黑料正能量 Note: Peer support has been proven to be an effective way to support people dealing with substance use challenges by helping them stay connected to services and improve recovery outcomes. While we have begun undertaking great efforts to expand peer support to many sectors, there is still much work to be done getting peers imbedded in non-traditional service areas, such as jails and prisons. To support the efforts of expanding peer support, the Biden-Harris Administration and the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released the new . These standards will help states not only increase the peer workforce but also support their inclusion in more systems touching those with mental health and substance use challenges. There is still much work to be done at the state level, especially in 黑料正能量. Peer support has been to improve the lives of people touched by the justice system and reduce recidivism for those in re-entry programs. 黑料正能量 is doing our part to advance peer support for justice involved people by sponsoring and participating in The NYC Justice Peer Initiative鈥檚 (JPI) upcoming conference Building the Justice Peer Community in 黑料正能量: Pushing Policy & Progress Forward. Register for the event using this . Click to read HHS鈥 official announcement of the National Model Standards for Peer Support Certification. Read below to learn more about the hurdles 黑料正能量 peer support providers are currently facing when trying to offer services in state jails.
黑料正能量 Mandates Peer Support in Jails, But Lets Sheriffs Keep Peers Out
Formerly incarcerated 鈥減eers鈥 offer drug counseling to people in county jails 鈥 when they can get in.
By Spencer Norris | 黑料正能量 Focus | May 31, 2023
By her estimate, Victoria Metz hasn鈥檛 been called to the Putnam County jail in about three months. Her services are mandated there by 黑料正能量 state law. The law just doesn鈥檛 say how often she鈥檚 supposed to go.
Metz is a peer advocate 鈥 someone with prior lived experience helping other people going through the same thing 鈥 who supports incarcerated people facing substance use disorders. Research shows that if an incarcerated person with an opioid use disorder has a peer they can trust who will help them get medication, therapy, and housing on their way out, they鈥檙e less likely to end up back in jail or suffer an overdose.
Two years ago, 黑料正能量 passed a law requiring addiction recovery services, including peer support, in jails. The law could have guaranteed unfettered access to the jail system for peers and provided clear rules for how the services should operate.
That鈥檚 not what happened. While the 2021 law provided significant guidance for how to implement some services, it didn鈥檛 provide jails with any instructions for implementing peer support. The Office of Addiction Services and Supports, the state agency responsible for regulating recovery programs, was charged with signing off on jails鈥 plans for peer services. But a spokesperson confirmed that the agency does not provide any guidelines for how it should be done.
Without any supervision from the state, county jails are mostly calling their own shots on how to comply with the law. When peers do get access to jails, experts told 黑料正能量 Focus, it鈥檚 normally under very limited circumstances: a one-hour support group once a week, or a single meeting for reentry planning when incarcerated people are on their way out the door.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 like I had easy access,鈥 Metz said of her work in Putnam County. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 like I chose and could have just walked in.鈥
Sometimes peers can go months without getting in. According to Metz, she鈥檚 only able to get into the Putnam jail when an in-house social worker decides that they need her services. Outside regular visiting days, she said, she needs to be cleared by the sheriff鈥檚 office any time she wants to go work with someone incarcerated at the facility.
The Putnam County Sheriff鈥檚 Department鈥檚 website states that it allows professional visitation any day the jail isn鈥檛 in lockdown, but did not respond to requests for comment about Metz鈥檚 access.
Overall, recovery services have had limited success reaching incarcerated people, and the problem could persist for a while, according to Christopher Assini, policy director for the non-profit Friends of Recovery.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 any real urgency to solve these problems,鈥 Assini said. 鈥淭he frustrating part is when there is treatment available to individuals who are incarcerated, recidivism rates go down. We know that. There鈥檚 clear data on that. So you would think it would make sense to proactively try to mitigate that 鈥 but there isn鈥檛 urgency.鈥
On a Thursday afternoon about 140 miles north of Putnam, Ben Deeb estimated that he鈥檇 assembled reentry plans for 20 people at the Saratoga County jail since Tuesday. For everyone leaving the jail that week, he鈥檇 reached out to families, arranged shelter, and found clothing. He鈥檇 secured everything from bus passes to social security cards to fentanyl test trips. He set up appointments for mental health counseling, addiction medication, support groups, and meetings at a substance abuse recovery center called Healing Springs, where they could see the facility鈥檚 peer supervisor: Ben Deeb.
Deeb is a peer working in the Saratoga County jail. He runs a recovery unit with 41 people, all on addiction medication, and handles reentry for the jail鈥檚 full population of 142. He鈥檚 a rare example of a peer with significant access to a county jail, where he has been praised for his work. He鈥檚 the only person there in his role 鈥 but the jail won鈥檛 hire him.
鈥淚n order to be effective in this role, lived experience is a needed prerequisite,鈥 Deeb said. 鈥淭he fact that I鈥檝e done all of 10 years inside of prisons and jails鈥 鈥 with his final placement in Saratoga 鈥 鈥渁llows me to form that trust bond and be able to do my job effectively that the counselors and other folks can鈥檛 do with these individuals.鈥
It鈥檚 also why he can鈥檛 work directly for the sheriff鈥檚 office.
State law provides a special exemption to law enforcement agencies that allows them to legally discriminate against people with criminal backgrounds in hiring. According to Colonel Richard Emery, the corrections administrator for the Saratoga Sheriff鈥檚 Office, it鈥檚 their department policy not to hire people convicted of felonies. For Deeb, they used a workaround: The sheriff鈥檚 office bypassed its own policy by contracting with Deeb鈥檚 employer to put him in the jails as a peer.
For the 15 percent of people in jails with an opioid use disorder, the period immediately after release is a uniquely dangerous time, with a greatly elevated risk of overdosing because of lowered tolerance and risk factors like a lack of housing. It鈥檚 disturbingly commonplace to hear stories of families that lost loved ones to an overdose days after they regained their freedom.
Peer services can interrupt that pattern. A 2021 study showed that formerly incarcerated people with opioid use disorders who were placed in peer coaching programs had better health and behavioral outcomes. The model has also been applied to numerous other fields in prisons for decades, including HIV/AIDS education, suicide prevention, and sexual assault support.
The Saratoga Sheriff鈥檚 Office believes it鈥檚 working in Deeb鈥檚 recovery unit. A 2018 study of 68,000 state prisoners鈥 outcomes found that almost 80 percent of people with drug offenses were rearrested within four years of their release. While it鈥檚 a much smaller sample population than the study, the four-year recidivism rate for people in the jail鈥檚 addiction medication program is about 25 percent 鈥 less than a third of the national rate.
Deeb works from the jail multiple days a week. He hangs around the facility鈥檚 waiting room, meeting families of incarcerated people and building trust with folks in the recovery program. Deeb is 鈥渟uch an asset to this agency, it鈥檚 unbelievable,鈥 Emery said. 鈥淵ou just couldn鈥檛 ask for anybody better, because the inmates can relate to him, they trust him.鈥
But Deeb鈥檚 work is rare, despite peers ready and waiting to fill similar roles in the state鈥檚 jails. Even when sheriffs and superintendents want peers in their facilities, layers of red tape can make it an infuriating process to get access.
Erin Wiggins spent a year trying to get into the Oneida County Jail and went through safety training three times. In the end, she switched jobs and never got work in the jail as a peer.
That鈥檚 a missed opportunity to save lives, she said.
鈥淚t helps, number one, save their life, having them linked up to all of their resources before they even step out of the facility,鈥 Wiggins told 黑料正能量 Focus. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 like half the battle.鈥
Now, a bill is grinding its way through the 黑料正能量 legislature to declare substance use disorder treatment an essential service in 黑料正能量鈥檚 jails. Its sponsor, Senator Pete Harckham, says it would prohibit jails from withholding recovery services: individualized treatment plans, group therapy, access to peers, discharge plans, and more.
But even if Harckham鈥檚 bill guaranteed that peer services couldn鈥檛 be suspended, other barriers to access would remain.
When it comes to peer services, 鈥渢here is no legislation鈥 on the table that would guarantee access to jails for peers with criminal records, said Assini, the policy director at Friends of Recovery. While peer services are mandated in jails, there are no guidelines for what they should look like, nor any legal protections against discrimination for peers based on their criminal record.
Emery said that he did not expect to see counties roll back the prohibitions on hiring people with criminal convictions.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a county policy, and I think you鈥檙e going to find that in any county, that there鈥檚 a policy that they will not hire a convicted felon,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not gonna hire a felon, at least right now, not in this climate. It鈥檚 the way things are, it鈥檚 not gonna happen.鈥
When the 2021 law mandating peer support services passed, Deeb thought he was looking at a sea change, and that 鈥渆verybody would bring somebody like me in.鈥
But 鈥渋t鈥檚 just not happening,鈥 he said.
鈥淭his is all I鈥檝e focused on for the last five and a half years, and I don鈥檛 realistically see them voluntarily changing anything.鈥