| Governor Discusses Department of 
			Corrections Transformation and Criminal Justice Reforms Nearly 13,000 Corrections 
			staff receive mental health training in less than 12 months
 
 Reforms rehabilitate inmates more effectively
 while improving safety for corrections officers
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            [December 15, 2016] 
            
            
			SPRINGFIELD 
			- Governor Bruce Rauner today joined Illinois Department of 
			Corrections Director John Baldwin to highlight efforts the 
			administration has made to transform the Department of Corrections 
			(DOC) along with other criminal justice reforms. The governor 
			pointed out nearly 13,000 security, non-security and contract DOC 
			staff have participated in a two-day Mental Illness 101 – See the 
			Person not the Illness training session in 2016 with almost 100 
			percent compliance. | 
		
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			 “Criminal justice reform has been a top priority of our 
			administration from the very beginning, which is why the progress 
			we've seen at the Department of Corrections is so encouraging," said 
			Governor Rauner. "Through the hard work and dedication of Department 
			of Corrections staff, we are closer every day to reaching our goal 
			of safely reducing Illinois’ prison population by 25 percent before 
			2025." 
 In Illinois, roughly 27 percent of DOC's population is on the mental 
			health caseload. DOC has partnered with the National Alliance on 
			Mental Illness (NAMI) to provide corrections officers with mental 
			health training. To date, nearly 13,000 members of IDOC’s staff have 
			received two days of focused mental health training. The course 
			provides lessons on conditions such as schizophrenia and bi-polar 
			disorder, helps staff understand the effects of psychotropic 
			medications, gives staff tools to recognize when someone is in 
			distress and offers suggestions on how to better communicate with 
			them.
 
			
			 
			 
 “We are committed to reforming Illinois’ criminal justice system and 
			this mental health training is an important step in that 
			transformation,” said IDOC Director John Baldwin. “The training 
			gives our staff a glimpse of what offenders with mental illness are 
			experiencing and provides strategic methods on how to better 
			communicate with them. We will continue to invest in our staff so 
			they can be safe and successful on the job, while also working to 
			better assist and rehabilitate our mentally ill offenders. We will 
			continue to work towards improving outcomes for all offenders, 
			giving them a real chance to get a job and take care of their 
			families when they go home.”
 
 One of the administration’s first acts was to establish the Illinois 
			State Commission on Criminal Justice and Sentencing Reform to 
			examine our current criminal justice and sentencing policies, 
			practices, and resource allocation in Illinois. The bipartisan 
			commission presented an initial 14 recommendations to the governor 
			last Spring.
 
			
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Under Governor Rauner’s leadership, DOC has already started to implement a 
number of the commission’s suggested reforms administratively, while two bills 
have passed the General Assembly with bipartisan support. Governor Rauner 
previously signed a bill into law that requires judges to explain why an 
incarceration sentence is appropriate for a low-level felony offender when they 
have no prior probation sentences or no prior convictions for a violent crime. 
The governor has signed other common sense bills including one to allow former 
offenders to have the chance to become licensed health care workers, and another 
to help youth by bringing Illinois in line with other states by reducing 
mandatory minimum lengths of probation and treating low level offenses with 
treatment. 
 In May, DOC entered into a Settlement Agreement in the case of Rasho v. Baldwin. 
The agreement requires the Department to hire additional mental health staff, 
provide increased staff training, bring four residential treatment units online, 
offer an inpatient treatment program, improve programming for mentally ill 
offenders, and ensure they are not disciplined because of their illness. The 
case had lingered in the courts since 2007 and it was the Rauner Administration 
that took action to ensure better treatment for offenders, while improving the 
safety of our corrections officers.
 
 Prior to January 2016, staff had not received any training on how to work with 
offenders who are mentally ill.
 
				 
			[Office of the Governor Bruce Rauner] 
			
			 
			
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