OPINION BY
Clifford L. Detar, Jr., pro se, petitions for review of a decision of the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole (Board) denying Detar’s request for credit toward his recalculated sentence. Detar contends that the Board erred in failing to grant him credit for time spent at the Gateway Rehabilitation Center. We are asked to consider whether the conditions at Gateway were sufficiently custodial in nature that Detar should be given credit on his sentence for time spent at Gateway.
Detar was serving several concurrent seven-year state prison sentences for theft and several concurrent eight-year state prison sentences for burglary at SCI-Waynesburg when the Board released him on parole on August 21, 2000. One of the conditions of Detar’s parole was that he enter an in-patient drug and alcohol treatment program. Consistent with his parole
On June 9, 2002, Detar was arrested. Thereafter, he was recommitted as a technical and convicted parole violator, with a maximum term of expiry of June 3, 2006, for three of Detar’s concurrent eight-year state prison sentences for burglary. .In calculating the new sentence date of June 3, 2006, the Board did not give Detar credit for time spent at Gateway, and De-tar appealed, asserting that the period of time he spent at Gateway from August 21, 2000, through December 18, 2000, was sufficiently restrictive and custodial to warrant credit for 119 days.
At the Board hearing on his appeal, Detar and Daniel Kownacki, an assistant director of’Gateway, each testified about the conditions at Gateway. The facts to emerge from their testimony are as follows.
Gateway has two buildings, an in-patient facility and a work release center. While enrolled in the in-patient program, residents are under 24-hour supervision. However, they are allowed to leave the facility to get cash at ATM machines, to go shopping, to do a “DPW run,” to spend one or two hours at the gym, and to attend offsite religious services. They are driven to and from these'places by Gateway staff. Residents who leave the facility for doctor visits or hospitalizations may make their own arrangements for transportation.
The in-patient facility has locks on the doors, but their purpose is not to prevent people from leaving, but from entering. Cameras monitor the doors. The facility is surrounded by a six-foot wooden fence, and residents pass in and out through an unlocked gate. There are no bars on the windows of residents’- rooms; the windows have locks but they can be opened by the residents. The windows in the bathrooms, the counseling office and a “brief’ room do have bars. The staff is instructed not to restrain residents if they attempt to leave. If a resident does leave the program, the staff notifies the local police or the parole office, if the resident is a parolee.
In the work release facility, conditions are less structured. Residents come and 'go from the facility on their own with a pass. 1 When off premises, residents are subject to location checks to confirm that the resident is where he is supposed to be; side trips are not authorized. Upon return to the facility, residents are required to blow into a breathalyzer. Residents are expected to hold jobs, which include community service. While living at the work release facility, residents may attend one religious service per week outside the Gateway grounds.
Of his 119 days at Gateway, Detar’s time was divided. He spent 45 days in the in-patient program, and he spent 64 days in the work release program. Mr. Kownacki was present at Gateway during 7 of the 64 days Detar was in the work release center. 2
Detar presents one issue for our consideration. 3 He argues that he is entitled to credit for his entire stay at Gateway because the program was restrictive and custodial in nature. 4 He notes that Gateway is a “community correction center,” which by its very name denotes a “minimum security” facility where pre-release inmates may be placed to serve some of their sentence. Accordingly, Detar argues that any time spent in any program at Gateway is the equivalent of incarceration. See 87 Pa.Code § 91.1; 37 Pa.Code § 94.2. 5
Section 21.1a 6 of the statute commonly known as the Parole Act, Act of August 6, 1941, P.L. 861, as amended, 61 P.S. § 381.21a, generally authorizes the Board to recommit the parolees. It states, in relevant part, that a parolee who “during the period of parole ... commits any crime punishable by imprisonment, from which he is convicted or found guilty by a judge or jury or to which he pleads guilty or nolo contendere at any time thereafter in a court of record, may, at the discretion of the Board, be recommitted as a parole violator.” 61 P.S. § 331.21a(a). If a parolee is recommitted under this section of the Parole Act, he must serve the remainder of his term of imprisonment he would have had to serve had he not been paroled and does not receive credit for time spent “at liberty on parole.” Id.
The Parole Act does not define “at liberty on parole,” which was considered, and interpreted, by our Supreme Court in
Cox v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
In
Jackson v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
Eagleville Hospital is not a secure facility. The doors to the hospital are not locked, there is no fencing around the facility, and the hospital does nothing to stop the patients from leaving. Additionally, the hospital does not treat parolees differently than other patients with the exception that, if a parolee were to leave the hospital before completing the program, the hospital would notify the parole authorities.
Id. Being able to leave the hospital without restraint was dispositive.
In
Willis v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
More recently, however, in
Torres v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
[A] parolee who has been forbidden generally to leave a particular inpatient drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility for a specified period for which credit is sought, who is under 24-hour supervision during the specified period and who is not permitted to make required trips outside of the facility without an escort cannot reasonably be described as being “at liberty on parole.”
Id. at 401 (footnote omitted). Thus, this Court reversed the Board, holding that the drug and alcohol program at Conestoga was the equivalent of incarceration. 10 Notably, Torres did not overrule Willis.
Willis is binding here. In Willis, we found Gateway’s 45-day drug and alcohol program not sufficiently custodial to entitle Willis to credit for time spent in the program. Detar presented no evidence that in the past year, since our ruling in Willis, the program at Gateway has changed and become more restrictive. To the extent additional facts about the Gateway program have been developed in this case, they only provide further support for the conclusion that the Gateway program does not constitute incarceration. In Willis, it was claimed that residents could not leave “on their own.” In this ease, we learned that residents do leave Gateway for reasons other than to attend meetings. They leave, on their own steam, for medical visits; they visit the mall, the bank, the gym and church. Staff drive residents to these off-site activities. No new evidence was presented in this case showing that Gateway is more restrictive than was understood when our decision in Willis was rendered; indeed, the evidence is to the contrary.
Every in-patient hospitalization, for treatment of any kind, involves 24-hour supervision that may be viewed by the patient as confining. Cox teaches that “at liberty on parole” does not mean that the parolee is literally “on the street.” To the contrary, it teaches that “at liberty on parole” may encompass a variety of confinements. Whether one is undergoing drug and alcohol rehabilitation at the Betty Ford Clinic or at a community corrections center, that individual may find the experience confining. We learned from Cox, however, mere confinement does not render parole not at liberty. The inquiry is a factual one, but the most important factor is whether the patient, or resident, is locked in and whether the patient may leave without being physically restrained.
In Willis, we held that the in-patient drug and alcohol program at Gateway was not the functional equivalent of incarceration. 11 We are bound by the holding in Willis. Because the record here provides only more support for that holding, we affirm the Board’s denial of Detar’s appeal.
President Judge COLINS dissents.
AND NOW, this 3rd day of January, 2006, the order of the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole dated January 31, 2005, in the above-captioned matter is affirmed.
Notes
. The work release center is not fenced.
. Daniel Kownacki did not join Gateway until the final 7 days of Detar’s stay. Detar contends that the Board’s findings about Gateway are not supported by substantial evidence because Kownacki was not present at the facility for the other 112 days of Detar’s residency. Detar’s challenge goes to the weight of Kow-nacki’s testimony. As questions of evidentia-iy weight and credibility are within the province of the Board,
Pastuszek
v.
Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
. This Court’s scope of review of a decision by the Board is limited to determining whether necessary findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence, whether an error of law was committed, or whether the constitutional rights of the parolee was violated.
Willis v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
. Detar asserts that he spent 48 days in the inpatient program because he waited three days to be transferred to work release. The record does not support this claim.
. 37 Pa.Code § 91.1 defines a "community corrections center” as a "minimum-security community-oriented facility operated or contracted by the Department for the purpose of facilitating special programs.” 37 Pa.Code § 94.2 describes “community corrections center residency” as,
a program operated as a continuum of the rehabilitative services provided in the facilities. Community corrections centers are residences in the community with custodial structure and strong emphasis on guidance and counseling. These centers serve those inmates who qualify and who should benefit from a gradual reintegration into society.
. Section 21.1a was added by Section 5 of the Act of August 24, 1951, P.L. 1401, as amended, 61 P.S. § 331.21a.
. The Court noted that while a convict may be on parole from a particular offense, he might be confined in prison for another offense, in a mental institution or in an enemy prison camp during a war. While not literally “at liberty,” that parolee would not be entitled to
.
See also Wagner v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
.
See also McMillian v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
. In finding the inpatient drug and alcohol program at Conewago to be the equivalent of incarceration, we noted Torres’ evaluation of the program. He testified as follows:
It’s like a state correctional facility because I'm over there with the state inmates another fellow and we don’t go anywhere except inside the building — meetings. We don’t go anywhere else. Meetings outside the community [are] under staff supervision. It’s 24/7 inside the facility.
Torres,
. Because we decide Detar is not entitled to credit for 45 days spent in rehabilitation, the most restrictive part of his stay, a fortiori he is not entitled to credit for time spent in the work release center.
