USA Today: Alternative Courts Gain Ground

Earlier last month, USA Today reported on Problem Solving Courts and the impact their programs are having on recidivism for drug and mental health related non-violent crime. The Center for Court Innovation reports more than 2,000 drug courts in the United States. Read USA Today’s Article in full at the link below:

Cities and counties increasingly are creating innovative community courts to deal with the growing number of habitual petty criminals that police call “frequent fliers.”

Criminals who are arrested repeatedly for crimes such as public drunkenness, trespassing and panhandling are crowding jails and sapping police resources, officials say. The cost of handling small-time criminals who cycle in and out of jail is becoming a more pressing problem for communities as budgets tighten and jail populations swell.

The new courts sentence “frequent fliers” to treatment plans and social services, such as mental health and substance abuse treatment, instead of jail.

“It’s the new frontier,” says Amy Solomon, who studies criminal justice at The Urban Institute in Washington. “There is a new realization and recognition” that incarceration is not the best solution. “I think it’ll grow and continue to pick up.”

Read the entire article here: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2008-06-09-frequentfliers_N.htm?loc=intersti…