Pubdate: Tue, 15 Feb 2000 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2000 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: GPO Box 3771, Sydney NSW 2001 Fax: +61-(0)2-9282 3492 Website: http://www.smh.com.au/ Forum: http://forums.fairfax.com.au/ Author: Geesche Jacobsen 'NO CHOICE BUT TO BUILD MORE JAILS' The State's prison population will continue to rise, and the "vast bulk" of released prisoners will re-offend, a parliamentary inquiry was told yesterday. The Corrective Service Commissioner, Mr Leo Keliher, said 152 of every 100,000 adults in the State were imprisoned in September last year - up from 133 per 100,000 in early 1995, a 14 per cent increase. At the same time, the prison population had grown by 75 per cent in Queensland and 36 per cent in Western Australia. "We believe that, based on best information, based on current activity of the NSW Police Service and on sentencing trends of the courts, that there will continue to be growth in inmate numbers," Mr Keliher said. The department had to respond by building more jails, he told the Upper House inquiry. In the US, the prison population had grown by 60 per cent from 1995 to 1998. It had grown by 30 per cent in Britain and 70 per cent in The Netherlands. Ms Marilyn Chilvers, from the Bureau of Crime Statistics, said bail was being refused more often - increasing the number of people on remand - and a greater proportion of those found guilty of certain offences were jailed. The research director of the NSW Judicial Commission, Mr Ivan Potas, said tougher sentences for traffic offences, such as dangerous driving, had added to the prison population. Mr Keliher said the Corrective Services Department had no influence over the number of prisoners or the rate at which they re-offended. The vast bulk of prisoners would re-offend, he said. While about 27 per cent of first-time inmates would go back to jail, more than half those who had been to jail several times would return. The department ran education and counselling programs but had few ways of measuring their impact on the likelihood to re-offend. If a heroin addict re-offended, this was not a failure of the system, he said. "People have a lifetime of socialisation: the parents, the school teachers, the local parish priest, the local football coach. There's all sorts of people who have a major impact on these people who turn up in my custody, and the fact is we do not have all of the answers in such a short space of time to guarantee that these people will never commit crime again." - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto