Pubdate: Mon, 28 Aug 2000 Source: Corpus Christi Caller-Times (TX) Copyright: 2000 Corpus Christi Caller-Times Address: P.O. Box 9136, Corpus Christi, TX 78469-9136 Feedback: http://www.caller.com/commcentral/email_ed.htm Website: http://www.caller.com/ Author: Suzanne Gamboa, Associated Press TEXAS ADDS 1 IN 5 TO PRISON SYSTEM State's inmate population rose annually by 11.8 percent in '90s WASHINGTON - Texas put people in prison at a faster rate than any other state during the last decade, but its crime rate is higher than other large states with smaller prison populations, according to a study being released today. The report by Justice Policy Institute, which supports alternatives to prison, showed that the Texas prison population's annual growth rate was 11.8 percent during the 1990s, which meant it added one in every five inmates to the nation's prisons. Meanwhile, the state's crime rate fell at half the national average and the least of any of the nation's five largest states. A Texas prison official said the last decade's growth was a response to a prison revolving door during overcrowded conditions, and the state's incarceration rate slowed in the latter part of the decade. The study's authors zeroed in on Texas' prison system after the Bureau of Justice reported earlier this year that the Texas prison population of 163,190 had surpassed California's, 163,067. California's population of 32 million is almost twice that of Texas. The Justice Policy is a think tank of the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice, and the study was paid for with a grant from the Center on Crime, Communities and Culture. The groups provide programs for families of inmates and look for other solutions to criminal behavior beyond prisons, such as substance abuse treatment. The study comes as Texas prison officials are pressing for money to build more lockups and as the inmate population is closing in on the system's capacity. Earlier this month, Tony Fabelo, executive director of the state Criminal Justice Policy Council, told elected officials that without a change in parole rates and policies for returning parole violators to prison, Texas will likely need prisons to hold 14,600 additional inmates by August 2005. On Friday, Fabelo said Texas' rapid incarceration occurred when the state went on a prison-building binge. Before that, the state intermittently released inmates to relieve overcrowding and comply with court-mandated capacity levels. Texas' crime rate decline has not fallen as much as in other large states. >From 1995 to 1998, Texas' crime rate fell 5.1 percent, half the national average drop of 10 percent. Meanwhile California's fell 23 percent, Florida's 5.9 percent, Illinois' 9 percent and New York's 21.1 percent, the study said. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck