Are Probation and Parole Systems Marked by High Stakes and Missed Opportunities? (Part 2)

March 8, 2019

This session will provide an interactive discussion of how to develop a long-term plan for restructuring the purpose and footprint of community corrections. Participants will have an opportunity to develop real world examples of how the core areas discussed throughout the symposium can be leveraged to develop a new corrections model. This session will challenge participants to rethink how community corrections has been operationalized and how it can be poised to make a difference in peoples’ lives.

Presenters: Barbara Broderick, Brian Lovins, Ph.D., and Megan Quattlebaum

About the Presenters

Barbara Broderick

Barbara Broderick has more than 30 years of experience in the criminal justice system and has been the Chief Probation Officer for Maricopa County Adult Probation Department in Phoenix, Arizona, since 2000. This department is the sixth largest probation department in the United States, with over 1,200 employees and a budget of $119 million.

Broderick earned her B.A. in History at Niagara University and her M.A. at the School of Criminal Justice at the State University of New York at Albany. Before heading to Arizona, Broderick was the New York State Director of Probation and Correctional Alternatives. She also held the position of Director of Policy Analysis and Information for the New York State Parole Division.

Broderick served as the State Director for Adult Probation for the Arizona Supreme Court for five years. In that position, she provided technical assistance to local jurisdictions and substance abuse treatment providers. She is knowledgeable in the areas of risk assessment, probation performance measures, drug courts, parole guidelines, substance abuse treatment with criminal defendants, sex offender supervision, enforcement of financial obligations, and the theory and practice of community justice. Prior to her current position, Broderick served as Maricopa County’sInterim Chief Juvenile Probation Officer, with over 1,000 juvenile probation staff and a budget of $60 million, and assumed responsibilities over diversion, probation, and detention services.

In addition to the above, she served from 1999-2015 as chair of the Arizona Parents’ Commission on Drug Education and Prevention, currently serves on the Maricopa County Community Justice Advisory Board, and is a past President of the American Probation and Parole Association. She is a member of the American Corrections Association, the National Association of Drug Court Professionals, and the National Association of Probation Executives.

Broderick’s areas of expertise are wide ranging, but they particularly include development and expansion of drug courts and substance abuse treatment, design and implementation of an operational review process for the oversight of numerous probation departments, and development of probation performance measures.


Brian Lovins

Dr. Brian Lovins earned his Doctor of Criminology from the University of Cincinnati’s School of Criminal Justice and has published extensively, is currently a Principal for Justice Systems Partners (JSP). He also co-edits APPA’s Perspectives journal. Prior to JSP, he worked as Assistant Director of the Harris County Community Supervision and Corrections Department and was the Associate Director for the University of Cincinnati's Corrections Institute. He has developed a state-wide juvenile risk assessment (Ohio Youth Assessment System: OYAS) and adult risk assessment (Ohio Risk Assessment System: ORAS) as well as validation of a series of pretrial risk assessments.

Dr. Lovins has been invited to present to over 200 agencies and routinely trains agenciesin the principles of effective intervention, risk assessment, and the delivery of cognitive-behavioral interventions. He has received the Dr. Simon Dinitz Award for his work and dedication in helping correctional agencies adopt evidence-based programs andis also recipient of a David Dillingham Award. He has been recognized as a Distinguished Alumnus from the University of Cincinnati. His publications include articles on risk assessment, sexual offenders, effective interventions, and cognitive-behavioral interventions.


Megan Quattlebaum

Megan Quattlebaum is the director of the Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center. The CSG Justice Center combines the power of a membership association, representing state officials in all three branches of government, with the expertise of a policy and research team focused on assisting others to attain measurable results. Prior to joining the CSG Justice Center, Ms. Quattlebaum served as a research scholar in law and the program director of the Justice Collaboratory at the Yale Law School, where she taught, developed and oversaw research projects, and led the organization’s work on behalf of the National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice. She has also been a lecturer in law at Columbia Law School, and was the Senior Liman Fellow in Residence for the Arthur Liman Center for Public Interest Law at the Yale Law School. She was a practicing criminal and civil defense attorney with Zuckerman Spaeder LLP in New York, and an Arthur Liman Public Interest Fellow and attorney at the Neighborhood Legal Services Association in Pittsburgh. She also served as a clerk for the Hon. Julio M. Fuentes of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. She received her BA from Sarah Lawrence College and her JD from the Yale Law School.