Arizona Problem Solving Courts Conference to Feature Celebrity Guest Speaker Matt Sorum

Arizona Problem Solving Courts Conference to Feature Celebrity Guest Speaker Matt Sorum

The Arizona Association of Drug Court Professionals and CONFERENCE DETAILS the ASU Center for Applied Behavioral Health Policy are pleased to announce the 2015 Arizona Problem Solving April 27-28, 2015 Courts Conference, scheduled for April 27-28, 2015. Prescott Resort Themed Advancing Justice Together, the conference 1500 State Route 69 creates an educational and networking opportunity for Prescott, AZ 86301 all professionals working in and with Arizona’s problem Registration Fees solving courts. $159 Early Bird (by 3/13/15) $185 Regular Join us at the Prescott Resort, where national and statewide experts will be on hand to present critical information and engage in dialogue about a variety of topics. Specialized breakout sessions in five educational WHO SHOULD ATTEND tracks will allow you to enhance your awareness and skills, and networking functions will provide a backdrop for you • Probation officers to build valuable partnerships with fellow professionals • Parole officers while sharing ideas and solutions. • Defense attorneys Mark your calendar today and register today! • Prosecutors • Law enforcement www.regonline.com/ProblemSolvingCourts2015 • Court coordinators • Judges MEET OUR KEYNOTE SPEAKERS! • Social workers • Counselors CARLOS QUEZADA-GOMEZ, PH.D. • Peer support specialists Mental Health Director, Cook County • Psychologists Health and Hospital Systems EDUCATIONAL TRACKS KENNETH D. ROBINSON, PH.D. President, Correctional • Core principles Counseling, Inc. • Mental health • Treatment • Juveniles & young adults JOEL A. DVOSKIN, PH.D., ABPP • Veterans Chair, Nevada Behavorial Health and Wellness Council 7:30 am - 8:30 Registration, Coffee, and Networking with Exhibitors E 8:30 am - 9:00 Welcome and Opening Remarks C 9:00 am - 10:30 Keynote Session - Kenneth Robinson, Ph.D. 10:30 am -10:45 Break LAN Core Principles Track: Correctional Compassion Fatigue Treatment Track: From Addiction to Advocate G 10:45 am -12 pm Juveniles/Young Adults Track: Marijuana Harmless? Think Again A Breakout Sessions Mental Health Track: The DSM-5 in Problem Solving Courts 27 T Veterans Track: Effective Veterans Court Mentors A 12:00 - 1:30 pm Networking Lunch & AADCP Awards Presentations PRIL E 1:30 - 1:45 pm Break A C , Core Principles Track: TBD Treatment Track: Trauma and Substance Abuse AY 1:45-3:15 pm Juveniles/Young Adults Track: Sex Trafficking Awareness D Breakout Sessions Mental Health Track: The Wounded Healer ON Veterans Track: Military Culture and the Justice-Involved Veteran ONFEREN M 3:15 - 3:30 pm Break C Core Principles Track: Outputs and Outcomes Treatment Track: Assessment/Treatment of Impaired Drivers 3:30 - 5:00 pm Juveniles/Young Adults Track: Trauma-Rage and Dissociation Breakout Sessions Mental Health Track: Arizona Mental Health Court Standards Veterans Track: Navigating Services for Veterans 5:00 - 6:30 pm Networking Reception 8:30 am - 9:45 Keynote Session - Joel Dvoskin, Ph.D. 9:45 - 10:00 am Break Core Principles Track: Closed Judges’ Session Treatment Track: Preventing Opioid-Related Overdoses 10:00 - 11:30 am Juveniles/Young Adults Track: Trauma-Informed Care 28 Breakout Sessions Mental Health Track: Tucson PD Mental Health Investigative Support Team Veterans Track: Establishing a Veterans Treatment Court PRIL 11:30 a.m. - 1 pm Lunch on Your Own A Core Principles Track: Myth Busters , Treatment Track: Contract Oversight 1:00 - 2:15 pm AY Juveniles/Young Adults Track: Family Run Organizations D Breakout Sessions Mental Health Track: Providing Critical Cost-Effective Peer Support Veterans Track: Regional Veterans Courts UES T 2:15-2:30 pm Break 2:30 - 3:30 pm Keynote Session - Carlos Quezada-Gomez, Ph.D. 3:30 - 4:00 pm Celebrity Guest Speaker Matt Sorum 4:00 pm Closing and Adjournment CONFERENCE AGENDA - MONDAY, APRIL 27, 2015 8:30 am - 9:00 am Juveniles & Young Adults Welcome and Opening Remarks Marijuana Harmless? Think Again Michelle Hart, Coconino County Adult Probation Merilee Fowler, Executive Director, MATFORCE, Supervisor, AADCP President; John Morris, Yavapai and Sheila Polk, Yavapai County Attorney County Adult Probation Chief, Vice President, AADCP; and Chief Justice Scott Bales, Arizona Marijuana Harmless? Think Again! is a movement Supreme Court with the goal of providing education on the true harms of marijuana use. The presentation will present scientific evidence from NIDA, SAMHSA, 9:00 - 10:30 am and other valid sources on what marijuana does to the human brain, marijuana addiction, and other Keynote Session: Opiate Addicts- How long term effects. The presentation will discuss what to Treat AND Supervise for Best Recovery is happening in Colorado with legalization as well as the current Arizona Medical Marijuana Act. The Outcomes presentation will also discuss the components of the Kenneth Robinson, Ph.D. Marijuana Harmless? Think Again! movement and President, Correctional Counseling, Inc. the many groups working together in Arizona to achieve the goal. 10:30 - 10:45 am Mental Health Networking Break The DSM-5 in Problem Solving Courts Lawrence Sideman, Ph.D., ABPP, Arizona 10:45 am - 12:00 pm School of Professional Psychology at Argosy University, Phoenix Breakout Sessions This session will review the DSM-5 and the ICD, Core Principles focusing on the fundamental changes in how Correctional Compassion Fatigue & Self-Care clinicians diagnose court participants’ behavioral Denise Beagley, Training and Curriculua health issues in order to enhance understanding Developer, ASU Center for Applied Behavioral and to fully inform treatment planning. We will Health Policy review the purposes of diagnosis, major changes to the DSM and ICD, and the relevance of the changes for your court practices. Correctional Compassion Fatigue, a gradual lessening of compassion over time, is common among correctional professionals that work with trauma Veterans victims. Sufferers can experience hopelessness, a decrease in experiences of pleasure, constant stress Effective Veterans Court Mentors and anxiety, sleeplessness or nightmares, and a Jack O’Connor, Buffalo Veterans Treatment Court; pervasive negative attitude. In this session we will John Fuller and Abel Moreno, Veterans Court explore correctional compassion fatigue and identify Mentor Project examples of self-care to help manage the issues that trigger one to act in a negative manner. Many veterans, upon leaving military service, have difficulty reintegrating into the civilian community. Some Treatment find themselves involved in the criminal justice system, ill-prepared to navigate the complex requirements From Addiction to Advocate of addressing their criminal behavior. Veterans Court mentors have proven themselves an invaluable asset to Maureen Accurso, Linda Perry, and Susan Peters, both the veteran and the court. These volunteers work Pima County Family Drug Court Program with justice involved veterans to assist them with obtaining services and complying with court-ordered treatment. This In this session, two certified recovery support specilists session will discuss how to recruit, train and retain effective will share their stories of recovery and describe how volunteer veterans court mentors. their roles have benefited family drug court clients. CONFERENCE AGENDA - MONDAY, APRIL 27, 2015 12:00 - 1:30 pm Juveniles & Young Adults Networking Luncheon Sex Trafficking Awareness AADCP Awards Presentations Dominique Roe-Sepowitz, Ph.D., Director, and Kristen Bracy, Associate Director of Research 1:30 - 1:45 pm Implementation, Office of Sex Trafficking Break Intervention Research, Arizona State University School of Social Work; and Commander James 1:45 - 3:15 pm Gallagher, Phoenix Police Department Breakout Sessions This session will explore the issue of sex trafficking as it appears in Arizona. We will discuss how to identify Core Principles indicators of sex trafficking situations, differences between dating violence and sex trafficking, and How to Provide Treatment Needed for Your techniques of sex traffickers. The impact of sex Drug/Problems Solving Court when Resources trafficking on the victims will be described along with are Limited the challenges of serving and treating this unique Kenneth Robinson, Ph.D., President, population. The roles of law enforcement, child Correctional Counseling, Inc. welfare, court personnel, juvenile justice staff and social service providers that are required to have a multidisciplinary approach to detect, identify and treat these victims will be outlined. Intervention and treatment techniques will also be described. Mental Health Treatment The Wounded Healer: Distress Among the Trauma and Substance Abuse: Effects on Helping Profession Parenting and Service Engagement in the Dr. Nathan A. Velez, The Guidance Center Child Welfare and Court Systems Nicole Roskens, Clinical Director, and Angela This session is designed to increase awareness of the recent research on those who enter the field of Tuzzolino, Dependency Treatment Court counseling with trauma and wounds of their own, Coordinator, Cradle to Crayons Child Welfare and how the data trasnlates into monitoring wellness Center and Maricopa County Juvenile Court and distress within ourselves in the profession. While there is a growing awareness that many Veterans children involved in the child welfare system have experienced trauma, the high prevalence of trauma among birth parents is less recognized. Military/Veteran Culture and the Justice- When a parent has past experiences of trauma Involved Veteran it can affect his or her ability to keep children Thomas

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