Background: Sentencing. When a person is convicted of a felony offense, a sentencing court is generally required to impose a term of confinement based on a standard range provided in statute. Additional sentencing policies can increase or decrease a term of confinement. In some circumstances, sentencing courts have discretion to order sentencing alternatives. Sentencing alternatives generally result in a person serving a shorter term of confinement, and sometimes serving no term of confinement. Instead, he or she may be required to participate in certain programs or treatment, or to submit to forms of partial confinement.
Persons sentenced to a term longer than one year are committed to the Department of Corrections (DOC), while those sentenced to shorter terms are committed to local jails.
Statute designates certain crimes as nonviolent offenses, violent offenses, serious violent offenses, and/or sex offenses. These designations can affect sentencing, programming and services, and collateral consequences.
Alternatives for Parents of Minors. In 2010 the state enacted two alternatives to prison sentences for nonviolent offenders with minor children: the court-based Parenting Sentencing Alternative (PSA) and the DOC-based Community Parenting Alternative (CPA).
Parenting Sentencing Alternative. The PSA is a judicial sentencing alternative, allowing a court to waive a person's entire prison sentence and instead impose 12 months of community custody under the supervision of the DOC, with additional conditions. A person must meet all of the following criteria to qualify:
- have physical custody of his or her biological or adopted minor child or be a legal guardian or custodian with physical custody of a minor child at the time of the current offense;
- have no current or prior conviction of a sex offense or violent offense;
- be subject to a standard sentence range with a high end of greater than one year;
- not be subject to a deportation detainer or order and not become subject to a deportation order during the period of the sentence; and
- sign necessary release waivers to allow information regarding current or prior child welfare cases to be shared with the DOC and the court.
Prior to imposing or authorizing the PSA, the DOC must contact the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) or a tribal child welfare agency to determine whether the person is involved in any open or prior cases of substantiated referrals of abuse or neglect. The DCYF must provide certain information to the court, including the status of any present case or findings from past cases and other specified items. If a person with an open child welfare case is approved for the PSA, the DOC must coordinate services with the DCYF.
The court may impose conditions for a PSA participant, including: parenting classes, chemical dependency treatment, mental health treatment, vocational training, offender change programs, and life skills classes. At any time during the 12-month term of community custody, a judge may order a participant back to court to evaluate his or her progress or determine whether he or she has violated conditions. The court may modify conditions or impose sanctions. If the participant violates conditions or fails to make satisfactory progress, the court may order the offender to serve his or her full prison sentence.
Community Parenting Alternative. The CPA is a DOC partial confinement program, allowing the DOC to transfer a person to reside in the community under supervision and electronic monitoring for up to the last 12 months of his or her prison sentence. The DOC may not authorize participation in CPA unless the program is also in the best interests of the minor child. A person must meet all of the following criteria to qualify:
- have physical or legal custody of a minor child; have a proven, established, ongoing, and substantial relationship with his or her biological or adopted minor child that existed prior to the commission of the current offense; or
- be a legal guardian of a minor child at the time of the current offense;
- have no current conviction of a sex offense or violent offense;
- be serving a sentence of longer than one year;
- not be subject to a deportation detainer or order and not become subject to a deportation order during the period of the sentence; and
- sign necessary release waivers to allow information regarding current or prior child welfare cases to be shared with the DOC and the court.
Similar to the PSA, the DOC must contact the DCYF or a tribal child welfare agency to determine if the person is involved in any open or prior cases of substantiated referrals of abuse or neglect. The DCYF must provide certain information to the DOC, including the status of any present case or findings from past cases and other specified items. Similar to the PSA, the DOC must coordinate services with the DCYF when a participant has an open child welfare case.
If the participant does not comply with any conditions, the DOC may return him or her to prison to complete the remaining portion of his or her sentence.