The task force discussed restoring day reporting to a full-day program and expanding weekend alternatives to reduce short-term jail occupancy. Michelle and other members asked whether judges had stopped referring to day reporting because it had been cut to part-day; staff reported referrals are equal to or greater than before the hour reduction, but committee members still recommended exploring benefits of restoring full-day programming for added educational and vocational time.
Members also discussed Ricks-style day-release tied to community service and the Probation Department’s service work alternative (swap) as options to shorten jail sentences while keeping a supervision component. One member said the swap program could be used as an alternative to weekend incarceration and suggested exploring conditional discharges tied to 10 weekends of service.
On monitoring technology, the group discussed whether to purchase additional electronic-monitoring devices versus paying per-day vendor charges; members reported devices are commonly paid per day and can be obtained quickly if funds are authorized, but buying versus renting trade-offs should be explored.
The task force agreed to mark day-reporting expansion and the swap/weekender ideas as exploratory items in the report and to assess staffing, facility space (classrooms in new quarters), and magistrate education as part of implementation analysis.