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Oklahoma Drug and Mental Health Courts Could Get More Funding Under New Bill

Drug court participants have to follow strict rules like, making regular court appearances, submitting to drug tests and reporting for group therapy sessions.
Quinton Chandler / StateImpact Oklahoma
Drug court participants have to follow strict rules like, making regular court appearances, submitting to drug tests and reporting for group therapy sessions.

Millions of dollars to make more room in the state’s drug courts, mental health courts, and community sentencing programs could be a possibility under a bill now being considered by the Oklahoma Senate.

State Representative John Waldron wants the Legislature to authorize a new fund to pay for up to 875 additional people to be diverted into treatment programs instead of prison.

If House Bill 1416 becomes law, it would call for the state to deposit into the fund $1 for every private prison inmate each day they are in custody and  the Department of Mental Health would create rules to manage the fund.

Based on the current private prison population — Waldron estimates the fund would collect about $2.15 million from the state. He hopes private donors would match that amount to create a budget of $4.3 million in additional money for the state’s treatment programs, such as drug court and mental health court.

Waldron said the bill targets the state’s ballooning prison population. As long as people are sent to private prisons in Oklahoma — the legislator wants to send extra money to prison diversion programs.

People who graduate Oklahoma’s drug court and mental health court programs are significantly less likely to go to prison.

A spokesperson for the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services said putting one person through drug court costs $5,000 per year. Department of Corrections data suggests in fiscal year 2018 the cost to imprison a single person ranged between $16,900 – $36,000.

According to the Department of Mental Health 82 percent of people who entered Oklahoma’s prison system for nonviolent crimes during fiscal year 2017 suffered from addiction or mental illness.

House Bill 1416 passed the House of Representatives 80-7.

Copyright 2019 KOSU

Quinton is joining the team at StateImpact Oklahoma, focusing on criminal justice reporting. He is an OSU grad with degrees in Economics and Marketing who got his start in radio at KOSU. After graduation, Quinton served as Morning Edition Host/General Assignment Reporter at KBBI Radio in Homer, Alaska and Education Reporter at KTOO Public Media in Juneau, Alaska. Quinton loves writing, reading and has an intense relationship with his Netflix account.
Quinton Chandler
Quinton Chandler joined StateImpact Oklahoma in January 2018, focusing on criminal justice reporting.