Fla. Stat. 944.012
Legislative intent


(1)

Florida spends each year in excess of $60 million for its state correctional system, but Florida citizens have not received a fair return on that investment. Florida correctional institutions have contributed little to the reduction of crime. To the contrary, crime rates continue to rise; recidivism rates are notoriously high; and large prisons have for the most part become schools for crime, making successful reintegration into the community unlikely.

(2)

It is clear that major changes in correctional methods are required. It is essential to abate the use of large institutions and continue the development of community-based corrections; to equip judges with more effective evaluative tools to deal with the criminal offender; and to provide alternatives to institutionalization, including the availability of probationers’ residences and community correctional centers.

(3)

One of the chief factors contributing to the high recidivism rate in the state is the general inability of ex-offenders to find or keep meaningful employment. Although 90 percent of all offenders sent to prison return to society one day, the correctional system has done little to provide the offender with the vocational skills the offender needs to return to society as a productive citizen. This failure virtually guarantees the probability of return to crime. Vocational training and assistance in job placement must be looked to on a priority basis as an integral part of the process of changing deviant behavior in the institutionalized offender, when such change is determined to be possible.

(4)

These changes must not be made out of sympathy for the criminal or out of disregard of the threat of crime to society. They must be made precisely because that threat is too serious to be countered by ineffective methods.

(5)

In order to make the correctional system an efficient and effective mechanism, the various agencies involved in the correctional process must coordinate their efforts. Where possible, interagency offices should be physically located within major institutions and should include representatives of the public employment service, the vocational rehabilitation programs of the Department of Education, and the Florida Commission on Offender Review. Duplicative and unnecessary methods of evaluating offenders must be eliminated and areas of responsibility consolidated in order to more economically use present scarce resources.

(6)

It is the intent of the Legislature:To provide a mechanism for the early identification, evaluation, and treatment of behavioral disorders of adult offenders coming into contact with the correctional system.To separate dangerous or repeat offenders from nondangerous offenders, who have potential for rehabilitation, and place dangerous offenders in secure and manageable institutions.When possible, to divert from expensive institutional commitment those individuals who, by virtue of professional diagnosis and evaluation, can be placed in less costly and more effective environments and programs better suited for their rehabilitation and the protection of society.To make available to those offenders who are capable of rehabilitation the job training and job placement assistance they need to build meaningful and productive lives when they return to the community.To provide intensive and meaningful supervision for those on probation so that the condition or situation which caused the person to commit the crime is corrected.

(a)

To provide a mechanism for the early identification, evaluation, and treatment of behavioral disorders of adult offenders coming into contact with the correctional system.

(b)

To separate dangerous or repeat offenders from nondangerous offenders, who have potential for rehabilitation, and place dangerous offenders in secure and manageable institutions.

(c)

When possible, to divert from expensive institutional commitment those individuals who, by virtue of professional diagnosis and evaluation, can be placed in less costly and more effective environments and programs better suited for their rehabilitation and the protection of society.

(d)

To make available to those offenders who are capable of rehabilitation the job training and job placement assistance they need to build meaningful and productive lives when they return to the community.

(e)

To provide intensive and meaningful supervision for those on probation so that the condition or situation which caused the person to commit the crime is corrected.

Source: Section 944.012 — Legislative intent, https://www.­flsenate.­gov/Laws/Statutes/2024/0944.­012 (accessed Aug. 7, 2025).

944.01
Short title
944.02
Definitions
944.08
Commitment to custody of department
944.09
Rules of the department
944.10
Department of Corrections to provide buildings
944.11
Department to regulate admission of books
944.012
Legislative intent
944.14
Supervision of correctional institutions
944.17
Commitments and classification
944.23
Persons authorized to visit state prisons
944.023
Comprehensive correctional master plan
944.24
Administration of correctional institutions for women
944.024
Adult intake and evaluation
944.026
Community-based facilities and programs
944.28
Forfeiture of gain-time and the right to earn gain-time in the future
944.31
Inspector general
944.32
Reports of prison inspectors
944.33
Failure of inspector to make report
944.033
Community correctional centers
944.35
Authorized use of force
944.36
Permitting inmates to escape
944.37
Acceptance of unauthorized compensation
944.38
Acceptance of remuneration from contractor
944.39
Interference with prisoners
944.40
Escapes
944.44
Holding persons as hostages
944.45
Mutiny, riot, strike
944.46
Harboring, concealing, aiding escaped prisoners
944.47
Introduction, removal, or possession of contraband
944.48
Service of sentence
944.52
Legal adviser
944.053
Forestry Work Camps
944.70
Conditions for release from incarceration
944.72
Contractor-Operated Institutions Inmate Welfare Trust Fund
944.73
State-Operated Institutions Inmate Welfare Trust Fund
944.091
United States prisoners, board authorized
944.095
Siting of additional correctional facilities
944.096
Budget requests for residential facility construction
944.105
Contractual arrangements with contractor-operated entities for operation and maintenance of correctional facilities and supervision of inmates
944.115
Smoking prohibited inside state correctional facilities
944.151
Safe operation and security of correctional institutions and facilities
944.171
Housing of inmates
944.0231
Reduction of capacity
944.241
Incarcerated pregnant women
944.242
Dignity for women in correctional facilities
944.275
Gain-time
944.278
Cancellation of administrative gain-time and provisional credits
944.279
Disciplinary procedures applicable to prisoner for filing frivolous or malicious actions or bringing false information before court
944.281
Ineligibility to earn gain-time due to disciplinary action
944.282
Rules governing inmate use of weight training equipment
944.291
Prisoner released by reason of gain-time allowances or attainment of provisional release date
944.292
Suspension of civil rights
944.331
Inmate grievance procedure
944.402
Reward for capture of escapee from correctional institution
944.405
Warrant for retaking offender who has escaped from custody or absconded from rehabilitative community reentry program, or who is ineligible for release
944.471
Short title
944.472
Drug-free corrections
944.473
Inmate substance abuse testing program
944.474
Legislative intent
944.485
Subsistence fees with respect to certain prisoners
944.512
State lien on proceeds from literary or other type of account of crime for which convicted
944.516
Money or other property received for personal use or benefit of inmate
944.596
Transfer of convicted foreign citizens or nationals under treaty
944.597
Transportation and return of prisoners by private transport company
944.602
Agency notification before release of intellectually disabled inmates
944.605
Inmate release
944.606
Sexual offenders
944.607
Notification to Department of Law Enforcement of information on sexual offenders
944.608
Notification to Department of Law Enforcement of information on career offenders
944.609
Career offenders
944.611
Legislative intent
944.0611
Department employees
944.612
Definitions for s
944.613
Methods of transportation
944.701
Short title
944.702
Legislative intent
944.703
Eligible inmates
944.704
Staff who provide transition assistance
944.705
Release orientation program
944.706
Basic release assistance
944.707
Postrelease special services
944.708
Rules
944.710
Definitions of terms relating to contractor-operated state correctional facilities and s
944.711
Requests for proposals
944.712
Bidder and private vendor qualifications
944.713
Insurance against liability
944.714
Quality assurance and standards of operation
944.715
Delegation of authority
944.716
Contract termination and control of a correctional facility by the department
944.717
Conflicts of interest
944.718
Withdrawal of request for proposals
944.719
Adoption of rules, monitoring, and reporting
944.801
Education for state prisoners
944.802
Direct-support organization
944.803
Faith- and character-based programs
944.804
Elderly offenders correctional facilities program of 2000
944.1905
Initial inmate classification
944.4731
Addiction-Recovery Supervision Program
944.7031
Eligible inmates released from contractor-operated correctional facilities
944.7065
Transition course for inmates
944.7071
Operation New Hope
944.8031
Inmate’s family visitation
944.8041
Elderly offenders

Current through Fall 2025

§ 944.012. Legislative intent's source at flsenate​.gov