐Free Reserva귈onCenter:1‐800‐843‐4898Floor PlansFloorplans
cFIVE CATALYST. The future of supervision management. Catalyst is a behavioral modification and rehabilitation platform that helps case managers maintain effective client relationships, enables timely communications and intervention, and promotes client self-management. The results are lower technical violations and improved client outcomes for your agency.We call it smart technology. You’ll call it irreplaceable.CONTACT US TO LEARN MORE 949.260.3002 | info@cfive.com | www.cfive.com/catalyst STOP BY BOOTH CV19(CENTER COURT)for a demoAre you a #Catalyst4Change? Visit our booth to learn how you can nominate and recognize a change maker.