Collaborative Rehabilitation Management - Connecting the Pieces

SESSION INFO

Monday, August 19, 2019
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Session Type: Workshop

Collaborative Rehabilitation Management is a comprehensive multidisciplinary recidivism reduction model for corrections and reentry that integrates processes, programs, and services throughout the criminal justice and rehabilitation systems. The connections between assessment, case planning, treatment assignment, referral, supervision, service delivery and final termination of supervision become seamless as a single process, rather than distinct units of service. In this practical model, currently being implemented in Tennessee, each discipline (corrections, parole, probation, community providers) shares information and interacts with the others within the same platform, creating a truly collaborative rehabilitation process.

SESSION PRESENTERS

Rob Openshaw
, Allvest Information Services dba Vant4ge


With more than 20 years of account management experience, including nearly a decade in the corrections industry, Rob has matched hundreds of clients to solutions that exceed their expectations. He has managed high-performing teams in the technology industry for more than a decade, and has a knack for using technology to solve relevant problems. Rob’s responsibilities include managing the Vant4ge Sales and Marketing team, which coordinates interaction with new and expanding client relationships. He pairs a keen intellectual curiosity with a passion for facilitating better opportunities for the incarcerated. He received both his bachelor’s and MBA degrees from Brigham Young University. Rob is a passionate husband and father and enjoys volunteering at his children’s schools and as a coach of his children’s sports teams. He also enjoys outdoor activities as well as team and individual sports of all kinds.


Marjorie Rist
Chief Solutions Officer, Allvest Information Services dba Vant4ge


Marjorie Rist has over 20 years in the corrections industry, working in, supervising, managing, and implementing change in juvenile and adult corrections, work release programs, pretrial release programs, community treatment programs, institutional programming, and residential treatment centers. Her extensive experience in the field at all levels - from Juvenile Hall Counselor to Chief Probation Officer - makes her extremely valuable and uniquely qualified to assist agencies making the transition from traditional practices to Evidence-Based Practices (EBP) and data-driven decision-making. Agencies find her amiable, non-threatening communication style and her considerable expertise particularly useful in leading organizational change, operationalizing reform efforts, and effectively navigating bureaucracy to facilitate the use of evidence-based programming that improves outcomes at reduced cost. Marjorie holds a Bachelor’s Degree (BA) in Management from St. Mary’s College of California and she has begun the Criminal Justice Master's Degree program at the University of Cincinnati. She is an active member of American Correctional Association (ACA), International Community Corrections Association (ICCA), International Corrections and Probation Association (ICPA), and the American Probation and Parole Association (APPA).