P.O. Box 2400 Wintersville, Ohio 43953

About & Benefits

COMMUNITY BASED CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES HELP TO:

Please click here to review additional highlights for fiscal year 2015.

Possibilities

Keep Communities Safe

Ohio’s CBCFs exist to provide a cost-effective and safe alternative to prisons for the incarceration of felony offenders.

Take control

Reduce Costs and Save Tax Payer Money

Ohio’s CBCFs exist to provide a cost effective and safe alternative to prisons for the incarceration of felony offenders.

Functions

Justice That Works

CBCFs use risk assessments that were designed especially for Ohio based on evidence-based research to assure proper placement of offenders to enhance community safety.

Focused

Research Based Practices

Research (University of Cincinnati) shows that incarceration at a CBCF increases community safety through use of evidence-based programming that reduces recidivism at a significantly higher rate than Ohio prisons.

Community Based Correctional Facilities

About CBCFs

Community Based Correctional Facilities (CBCFs) are prison diversion residential programs that promote community safety by providing cost efficient, effective services and programming to felony offenders. 

 

CBCFs serve 88 counties across Ohio and provide treatment to more than 7,000 offenders each year. 

Established by the Ohio General Assembly, CBCFs work hand-in-hand with the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction to reduce crime in the state and to reduce recidivism among those they touch. The prison population in Ohio continues to be on the rise with more than 50,000 offenders. CBCFs and all Community Corrections are committed to working with the Department to reduce the prison population with successful diversion programming.

 

CBCFs provide the most secure level of programmatic intervention in the community for eligible felony offenders, which includes education, job training, cognitive behavior therapy, family outreach, and substance abuse treatment during the time of their sentence.  Throughout an offender’s incarceration in a CBCF, s/he is taught skills to deal with drug and alcohol addiction and to change criminal behavior.  They also have the opportunity to obtain their GED and find viable employment. And in fact, many leave the facilities employed.  CBCFs are in a unique position to keep communities safe by using successful proven methods which combine punishment and treatment.