Pubdate: Wed, 16 Feb 2000 Source: Daily Texan (TX) Contact: http://stumedia.tsp.utexas.edu/webtexan/ Bookmark: MAP's link to Texas articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/tx Author: Joel Giorgio, Daily Texan Staff NAISHTAT ADDRESSES TEXAS' LARGE PRISON POPULATION Texas could reduce its prison population by easing drug laws and sentences, said State Rep. Elliot Naishtat, D-Austin, at a Capitol press conference Tuesday. "The biggest contributing factor to the burgeoning prison population -- both nationwide and in Texas -- has been crimes of possession or low-level dealing," said Naishtat, adding that the number of drug offenders in prison doubled between 1990-2000 and has cost taxpayers more than $5 billion annually. Naishtat's announcement comes on the heels of a study released in December by the Justice Policy Institute that reveals the United States is second to Russia in the number of people behind bars. The institute, a nonprofit, Washington D.C.-based organization that aims to decrease the number of those incarcerated, estimated that the current population of U.S. prisons rose to 2 million Tuesday. The increase in prisoners since 1970 is unprecedented, with the number of people jailed jumping from 196,429 in 1970 to 2 million today, according to the institute. In Texas, the number of prisoners held by the Texas Department of Corrections increased from approximately 39,000 in 1988 to 151,216 currently. A 1989 study by the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse revealed that 63 percent of inmates are either substance-dependent or abusers, and 39 percent of those jailed claimed to be drunk or high at the time of the offense. "Our efforts to stop the flow of drugs into the United States have not resulted in diminished availability, or meaningfully affected the quality of the drugs on the street," Naishtat said, adding that drug addiction is a medical problem, not a criminal issue. Glen Castlebury, director of public information for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, said the average stay in prison has lengthened, thus resulting in the higher prison population. Those released in 1999 were in prison an average of 8.0 years, but those admitted into prison the same year were handed sentences averaging 8.1 years. Castlebury added that nonviolent and first-time offenders are usually given shorter sentences. "We aim rehabilitation towards people with nonviolent crimes to stop them from coming right back," Castlebury said, adding that the department spends less money to rehabilitate prisoners with longer sentences because they are less likely to commit crimes when released. Naishtat said ultimately the citizens of Texas should lobby to change laws that they perceive to be ineffective. "In the end it will be up to the voters of Texas, the taxpayers, to say how their money is going to be spent and to hold the government accountable for the effectiveness of its laws," Naishtat said. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck