Colorado Code § 17-32-105

Development of correctional education program - goals and objectives - performance objectives - evaluation - transfers of custody - reports
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(1) On and after July 1,
1990, the correctional education program is responsible for providing educational services to
persons in correctional facilities under the control of the department and for developing and
implementing a comprehensive competency-based educational and vocational program, which
must conform to the goals and objectives outlined in this subsection (1). The correctional
education program may be implemented in phases with the goals and objectives implemented in
all facilities in the order specified in this subsection (1); except that the goal and objective stated
in subsection (1)(a) of this section must be implemented in all correctional facilities no later than
July 1, 1991, and the entire program must be completely implemented in all correctional
facilities no later than July 1, 1992. The program shall continue to operate instructional services
currently offered in correctional facilities until such services are incorporated in or replaced by
instructional services offered under the correctional education program. The correctional
education program must encompass the following goals and objectives:
(a) First, to ensure that every inmate in a correctional facility shall receive appropriate
academic services mandated by federal or state statutes, regulations, or orders;
(b) Second, to ensure that every person in a correctional facility who has an expectation
of release from custody within five years and lacks basic and functional literacy skills receive
adult basic education instruction in accordance with the provisions of subsection (3) of this
section;
(c) Third, to provide every person in a correctional facility who has an expectation of
release from custody within five years with the opportunity to achieve functional literacy,
specifically the ability to read and write the English language and the ability to perform routine
mathematical functions prior to his or her release;
(d) Fourth, to provide every person in a correctional facility who has an expectation of
release from custody within five years and who has demonstrated the intellectual capacity with
the opportunity to successfully complete a high school equivalency examination, as defined in
section 22-33-102 (8.5), C.R.S. A person who wishes to receive a standard high school diploma
must meet the graduation requirements established by the school district where he or she was last
enrolled or pass the high school equivalency examination. To be eligible to receive credit for
completion of a course required for the receipt of a high school diploma, a person must satisfy
the requirements for the course as established by the school district where he or she was last
enrolled.
(e) Fifth, to ensure that every person in a correctional facility who has an expectation of
release from custody within five years has an opportunity to acquire at least entry-level
marketable vocational skills in one or more occupational fields for which there is a demonstrable
demand in the economy of this state;
(f) Sixth, to ensure that every person in a correctional facility be released possessing life
management skills which will allow him to function successfully in a free society;
(g) Seventh, to provide every person in a correctional facility who demonstrates college-
level aptitudes with the opportunity to participate in college-level academic programs that may
be offered within the correctional facility. Costs for such programs may be borne through
private, local, or federally funded gifts, grants, donations, or scholarships; or by such persons
themselves; or through any combination of such funding.
(2) The correctional education program developed pursuant to subsection (1) of this
section shall provide that training in the fundamentals of personal health be an integral part of all
instructional services offered in such program. Such training shall include instruction in personal
hygiene, general health, and substance abuse education. The program shall also provide courses
of instruction in the evening in order to accommodate those persons in work programs.
(3) (a) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b) of this subsection (3), any person
in a correctional facility who lacks basic and functional literacy skills, as determined through the
use of a literacy test approved by the state board of education, shall be required to complete
sequential course work sufficient to allow the inmate to pass a competency test or the test of
general education development or both. If a composite test score of functional literacy is not
attained, the program may require the inmate to continue to receive adult basic education
instruction.
(b) A person in a correctional facility who lacks basic and functional literacy skills shall
be required to attend adult basic education instruction unless such person:
(I) Is serving a life sentence or is under sentence of death;
(II) Is specifically exempted by the program from participation for security or health
reasons;
(III) Is housed at a community correctional facility;
(IV) Is determined, through testing, to have attained a functional literacy level;
(V) Is, because of a disability, at a maximum level of proficiency;
(VI) Refuses, in writing, to participate in adult basic education instruction; or
(VII) Fails to make "positive progress" after a minimum of twenty hours.
(4) This section shall not affect the eligibility of any person for educational training
programs, vocational programs, or other programs expressly created under federal or state
statutes, regulations, or orders.
(5) On or before December 31, 2010, the department shall develop a plan for each
educational or vocational program offered pursuant to this article to meet the following
performance objectives:
(a) The department is encouraged to use a vocational skills assessment to determine the
vocational needs of each offender who is eligible to participate in a vocational program. To the
extent practicable, the department shall assign each such offender to a vocational program based
on this assessment.
(b) The program shall use a curriculum or a set of training practices that is:
(I) Approved by the department of education created in section 24-1-115, C.R.S., or the
state board for community colleges and occupational education created in section 23-60-104,
C.R.S.; or
(II) Described as part of an agreement or contract entered into pursuant to section 17-32-
106 (1)(b).
(c) The program shall provide offenders training and competency in marketable skills
that are relevant and likely to be in demand in the workplace as determined by data provided to
the department by the department of labor and employment pursuant to subsection (6) of this
section.
(6) On or before October 1, 2010, and on or before October 1 of each year thereafter, the
department of labor and employment created in section 24-1-121, C.R.S., shall provide the
department with data on current market trends and labor needs in Colorado to assist the
department in providing educational and vocational programs that satisfy the performance
objective described in paragraph (c) of subsection (5) of this section.
(7) When considering an offender for transfer, the department shall take the offender's
enrollment in an educational or vocational program into consideration unless the offender is
granted parole or is placed into a community corrections program pursuant to article 27 of this
title. If the department transfers an offender enrolled in an educational or vocational program to
another facility, the department is encouraged to give the offender priority for placement in a
comparable educational or vocational program if such a program exists at the facility.
(8) The department shall annually report the following information concerning
educational and vocational programs offered pursuant to this article:
(a) A list of the specific programs offered at each state-operated facility and private
prison that houses offenders on behalf of the department;
(b) The number of instructors and the number of instructor vacancies, by program and
facility;
(c) The annual capacity of each program;
(d) The annual enrollment of each program, including the number of offenders who were
placed on a waiting list for the program and the average length of time spent on the waiting list
by each such offender;
(e) The number of offenders who successfully completed each program in the previous
fiscal year;
(f) The number of offenders who enrolled in each program but failed to successfully
complete the program in the previous fiscal year, including for each such offender the reason for
the offender's noncompletion;
(g) The percentage of parolees who are employed full-time, employed part-time, or
unemployed at the end of the previous fiscal year;
(h) A summary of the results of any program evaluations or cost-benefit analyses
performed by the department; and
(i) The total amount of state and federal funding allocated by the department during the
most recently completed fiscal year for vocational and educational programs, including
information concerning the allocation of each source of funding and the amount of funding
received by each program.

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