Program Goals/Target Population
The Decide Your Time (DYT) program in Delaware aimed to reduce drug use and recidivism among chronic drug-using individuals while they were on intensive supervision probation. All individuals eligible for DYT had to have been sentenced to Level 2 or 3 probation. Level 2 denotes standard probation requiring monthly contact with a probation officer, and Level 3 denotes intensive probation requiring weekly contact with a probation officer. Other inclusion criteria for program enrollment included 1) having a recommendation or mandate for substance abuse screening, 2) a probation duration of 6 months or longer, 3) an age of 18 or older, 4) fluency in English, and 5) a failed initial urinalysis. Exclusion criteria were 1) having a diagnosed psychotic disorder, 2) current conviction for sex offense, 3) evidence of neuropsychological dysfunction, 4) life expectancy of less than 6 months, and 5) probation or parole requirements that prevented protocol participation.
Program Activities
DYT modified existing probation procedures to include frequent random drug testing, swiftly delivered sanctions, and treatment referrals. Developed specifically to focus on the certainty of apprehension and on ensuring that the threat of sanctions was known, the modified procedures informed eligible persons of what was required of them, what would happen to them if they failed to meet requirements (increased sanctions), and how to reduce their level of monitoring once they violated and triggered increased sanctions. The modified procedures provided a framework in which the deterrent effects of certainty and speed of sanctions, rather than of immediate severity, were the key elements. The program also made the sanction threat known and empowered the persons on probation by clearly informing them of the elements of their probation; thus, being able to “Decide Your Time.” Failure at any phase resulted from having a positive urine test or missed appointment with a probation officer (PO).
The DYT phases were as follows:
Start-up phase. Persons on probation met with their PO and received an explanation of the protocol. This included the DYT procedures, possible sanctions, and the ability to move to a lower level of probation. They were then given 2 weeks to prepare a sobriety plan. A list of Alcoholics Anonymous/Narcotics Anonymous meetings, treatment providers, and other support mechanisms were provided, and they were informed of testing timing and protocol sanctions and incentives.
Phase 1: Random weekly urine tests. A procedure was used in which persons on probation were assigned colors and called in daily to see whether their color had been chosen that day. If it had, they were required to report to probation and provide a urine sample for testing. If they provided clean samples for 3 months, they would be placed on Level 2 probation, which requires only monthly reporting. This was intended to serve as a reward for positive behavior.
Phase 2: Failure at phase 1. This phase comprised 1) being held for 4 days in a probation violation center, and 2) mandatory Saturday morning treatment sessions. The Saturday treatment sessions were developed solely for DYT participants and were conducted by DYT POs based on motivational interviewing and cognitive–behavioral therapy principles. Urine testing was also increased to regularly scheduled, twice-a-week tests for 30 days. Compliance (no failed urine tests or missed appointments) for 30 days resulted in placement back into phase 1, requiring only weekly random tests and no Saturday treatment sessions.
Phase 3: Failure at phase 2. This phase added a 6 p.m. curfew to existing sanctions. Compliance for 30 days resulted in placement back into phase 1, requiring only weekly tests and no Saturday treatment sessions.
Phase 4: Failure at phase 3. Phase 4 resulted in being held for 5 days at a probation violation center, followed by return to phase 3. Subsequent failure in phase 3 resulted in termination from DYT, a formal violation of probation (VOP), and a hearing in front of a judge.
The participants were incentivized by the knowledge that 3 months of consecutive compliance in phase 1 resulted in moving down to Level 2 probation, requiring monthly rather than weekly reporting.
Program Note
Similar to Hawaii’s Opportunity Probation with Enforcement (HOPE), Decide Your Time (DYT) was designed to test the efficacy of providing increased monitoring with known, certain, and quickly enforced sanctions to reduce substance use and recidivism among probationers. DYT is not a replication of HOPE, but an experiment testing whether procedures based on the swift and certain principles of deterrence can reduce recidivism among chronic drug-using individual on probation.