Pubdate: Fri, 17 Nov 2000
Source: Poughkeepsie Journal (NY)
Copyright: 2001 Poughkeepsie Journal
Contact:  PO Box 1231 Poughkeepsie, NY 12602
Fax: (845) 437-4921
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Website: http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/
Author: Mary Beth Pfeiffer, Poughkeepsie Journal
Note: Part 3a of a 3 part series

The Prison Explosion, Part 3a

PRISON GET-TOUGH POLICIES PUSH REHABILITATION ASIDE

In 1996, Gov. George Pataki commuted the lengthy prison sentences of seven 
people, six of whom, he noted on their behalf, had dutifully earned college 
degrees in prison.

The irony is that, a year earlier, Pataki had eliminated the college 
program from the New York state budget.

Today, except for a few privately funded programs, inmates cannot take free 
college courses, despite studies showing they cut the return rate to prison 
by half.

The loss of college prison programs -- which cost the equivalent of less 
than 1 percent of the prison budget -- is just one outgrowth of the 
tough-on-crime mentality in current vogue. While New York's 71 prisons are 
in many ways better than many nationwide, the emphasis, say prison reform 
advocates, has shifted ever more toward punishment and away from 
rehabilitation.

Serving long, hard time

State officials say while punishment comes first, rehabilitation is still a 
high priority. Nonetheless, if you are in prison in New York in the year 
2000, you are:

- Much more likely to do significant time in "The Box" or other 
disciplinary housing where you're locked away for 23 hours a day -- as 
fully 8 percent of the population now is.

- Much more likely to be sentenced to a longer term.

- Much less likely to be paroled when your minimum term is up.

- Much less likely to qualify for work programs in the community.

You may share a cell that was designed for one person. You'll attend 
classes of 25 that used to hold 15 in the belief that prison class size 
should mirror that in the community. And if you committed a violent crime, 
you may not get drug treatment.

This is not to say that New York's prisons compare poorly to others.

"I have nothing but the highest regard for the New York correctional 
system," said Robert Verdeyen, accreditation director for the American 
Correctional Association. He said New York was one of the first states to 
have all of its prisons accredited.

"There are still good programs in the prison system; there are still good 
people from the top down,'' agreed Robert Gangi, executive director of the 
New York Correctional Association, which provides prison oversight. "The 
overall picture, though, is a system that is moving toward a more punitive 
approach, depending less on programs and rehabilitation and more on 
punishment."

Officials of the state Department of Correctional Services steadfastly deny 
prison is a more desolate place.

''We have more inmates in programs today than ever before,'' said James 
Flateau, spokesman for Commissioner Glenn Goord, who declined an interview.

More inmates are getting high school equivalency degrees, the number 
enrolled in vocational programs is up and the rates of assaults on staff 
and inmates are at their lowest points in 14 and seven years, respectively, 
he said.

Further, prison officials maintain that double-celling of inmates -- in 
cells as small as 45 square feet -- has been upheld by the U.S. Supreme 
Court, which ruled: "The Constitution does not mandate comfortable prisons."

Families fear restlessness

Critics of state prisons acknowledge people are in prison to be punished. 
But many, including families of prisoners, agencies that provide legal 
assistance and oversight groups like Gangi's, believe harsher discipline, 
program cuts and longer, harder time is leading, inevitably, toward two 
things: More tension inside prisons and more certainty that those released 
will be back.

"The conditions today are a groundswell for another Attica,'' said Harold 
Walker, a former inmate involved in the 1971 Attica prison uprising that 
killed 43 people. He is now a paralegal for Prisoners Legal Services in 
Poughkeepsie, which represents inmates.

An attempt last January for a work stoppage by inmates -- and the official 
response to it -- is proof of growing unrest, prison reform groups say.

Dubbed Y2K, plans for the alleged action at Green Haven Correctional 
Facility in Stormville and Sing-Sing in Ossining were quickly ended when 
dozens of inmates were put in special housing units -- the modern 
equivalent of solitary confinement. There, inmates do not participate in 
programs, are let out once a day for an hour and have little human contact. 
Hans Toch, distinguished criminal justice professor at the State University 
at Albany, called them "the functional equivalent of dungeons."

Prison legal advocates say 55 of 84 disciplinary sentences appealed after 
the action were either reduced or reversed -- proof, they say, of what 
Karen Murtagh-Monks, an attorney for Prisoners Legal Services, called a 
"broad, panic-motivated, sweep."

"It really was an abuse of the system,'' said Joan Simon Faulkner, another 
attorney for the organization. Many inmates spent months in ''Box'' 
confinement before the sentences were modified, she and others said.

'Due process works'

Prison officials acknowledged sentences were reversed -- and point to that 
as proof the due process system works. As for the months that innocent 
inmates spent confined, Flateau said, ''That's the way the system works, 
whether it's in prison or out of prison. We weren't going to wait until... 
somebody got hurt.''

Inmates at Green Haven were threatening inmates who refused to participate 
and two containers of gunpowder were found, he said.

Since 1995, the corrections department has added 3,500 special housing beds 
-- a 142 percent increase -- including a special housing prison in Franklin 
County and nine 100-cell additions.

Before the beds were built, many inmates served disciplinary sentences in 
their own cells, under what is called "keeplock," where they were not 
isolated from the general population. But since the new beds were added, 
legal advocates for prisoners agreed, offenses that used to draw short 
sentences are now getting significant "Box" time, in part, they believe, to 
keep those beds filled.

More time in isolation

Figures provided by the department after repeated requests confirm an 
increase in long sentences.

- Sentences of six months or more to special housing units grew by 44 
percent from 1995 to 1999; the shortest sentences, less than 30 days, 
dropped by 30 percent. (The prison population grew 7 percent.)

- For special housing and keeplock sentences combined, the increase was 32 
percent for sentences of six months or more since 1995, while the sentences 
of less than 30 days dropped by 4 percent.

Dennis Fitzpatrick, spokesman for the correctional officers union, said the 
use of disciplinary housing has had ''a tremendous chilling effect" on 
inmate violence.

"All inmates -- not just staff -- are safer when disruptive inmates are 
locked up," Commissioner Goord wrote in an in-house newsletter in May, 
which was in response to a critical report on special housing in the Albany 
Times Union newspaper. Goord maintained then that the "average SHU (special 
housing unit) sentence has remained at six months for the past five years."

Flateau said the six-month figure was "the considered opinion of the 
professionals'' in the department and that no average figures were available.

When presented data on the increase in the lengthiest sentences, he amended 
the department's position: ''The average sentence for the same offense is 
the same as it was five years ago,'' he said.

"The length of time inmates are spending isolated in SHUs is alarming,'' 
wrote the New York Catholic Conference of Bishops in a statement issued 
last year, noting that Box time can "induce psychosis in inmates with 
mental disorders, and serious psychotic symptoms in inmates with prior 
mental illness."

The Capital Region Ecumenical Organization in the Albany area called the 
use of special housing and keeplock "punishments that both treat inmates as 
if they are less than human and border on vengeance."

To many, the use of special housing units may be a necessary response to 
the state policies that diminish chances for self-improvement and early 
release.

"Inmates are misbehaving in more and more extreme ways than before,'' said 
Ted Conover, author of "Newjack," a recently released book about his months 
as a correction officer at Sing Sing. "It's a pretty fair indicator of a 
decline in hope and increase in self-hate."

Said Flateau, the department spokesman, ''It's driven by inmate behavior, 
not by anything we've done.''

To be sure, there is still evidence of good prison programs. Current and 
former inmates spoke of learning welding and plumbing, graduating drug 
treatment programs and finishing their high school education.

One of the chief accomplishments that DOCS points to is the number of 
graduate equivalency degrees issued since 1995, which grew 14 percent while 
the prison population itself grew 7 percent. The prison passing rate in 
1999, 60 percent, was actually higher than the general population's, 57 
percent.

But the growth in degrees awarded since 1991 -- 16 percent -- actually 
flagged behind the growth in the prison population -- 24 percent. And more 
recently, both the number of degrees earned and the passing rate dropped 
from 1998 to 1999.

Significantly, DOCS increased the ratio of teachers to inmates from 1 to 15 
to 1 to 25 in the mid-1990s. In a statement, Goord said this was "in 
recognition of the constraints and fiscal realities that require every 
school district across the state to maintain teacher-to-pupil ratios 
greater than those in prison."

Fewer opportunities

Other changes clearly reduce inmate opportunities.

n In 1994, 864 inmates received college degrees under programs funded by 
federal and state education grants for poor students. Both were eliminated 
in the mid-1990s. Only 70 inmates were awarded degrees last year in a 
handful of privately funded programs.

"Here we have an almost proven technique to help reduce recidivism and 
we're not using it,'' said Assemblyman Jeffrion Aubry, a Queens Democrat 
who is chairman of the Corrections Committee.

In response to a 1997 report critical of the cuts, Goord wrote that "only 
3,000 to 3,500 inmates participated in college programs," while about 
47,000 inmates lacked a high school degree -- the focus of DOCS education 
programs.

In defense of clemency given to inmates who had received college degrees, 
he said, "It is obvious that far more than academic credentials entered 
into the governor's decision."

- Work release, a program that prepared inmates for release by having them 
work in the community, was eliminated for violent offenders by Pataki in 
1995, reducing participants from 18,000 to 7,100 last year.

The New York Correctional Association maintains that leaves prisoners less 
prepared for release and hence more likely to fail.

"Work release is considered a valuable program that prepares participants 
for a gradual, supervised re-integration into the community,'' the 
association said in a statement.

Flateau, the prison spokesman, said the work-release decision was a 
''philosophical call. ... The governor and the Legislature made a decision 
that violent felons belong behind prison walls.''

Statistics conflict

In 1994, then-Corrections Commissioner Thomas Coughlin testified at a 
hearing in defense of work release, maintaining there were only 11 arrests 
of 1,000 work-release participants convicted of murder or manslaughter. And 
their arrests were not for violent crimes but things like drug possession 
and trespass, he said.

State officials, however, point to other statistics since work release was 
eliminated: an 89 percent decrease in people who absconded from the program 
and a 95 percent decrease in violent felonies charged to participants. 
That's tempered somewhat by the fact that there was also a 60 percent 
decrease in participants in the program and a 20 percent drop in felony 
arrests statewide in that time.

- Eliminating work release for violent felons had a ripple effect. It 
reduced the number of inmates involved in intensive substance abuse 
treatment programs that served as a prelude to the program. After 
increasing steadily throughout the early 1990s, the number of people 
involved in the Comprehensive Alcohol and Substance Abuse Treatment Program 
dropped from 1,809 in 1996 to 1,275 this year, according to state figures. 
Now the only drug treatment at maximum-security prisons is through 
Narcotics and Alcoholics Anonymous groups, self-help groups that do not 
involve professional counseling.

Excluding NA and AA, about one in seven prisoners was enrolled in alcohol 
and substance abuse programs as of October, state figures show. 
Fitzpatrick, the corrections union spokesman, said current programs are 
good but are too short in duration.

"The truly meaningful programs must be established from the beginning to 
the end of a person's incarceration,'' he said -- as opposed to "a shot-gun 
form of six months out of a five-year commitment."

''Unions can make statements like that,'' countered prison spokesman 
Flateau. ''They don't have to worry about tax dollars.''

- Chances of being paroled have been reduced across the board since the 
early 1990s, leaving prisoners with little hope that a good behavioral 
record will lead to parole. For violent crimes, the decrease was dramatic 
-- from 48 percent in 1994 to 21 in 1999 -- but the rate also dropped 9 
percentage points for drug offenses.

"People who are different are being treated exactly the same,'' said 
Claudette Spencer, staff attorney for the Prisoners Rights Project. 
"Nothing is being looked at (at parole hearings) except the crime, which is 
never going to change."

Less chance to grow

All this means that inmates have less to do and are more embittered toward 
a system that seems not to care about their welfare or reform, say inmates 
themselves, their families and their advocates.

"We have to start with the basic question: What is the purpose of our 
prisons?" said Terry Derikart, director of Families Against Mandatory 
Minimums, which favors drug-law reform. "Right now, it's very punitive. 
There's very little rehabilitation."

"One of the most common complaints from inmates and staff is the loss of 
programs and increased idleness," said Gangi, of the Correctional 
Association, which criticized DOCS in a 1997 report for reductions in 
teachers, drug counselors and vocational programs.

Goord called the association's report on staff cuts "discredited."

"The fact that DOCS is delivering old services in new, unique and 
innovative ways does not in any way diminish our dedication to our goals,'' 
he wrote in response to the Correctional Association's report, which, he 
said, "equates program opportunity directly and solely to the number of 
staff employed."

 From 1995 through 1999, department figures show, the number of people 
earning vocational certificates rose 8 percent, about twice the rate of 
population growth.

But Gangi said DOCS plays "a smoke-and-mirrors game" with its numbers. Jobs 
such as porter, in which an inmate mops floors and such, can take an hour a 
day and are not meaningful job training, he contended. Flateau said they 
aren't usually counted that way, although errors occur.

To Susan Jeffords, a 17-year parole officer and president of the parole 
officers' association, program cuts and the lack of support after release 
have clear results.

She said, "I think they're less prepared to be released and to do well.''