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Published byAlfred Ross Modified over 8 years ago
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Anthony Vidale Arizona Criminal Justice Commission
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Reductions to Task Force funding necessitate the need to get more by using more through data-driven decision-making and utilizing community partners. 2
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Funding Community Partners Use of Data 3
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Agency Budget Reductions Improving economy but funding increases lag recovery Special revenue funds may not recover to pre-recession levels Direction of federal grant funds Federal spending is a continued concern Impact of Byrne JAG formula on allocation to state Pressure to fund evidence-based projects Use of Forfeiture proceeds Penalties Becoming a popular method of forcing compliance Cost increases Establishing a “new” funding level norm 4
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Diversion of Personnel/Resources to other law enforcement functions Moving task force officers from specialty units to traditional street enforcement Doing less with less More with less requires productivity gains and at some point those options run out Fracturing of task forces Economies of scale reductions Especially impactful in rural areas or small jurisdictions Make use of non-monetary resources to effect the drug crime problem Data-driven decision-making Multi-disciplined approach to drug crime 5
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Use of data to drive decision-making Build data capacity Become data/research consumers Arizona Criminal Justice Commission’s Community Data Project 6
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Arizona Criminal Justice Commission Community Data Project Criminal Justice Data Project Activity Data Finance DataCommunity Data Community Data Project Database 7
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Community level data that shows trends of drug use As a stand-alone, one variable may not tell the story A combination of data can paint a picture of the environment Task Forces are operating in Can answer questions like: How bad is the problem? Where should the focus be? How effective are we being? 8
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Inventory what data are available Identify what data are meaningful What information is useful to grantors in decision-making that Task Forces can use to measure effectiveness? Establish a collection system for that data Educate Task Forces and other stakeholders how to use data collection system Use data to articulate drug problem in grant applications Use data to measure effectiveness in responses/solutions to drug problem Use data to justify funding Data are shared by all stakeholders involved in addressing a problem and leads to a shared understanding and shared solution 9
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Primary mission of drug task forces is to enforce drug laws To effectively impact the drug problem in a community, task forces need to be involved in supply reduction and demand reduction efforts Funding pressure may limit ability of task forces to conduct activities outside of core apprehension operations Partnering with community coalitions and other groups to extend the influence and perspective of law enforcement Work towards multi-faceted, multi-disciplined approach to drug problem Expand task force reach on drug problem through community partnerships 10
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Criminal Justice Commission established a partnership with the Department of Health Services to provide SAMHSA funding to criminal justice agencies Created grant program to prevent/reduce substance abuse by building collaborative relationships between public health, community, and criminal justice organizations Examples of some collaborative projects: Purchase incinerator and conduct prescription drug take-back events Drug prevention training for probation officers Training for DOC substance abuse counseling staff to improve quality of treatment services and outcomes Substance abuse prevention and education training for school resource officers, field officers, school faculty and staff Substance abuse prevention training for youth in Teen Court program Toolkit development, training presentations, and curriculum development for youth anti- marijuana campaign
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