Fiscal Pressures Lead Some States to Free
Inmates Early
By Keith B.
Richburg and Ashley Surdin
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, May 5, 2008; A01
NEW YORK --
Reversing decades of tough-on-crime
policies, including mandatory minimum prison
sentences for some drug offenders, many
cash-strapped states are embracing a view
once dismissed as dangerously naive: It
costs far less to let some felons go free
than to keep them locked up.
It is a theory that has long been pushed
by criminal justice advocates and liberal
politicians -- that some felons,
particularly those convicted of minor drug
offenses, would be better served by
treatment, parole or early release for good
behavior. But the states' conversion to that
view has less to do with a change of heart
on crime than with stark fiscal realities.
At a time of shrinking resources, prisons
are eating up an increasing share of many
state budgets.
"It's the fiscal stuff that's driving
it," said
Marc Mauer,
executive director of the Sentencing
Project, a Washington-based group that
advocates for more lenient sentencing. "Do
you want to build prisons or do you want to
build colleges? If you're a governor, it's
kind of come to that choice right now."
Mauer and other observers point to a
number of recent actions, some from states
facing huge budget shortfalls, some not, but
still worried about exploding costs.
· To ease the overcrowding and save
California about $1.1 billion over two
years, Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) has proposed
freeing about 22,000 prisoners convicted of
nonviolent, nonsexual offenses 20 months
earlier than their scheduled release dates.
He also wants to place them on unsupervised
parole, saving the state the cost of having
all parolees assigned to an agent.
· Lawmakers in Providence, R.I., approved
an expansion last week of the state's "good
time" early-release rules to cover more
inmates serving shorter sentences. The new
rules, which will put more inmates under
post-prison supervision, are expected to
save Rhode Island an estimated $8 billion
over five years.
· In Kentucky, where 22,000 state inmates
are housed in county prisons and private
facilities, lawmakers agreed to allow
certain nonviolent, nonsexual offenders to
serve up to 180 days of their sentences at
home, and to make it easier for prisoners to
earn credit for good behavior. The move
could save the state, which is facing a $900
million deficit over the next two years, as
much as $30 million.
· In Mississippi, where the prison
population has doubled during the past dozen
years to 22,600, Gov.
Haley Barbour (R) has signed into law
two measures that will reduce it: One to let
certain nonviolent offenders go free after
serving 25 percent of their sentences, and
the other to release some terminally ill
inmates.
· South Carolina, meanwhile, is looking
to abolish parole, in part to slow the
growth of its prison population since there
would be fewer people returned to prison for
parole violations.
Proposals to free prisoners are still met
with opposition, particularly from law
enforcement officials who fear that a flood
of released felons could return to their
communities, and from victims groups that
worry that justice is being sacrificed for
budgetary concerns.
The California plan has drawn criticism
from the Legislative Analyst's Office, the
state's nonpartisan fiscal adviser, which
warned that 63,000 mid-level offenders would
"effectively go unpunished, serving little
or no prison time" and would not have active
supervision.
The proposal also worries local
governments and police in California,
particularly in
Los Angeles County -- home to the
nation's largest prison system, which
supplies about a third of the state's prison
population. "It's kind of like the volcano
has erupted," County Sheriff Lee Baca said.
"To let out 63,000 prisoners on summary
parole -- which means no parole -- is not
good policy."
Bob Pack, 52, of Danville, Calif., is
particularly disturbed by the prospect of
softer punishment forthose convicted of
drunken driving. In 2003, Pack's two
children -- Troy, 10, and Alana, 7 -- were
struck and killed when a drunk driver's car
jumped a curb and ran onto a neighborhood
sidewalk. The driver had three prior
drunken-driving convictions.
Said Pack: "I guarantee you that if this
program is fulfilled, somewhere down the
road -- it could be three months or a year
-- there's going to be a family in court
over the death of a loved one, because of
someone who got out early."
But for now, state officials are finding
themselves under mounting pressure to cut
costs and are looking at their rising prison
population.
Between 1987 and last year, states
increased their higher education spending by
21 percent, in inflation-adjusted dollars,
according to the Pew Center on the States.
During the same period, spending on
corrections jumped by 127 percent.
In the Northeastern states, according to
the Pew report, prison spending over the
past 20 years has risen 61 percent, while
higher education spending has declined by
5.5 percent.
California -- which has the country's
worst fiscal crisis, with a potential
shortfall of $20 billion -- has seen its
prison-related spending swell to $10.4
billion for the 2008-2009 fiscal year. About
170,000 inmates are packed into California's
33 prisons, which were designed to hold
100,000. About 15,000 prisoners are being
housed in emergency beds, in converted
classrooms and gymnasiums.
Rhode Island's prison population peaked
and its 4,000-inmate prison capacity was
exceeded in recent years, prompting a
lawsuit and a court settlement. "The soaring
inmate census has created a crisis here,"
said Ashbel T. Wall, the state's corrections
director. "We've been busting the budget
continuously. . . . Our prisons have been
packed."
New Jersey is one state making changes
out of a desire for more efficiency.
Gov. Jon S. Corzine (D) is proposing
legislation to expand drug courts to channel
more nonviolent, first-time drug offenders
into treatment instead of prisons, and also
to expand supervised parole. Another
proposal would change the parole policy so
parolees were not automatically returned to
prison for minor drug offenses, said Lilo
Stainton, the governor's spokeswoman.
She said that in New Jersey's case, the
changes are not budget-driven. "We think
this is a more humane and sensible way to
treat people," she said.
Michigan is grappling with a massive
prison population, mainly because "truth in
sentencing" rules make the state less
generous about granting paroles. Michigan's
incarceration rate is 47 percent higher than
that of the other Great Lakes states,
according to experts.
Michigan has become one of the few states
that actually spend more on prisons than on
higher education -- about $2 billion for
prisons, and $1.9 billion in state aid to
its 15 public universities and 28 community
colleges. "It's insane," said Barbara Levine
of the Citizens Alliance on Prisons and
Public Spending in Lansing. "The governor is
always talking about how we need to be high
tech. But these days, the best career
opportunity is to get a job as a prison
guard."
In fact, according to Thomas Clay, a
prisons and budget expert with Michigan's
nonprofit Citizens Research Council, the
state government employed 70,000 people in
1980, including 5,000 working for the
prisons system. Today, the number of state
workers has dropped to 54,000, but 17,000
work for the prisons.
"You've got two decades of failed
policies," said Laura Sager a consultant in
Michigan for Families Against Mandatory
Minimums. She said mandatory sentencing laws
and tough penalties for drug offenses in the
1980s "bloated prisons and prison
populations, and the taxpayer is paying a
very high price."
Now with states struggling with budget
deficits, she said, "you have pressures that
make it palatable to take a second look."
Surdin reported from Los Angeles.
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