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There’sbeauty in rehabilitation Community … · Harold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired)...

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Oriana House Administrative Offices P.O. Box 1501 Akron, OH 44309 330-535-8116 www.orianahouse.org 2016 Community Report & There’s beauty in recovery rehabilitation.
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Page 1: There’sbeauty in rehabilitation Community … · Harold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Service Director James Lawrence, Oriana House, Inc.

Oriana House Administrative Offices P.O. Box 1501 Akron, OH 44309330-535-8116 www.orianahouse.org

2016 Community Report

&

There’sbeauty

in recoveryrehabilitation.

Page 2: There’sbeauty in rehabilitation Community … · Harold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Service Director James Lawrence, Oriana House, Inc.

If you live in Ohio, you undoubtedly have an appreciation of the beauty of the seasons. In spring we have beautiful blossoms and splashes of green budding on the trees. Summer comes with the sounds of kids at play and late night sunsets. Vibrant colors come alive with the crisp air in the fall. And winter brings a blanket of sparkling snow flakes. Each season offers a sense of newness and a fresh start.

No one can understand the beauty of a fresh start more than a person in recovery. At a time when an opiate epidemic is merciless in its lock on sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, brothers, and sisters, we need to focus on the beauty of recovery and how to give people a fresh start. Addiction is not a stigma, it’s a disease. We need to embrace those who reach out for help, continue to direct those who relapse, and not lose hope in those who are in the depths of their disease.

Established in Akron in 1981, Oriana House now provides community corrections and substance abuse treatment programs throughout much of Ohio. With facilities in Summit, Cuyahoga, Seneca, Erie, Sandusky, Huron, and Washington counties, Oriana House employs nearly 800 professionals who work to help clients become healthy, independent members of our communities. When our clients succeed, recidivism decreases, the economy benefits, and families and neighborhoods become stronger.

Treatment that helps overcome a substance abuse addiction; assistance in developing responsible work habits and securing a job; classes that focus on parenting skills; the opportunity to learn how to use better judgment; sessions that help family members cope with a loved one who has an addiction – these are just some of the many benefits of the programs offered by Oriana House.

Just as nature’s seasons offer a fresh start, Oriana House will continue to give our clients the skills they need to start anew and to thrive; and their successes and sobriety are what we see as beauty.

James J. Lawrence President & CEO Oriana House, Inc.

William Kea (chair), Summit County Executive’s Office (retired)

Harold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired)

Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Service Director

James Lawrence, Oriana House, Inc.

George Romanoski, Akron Deputy Mayor (retired)

Judge Mary F. Spicer, Summit County Court of Common Pleas (retired)

James Wagner, Attorney

Message to the Community

2016 Board of Directors

Service AreasOriana House, Inc., has facilities in Summit, Cuyahoga, Seneca, Erie,

Huron, Sandusky and Washington counties and provides services in

these and the surrounding catchment areas.

Page 3: There’sbeauty in rehabilitation Community … · Harold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Service Director James Lawrence, Oriana House, Inc.

Highlights 2016

14,470 Community Corrections Clients17,496 Chemical Dependency Clients

Oriana House celebrates that all programs eligible for ACA accreditation have perfect audit scoresThe Judge Nancy R. McDonnell Community Based Correctional Facility (CBCF) and the Fannie M. Lewis Community Corrections and Treatment Center (CCTC) in Cleveland both received 100% on their reaccreditation audits from the American Correctional Association (ACA). For the first time in Oriana House’s history, all programs eligible for ACA received a perfect audit score.

Treatment Transfer Program begins The Treatment Transfer Program allows eligible offenders to be transferred from prison to a halfway house for substance abuse treatment and other services. The program was initiated by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. Oriana House has halfway house programs in Summit, Cuyahoga, and Erie counties.

Oriana House looks to offer services in Washington CountyOriana House worked with the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction to establish a halfway house and substance abuse treatment program in south east Ohio. This region of the state was in need of a residential community corrections program.

Substance abuse treatment using Vivitrol becomes available in Sandusky and Huron countiesThe prescription drug Vivitrol has been made available to opiate dependent clients at the Northwest Ohio Behavior & Reporting Services (NO-BARS) Program in Fremont and Norwalk. Vivitrol is an extended release, injectable medicine that blocks the effects of opioids for approximately 30 days and eliminates or greatly reduces cravings.

Oriana House programs all become PREA certifiedThe Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) is Federal Law that requires residential correctional facilities to adopt a zero-tolerance policy relating to all forms of sexual abuse and sexual harassment. Oriana House developed a systematic means of monitoring, identifying, reporting, and investigating employee and client sexual misconduct, in order to provide a safe and secure environment for employees, clients, independent contractors, vendors, interns, and volunteers. The Residential Corrections Center (RCC) and Residential Institutional Probation (RIP) in Akron complete the list of Oriana House programs that are PREA certified.

Oriana House’s 2016 client totalsThe Summit County region had 10,380 community corrections client intakes and 788,359 mandays.

The Cuyahoga County region had 2,510 community corrections client intakes and 254,384 mandays.

The North Central Ohio region had 1,580 community corrections client intakes and 136,807 mandays.

Chemical Dependency Treatment had 17,496 clients.

Agency-wide, there were 5,938 residential community corrections client intakes.

Agency-wide, there were 8,532 non residential community corrections client intakes.

Page 4: There’sbeauty in rehabilitation Community … · Harold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Service Director James Lawrence, Oriana House, Inc.

2016 Cuyahoga County Residential PRogRamsJudge Nancy R. McDonnell CBCF 601 62,198 69%Federal Placement 233 23,637 80%Cuyahoga County Jail Reduction 13 558 58%Halfway House 460 39,437 64%

non Residential PRogRamsElectronic Monitoring 173 12,326 84%Day Programming 363 43,156 38%Transitional Services 184 17,938 49%SCOPE (cognitive program for probationers) 483 55,134 50%

2016 noRth CentRal ohio Residential PRogRamsCROSSWAEH CBCF 244 32,528 92%Halfway House 130 12,571 76%

non Residential PRogRamsElectronic Monitoring (includes home 506 29,655 75%incarceration, GPS, alcohol intake monitoring)

Day Reporting (NO BARS) 700 62,053 77%

ReentRy & housing seRviCesNorth Star Neighborhood ReentryResource Center (NRRC) new members 1,678

North Star NRRC in person contacts 27,827

Access to Recovery, Summit County 199

Access to Recovery, Cuyahoga County 32

Cleveland Community Residential Center 86

Akron Community Residential Center 86

ADM Recovery Housing at Frederick Avenue Apartments 64

Beginnings Housing in Akron 13

ChemiCal dePendenCy PRogRamsChemical Dependency Treatment 7,193

Chemical Dependency Program Assessments 3,623

Summit County ADM Crisis Center

Detoxification 1,355

Ambulatory Detoxification 118

Drop In 1,429

Central Assessment 2,304

Summit Link 754

Rigel Recovery Services Akron Clients 204 Assessments 206

Rigel Recovery Services Tiffin Clients 143 Assessments 167

6,123 non residential clients

549,514 days served

4,257 residential clients

238,845 days served

Days Served# of ClientsSuccessful Completions

Community CoRReCtions PRogRams

1,307 residential clients

125,830 days served

1,203 non residential clients

128,554 days served

1,206

non residential clients

91,708 days served

374 residential clients

45,099 days served

17,496 chemical dependency total

Financials

# of Clients

* Retention rate: percentage of successful completions & active clients

2016 summit County Residential PRogRamsSummit County CBCF 516 60,362 65%Medication Assisted CBCF 127 15,746 75%Federal Placement 147 12,512 90%Multiple Offender Program 182 2,668 80%Glenwood Jail 1,269 33,300 95%Halfway House 1,106 85,954 56%Work Release/Employment Placement 364 18,051 55%SHARP 98 8,069 45%Driver Intervention Programs (includes 448 2,183 99%time served at Glenwood Jail as part of 6-day sanction)

non Residential PRogRamsElectronic Monitoring (includes home 3,263 196,761 74%incarceration, GPS, alcohol intake monitoring)

Reentry Court 86 34,126 74%*Felony Drug Court/Turning Point Program 198 73,764 74%*Akron Municipal Drug Court 73 20,413 68%*Family Intervention Court 58 18,765 80%*Day Reporting 701 73,417 42%Transitional Services 125 16,070 46%Pretrial Diversion 57 n/a 67%Pretrial Supervision 1,562 116,198 77%

2016 exPenses$53,396,911

5%

7%

10%

Insurance/ Interest

OccupancyClient

Expenses

Supplies/ Maintenance

Operating Expenses

1%

6%Personnel

71%

# Served

2016 Revenue$50,956,837

Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction Halfway House Contract

22%

1%

12%

2%8%

7%

2%

5%

11%

7%

6%

Miscellaneous/ Other Contracts

Judge Nancy R. McDonnell (Cuyahoga County) CBCF Contract

11%

Cuyahoga County Jail Reduction Program, Other Cities/Counties & Third Party Fees

Summit County ADM Board

Summit County CBCF Contract City of Akron Community Corrections Contract

Client Fees

Federal Bureau of Prisons

Community Corrections Act

Summit County Community Corrections Contract

CROSSWAEH (Seneca County) CBCF Contract

Medicaid

6%

Page 5: There’sbeauty in rehabilitation Community … · Harold Craig, Akron Police Department (retired) Eric Czetli, Cuyahoga Falls Service Director James Lawrence, Oriana House, Inc.

Prison County Jail Community Based Correctional Facilities* Minimum Security Jail* Multiple DUI Offender Program* County Jail Transfer* County Jail Direct Placement* Restricted Halfway House* Halfway House* Work Release* Employment Placement* Special Population Programs* (Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities, Opiate Addiction) Driver Intervention Programs* Intensive Supervised Probation Electronic Monitoring*/GPS Monitoring* Secure Continuous Remote Alcohol Monitoring (SCRAM)* Speciality Court Programs (Drug Courts*, Mental Health Court*, Family Intervention Court*, Reentry Court*, Veterans Court) Day Reporting* Criminal Non-Support* Community Control Forensic Drug & Alcohol Assessments* Community Service Pretrial Diversion Programs* Pretrial Supervision* Forfeiture/Impoundment Restitution/Fines/Costs

Leas

t Res

trict

ive

Mos

t Res

trict

ive

Oriana House provides integrated rehabilitative services across the continuum of sanctions. Because many of the services are provided by Oriana House, offenders can easily be moved up and down the continuum, adding or removing restrictions as necessary, without interruption to programming. This continuum of sanctions in Summit County, Ohio, is a nationwide model for successful community corrections programs.

Correctional Sanctions

Each step in the Continuum of Sanctions can be used in conjunction with one another or as a step up or down from one program to another.

Residential SanctionsNon- Residential SanctionsFinancial Sanctions

Continuum of Sanctions Model

It is the policy of Oriana House, Inc., to not discriminate based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, age, sex (wages), genetics, gender, sexual orientation, HIV status, retaliation, and military/veteran status.

Drug/Alcohol Treatment

Intensive Outpatient Program

Relapse Prevention Program

Aftercare Program

Employment Programs

Crisis Counseling

Cognitive Skills

Education Programs

Case Management

Drug/Alcohol Screens

Family Involvement

Rehabilitative Services(based on individual risk/needs assessment)


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