Pubdate: Fri, 11 Apr 2008 Source: Star-Banner, The (Ocala, FL) Copyright: 2008 The Star-Banner Contact: http://www.starbanner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1533 Author: Lowell Workman INMATE TRAFFIC The present policy of the felony and misdemeanor courts is to incarcerate probationers who are in violation of their probation when they become delinquent in paying their monetary obligations or who have a drug-related illness and test positive for using an unauthorized or controlled substance. After being incarcerated and serving only a fraction of their sentence, these probationers are released to a halfway house, which are supplemented by the state to supervise these inmates. These halfway houses also charge these inmates up to 65 percent of the inmate's total earned income for lodging and meals. The state also authorizes a 15 percent tax incentive to employers who will hire these inmates. Now, the new concept in the process would be to send Florida inmates to other states and pay the receiving state to house Florida inmates. Why not use an order to appear when an offender is in violation of their probation for delinquent monetary obligation or drug use? An order to appear would allow these probationers to remain employed, to continue paying toward their monetary obligations, attend substance abuse treatment at their own expense while waiting disposition of the violation of probation in criminal or misdemeanor court. An order to appear would also eliminate the need for an officer or officers to arrest the probationer, reduce the inmate population in the Marion County Jail and the prisons in Lowell, eliminate the need for inmate families to apply for public assistance, reduce the workload of the Department of Corrections, the state attorney, the public defender office, and it would reduce the state deficit. Why isn't an order to appear being used in the felony and misdemeanor courts? Only the state attorney knows the answer to the question. LOWELL WORKMAN Ocala - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath