Thursday, January 31, 2008

This does not match up...

Governor: State to cut jobs, close mental hospitals
By Julie Carr Smyth/AP Statehouse Correspondent
POSTED: 11:57 a.m. EST, Jan 31, 2008
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- The state will eliminate up to 2,700 jobs, close two mental hospitals and limit other spending in an effort to reduce a projected budget deficit, Gov. Ted Strickland announced Thursday.
Strickland also issued a series of directives to limit travel, new contracts, equipment purchases and other spending categories in the face of a predicted a budget shortfall of between $733 million and $1.9 billion by June 2009, depending on how the economy fares.
A minimum of 1,500 jobs will be lost, Strickland said. The hospitals to be shuttered are in Dayton in western Ohio and Cambridge in eastern Ohio.
Strickland said the state also plans to get $73 million from an expansion of the lottery, including some new games.
The changes will account for the lower deficit amount, at minimum, Strickland said.
If the situation worsens, he would consider using money from the rainy day fund, which is set aside for budget emergencies.
He said he will protect tax reforms that started in 2005, as well as the homestead tax exemption for seniors, the tuition freeze at state colleges and universities, and the expansion of children's health care that were in the budget plan that began in July.




Funding will help ex-inmates stay clean
Grant tries to end cycle of addiction and crime
By Colette M. Jenkins Beacon Journal staff writer
Published on Thursday, Jan 31, 2008
Beginning next week, nearly $14 million in federal grant money will be available to help released prisoners with addictions navigate the road to re-entry in Summit, Stark and Cuyahoga counties.
That was the message Wednesday from Angela L. Cornelius, director of the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services, to about 100 representatives from faith- and community-based organizations that provide substance-abuse treatment and support services in the three targeted counties.
Cornelius spoke during a forum at the Interval Brotherhood Home to launch Ohio's Access to Recovery grant, which is officially called ''Choice for Recovery.''
The initiative is expected to benefit about 6,200 adult ex-offenders over the next three years by helping them break the cycleof addiction and crime. Summit, Stark and Cuyahoga counties were targeted, because they receive the highest number of returning offenders.
''The rate of recidivism and relapse are directly tied to the lack of support these individuals receive when they return to their communities,'' Cornelius said. ''This initiative gives access and choice to people who need these services to become re-engaged in life and become productive members of Ohio's communities. It gives hope and direction for a successful recovery journey.''
Access to Recovery is a three-year program funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
It is a presidential initiative that provides vouchers to clients for substance-abuse clinical treatment and recovery support services.
Access to Recovery projects are funded in 17 other states, five tribal organizations and the District of Columbia.
First vouchers Monday
In Ohio, the first vouchers will be given Monday to ex-offenders, who have gone through an assessment process. The vouchers are to be taken to benefit coordinators, which are agencies in each county that give the voucher holder, or client, a list of appropriate providers. The client can then make a choice of provider from the list. A Web-based voucher payment system will monitor the operations and effectiveness of the Choice for Recovery program.
The coordinating agency in Cuyahoga County has not been named. In Stark County, Treatment Accountability for Safer Communities (TASC) Inc. is the benefit coordinator. Oriana House in Akron is the coordinator for Summit County.
Barriers to success
''In addition to dealing with addictions, it is clear that when those who are incarcerated are released, they face barriers like child care, transportation, housing and employment,'' said Chris Richardson, program manager at Oriana House. ''We need as many agencies in the county as possible to come on board to provide the resources that ex-offenders need to get on the right path. If we can connect them with the resources that are needed, we will reduce the rate of recidivism and see fewer repeat offenders.''
The Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services is accepting applications from potential providers. Grant money can be used for treatment services, as well as recovery support services, including education, short-term housing, marriage and family counseling and life-skills training.
''These vouchers offer some positive options to people who have been incarcerated as a result of their addictions or because of problems related to their addictions,'' said the Rev. Sam Ciccolini, executive director at Interval Brotherhood Home. ''What this really means is people who get caught up in the vicious cycle of addiction and being sent to prison will now be given options to get help and get into treatment.''
Colette Jenkins can be reached at 330-996-3731 or cjenkins@thebeaconjournal.com.


Good idea... lets cut funding and close mental institutions and give more money to sex offenders in prision to stay clean. That way we can have more mentally unstable people on the streets while making sure the ex-prisioners stay drug free. The brilliance of this concept is almost too much bear.

Don't get me wrong, I think its great that they are trying to keep ex prisioners drug free... and I would not object pouring money into keeping those people clean if they weren't putting people on the street in this fashion.

I understand they are not taking money from the mentally insane and giving it to prisioners directly... but it seems like thats what is going on.

I'm going to write a little letter to Mr. Strickland I think...

(and yes, i'm becoming my dad)

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