Budget woes prompt states to rethink prison policy
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By DAVID CRARY
AP National Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Their budgets in crisis, governors, legislators
and prison officials across the nation are making or considering
policy changes that will likely remove tens of thousands of
offenders from prisons and parole supervision.
Collectively, the pending and proposed initiatives could add up
to one of biggest shifts ever in corrections policy, putting into
place cost-saving reforms that have struggled to win political
support in the tough-on-crime climate of recent decades.
``Prior to this fiscal crisis, legislators could tinker around
the edges - but we're now well past the tinkering stage,'' said
Marc Mauer, executive director of the Sentencing Project, which
advocates alternatives to incarceration.
``Many political leaders who weren't comfortable enough,
politically, to do it before can now - under the guise of fiscal
responsibility - implement programs and policies that would be
win/win situations, saving money and improving corrections,'' Mauer
said
In California, faced with a projected $42 billion deficit and
prison overcrowding that has triggered a federal lawsuit, Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger wants to eliminate parole for all offenders
not convicted of violent or sex-related crimes, reducing the parole
population by about 70,000. He also wants to divert more petty
criminals to county jails and grant early release to more inmates -
steps that could trim the prison population by 15,000 over the next
18 months.
In Kentucky, where the inmate population had been soaring, even
some murderers and other violent offenders are benefiting from a
temporary cost-saving program that has granted early release to
nearly 2,000 inmates.
Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine is proposing early release of about
1,000 inmates. New York Gov. David Paterson wants early release for
1,600 inmates as well as an overhaul of the so-called Rockefeller
Drug Laws that impose lengthy mandatory sentences on many
nonviolent drug offenders.
``These laws have neither curbed drug use nor enhanced public
safety,'' said Donna Lieberman of the New York Civil Liberties
Union. ``Instead, they have ruined thousands of lives and annually
wasted millions of tax dollars in prison costs.''
Policy-makers in Michigan, one of four states that spend more
money on prisons than higher education, are awaiting a report later
this month from the Council of State Governments' Justice Center on
ways to trim fast-rising corrections costs, likely including
sentencing and parole modifications.
``There's a new openness to taking a look,'' said state Sen.
Alan Cropsey, a Republican who in the past has questioned some
prison-reform proposals. ``What we'll see are changes being made
that will have a positive impact four, five, six years down the
road.''
Even before the recent financial meltdown, policy-makers in most
states were wrestling with ways to contain corrections costs. The
Pew Center's Public Safety Performance Project has projected that
state and federal prison populations - under current policies -
will grow by more than 190,000 by 2011, to about 1.7 million, at a
cost to the states of $27.5 billion.
``Prisons are becoming less and less of a sacred cow,'' said
Adam Gelb, the Pew project's director. ``The budget crisis is
giving leaders on both sides of the aisle political cover they need
to tackle issues that would be too tough to tackle when budgets are
flush.''
In contrast to past economic downturns, Gelb said, states now
have better data on how to effectively supervise nonviolent
offenders in their communities so prison populations can be reduced
without increasing the threat to public safety.
Safety remains a potent factor. In California, for example, the
state correctional officers' union contends Schwarzenegger's
proposals will fuel more crime.
In Idaho, a combination of budget cuts and prison overcrowding
contributed to an uprising Jan. 2 in a former prison workshop that
was converted into a temporary cell block. Inmates who engaged in
vandalism and arson had been placed there as part of a cost-cutting
effort to move other prisoners back to Idaho from more expensive
quarters at a private prison in Oklahoma.
Thomas Sneddon, a former Santa Barbara, Calif., prosecutor who
is now executive director of the National District Attorneys
Association, said he and his colleagues support reappraisals of
corrections policies yet worry constantly that dangerous criminals
will be released unwisely.
``I don't think the public at large has any idea of who's in
these prisons,'' Sneddon said. ``If they went and visited, they'd
say 'My God, don't let any of these people out.'''
He noted that many states are seeking to send fewer offenders
back to prison for technical violations of parole conditions. Some
of these violations are indeed relatively minor, Sneddon said, but
often they are accompanied by more serious criminal behavior that
warrants a return to prison.
As budgetary pressures worsen, some advocacy groups are
concerned that spending cuts will target the very programs needed
to help inmates avoid re-offending after release - education,
vocational and drug-treatment programs.
``The idea that we'd cut programs and then release inmates early
is a toxic combination,'' said Pat Nolan, vice president of Prison
Fellowship. ``Just opening prison doors and letting people out with
no preparation - that's cruel to the offender and dangerous to
public.''
However, Nolan, a former California legislator who served time
in a federal prison on a racketeering charge, sees the current
climate as ripe for the kind of reforms Prison Fellowship has
advocated with its Christian-based outreach programs.
``It's forcing the legislators to see the actual costs of
imprisonment, because it's coming out of the budget for schools,
roads, hospitals,'' he said.
The Council of State Government's Justice Center has been
working with 10 states to develop options for curbing prison
populations without jeopardizing public safety. Tactics used in
Texas and Kansas have included early release for inmates who
complete specified programs, more sophisticated community
supervision of offenders, and expanded treatment and diversion
programs.
``There's an unprecedented level of interest in this kind of
thinking,'' said the Justice Center's director, Michael Thompson.
``It's a combination of fiscal pressure and a certain fatigue of
doing the same thing as 20 years ago and getting the same return.''
In Florida, where prisons are so crowded that the state has
acquired tents for possible use to house inmates, officials say 19
new prisons may be needed over the next five years. As an
alternative, Corrections Secretary Walter McNeil told lawmakers
they should re-evaluate the state's hard-line sentencing policies
and look at ways to help released inmates avoid returning to
prison.
One important variable is the role of private prisons, which
some advocacy groups consider less accountable that state-run
prisons. Elizabeth Alexander of the American Civil Liberties
Union's National Prison Project expressed concern that fiscally
struggling states would rely increasingly on private operators.
The largest private prison firm, Nashville, Tenn.-based
Corrections Corporation of America, operates in 20 states and says
some of them have asked if CCA can expand its capacity so more beds
don't need to be added to the state-run system.
``Of the states we do business with, none have made prison
construction a priority in this economic environment,'' said Tony
Grande, CCA's executive vice president. ``Our partnership with the
states will become even stronger. ...We want to be a part of their
financial solution.''
01/10/09 12:32
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