Pubdate: Sat, 09 Jun 2001
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: David Firestone

PRISON POPULATION IN U.S. IS LEVELING OFF

ATLANTA   After growing explosively for three decades, the nation's prison 
population has begun to stabilize, according to new government figures. For 
the first time in years, the overcrowding that has plagued state prisons 
and local jails alike is beginning to ease, as a result of falling crime 
rates and a decade of new construction. Through the middle of last year, 
the number of state prisoners grew by only 1.5 percent, the lowest annual 
increase in 29 years, according to figures recently compiled by the United 
States Department of Justice. In the three most populous states, the number 
of prisoners in California and New York actually fell last year, and the 
number in Texas grew by only half of 1 percent. Nine other states including 
New Jersey also reported a decline, the largest number of states to do so 
in two decades.

Connecticut's prison population grew 1.4 percent. Government officials and 
other experts in the field say there are several reasons for the slowing 
growth, but the most important is that the prison system is finally 
experiencing the benefits of the decline in crime rates that began in the 
mid-1990's. Before the crime rates fell, many states had begun toughening 
their criminal justice systems, imposing longer minimum sentences for a 
wider spectrum of crimes and ending parole.

The average sentence increased by 13 percent during the 90's, and with more 
prisoners staying behind bars longer, it took several years for the drop in 
crime to be reflected in the prison population numbers. "The reason we saw 
those increasing numbers every year was because of the sentencing reforms 
undertaken by so many states," said Allen J. Beck, the chief of corrections 
statistics for the Justice Department, who compiled the new figures. "In 
the 90's, there was a much greater chance that violent offenders would be 
incarcerated, and would stay longer.

But those reforms had their effect, and now we're finally starting to see 
the prison population stabilize." The drop in crime was not directly 
related to the increased sentencing; a variety of studies have shown no 
relationship between the length of sentencing in a state and its crime 
rate. Rather, criminologists say, many of the tough sentences imposed 
earlier in the decade began to run their course at the same time as the 
crime rate continued to decline. During that same period, many states with 
corrections systems that became overwhelmed by the new prisoners also began 
experimenting with alternative sentencing, special drug courts and 
diversionary programs for drug users that are starting to have an effect on 
reducing inmate populations. By more closely supervising convicts on 
parole, states have kept many of them from returning. "Forty percent of the 
people walking through our prison doors were parole violators, mostly who 
had relapsed into drug use," said Martin F. Horn, who was the secretary of 
corrections in Pennsylvania for six years until earlier this year. "So we 
started a system that put them in an intensive treatment program inside 
prison for six months, then put them back on the street under close 
supervision, Mr. Horn said. "Now our prison population has been flat for 
three years, which we hadn't seen since before 1980." In addition to 
California, New York and New Jersey, the other states that reported 
declines in prisoners were Alaska, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, 
North Carolina, Ohio, Rhode Island and South Carolina. State prisoners 
represent about 60 percent of all people incarcerated in the United States. 
The growth in the number of jail inmates, usually people held for a year or 
less, representing 32 percent of those incarcerated, has also been flat in 
the last two years, which is considered a more direct reflection of the 
drop in crime. "Jails are the most immediate beneficiary of the crime 
decline, because their sentences are shorter," said Alfred Blumstein, a 
professor of criminology at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, who 
studies crime statistics. "Typically, at least half the people in jail are 
awaiting trial, and as the crime rates declined, trials can occur faster." 
But the trend has not held true in the federal prison system, which grew by 
11 percent last year, mostly due to mandatory drug sentencing and the 
federal takeover of prisoners from the District of Columbia. Federal 
prisons remain considerably more crowded, on average, than state prisons or 
local jails. One reason for that is the boom in prison and local jail 
construction during the 1980's and 90's, which doubled the number of state 
prisons, though it was not matched at the federal level.

Between 1990 and 2000, the number of state prisoners nationwide grew by 75 
percent, to 1,242,962 from 708,393, corresponding to the rise in drug 
arrests, more vigilant policing and harsher sentences. But prison 
construction in most states has kept pace and often exceeded the increase 
in prisoners, even though most prisons remain overcrowded. Justice 
Department figures show that the state prisons were operating at 115 
percent of capacity in 1990, and at 109 percent of capacity in 1999, the 
latest year for which statistics are available. Similarly, the number of 
local jail beds almost doubled during the 1990's, to 677,000. In 1990, 
jails were operating at 104 percent of capacity, but last year, that number 
dropped to 92 percent.

Mr. Beck said that in the year ending last June, more jail beds were added 
than jail inmates. Many states continue to make headlines because of 
overcrowded prisons and jails, mostly in cases where the state has not 
built new prisons as fast as elsewhere. New Jersey has the most crowded 
prison system, according to the Justice Department, at 143 percent of its 
capacity, and Illinois and Wisconsin are only a few percentage points behind.

Other states, including Alabama, have allowed local jails to hold their 
excess prisoners, resulting in lawsuits over jail conditions and court 
orders to expand state capacity. But nationally the crowding is 
diminishing, and experts predict it will become a much less serious problem 
in the coming decade as the number of prisoners stabilizes and prisons now 
under construction open. Several states added so many beds that they have 
an excess of prison capacity, and Texas and Virginia have made a lucrative 
business out of leasing their spare prison beds to more crowded states. Ten 
percent of the inmates in Virginia's prisons are from out of state, and the 
state expects to receive more than $80 million this year for housing them. 
Several prisoners from Connecticut and New Mexico who were housed at 
Virginia's newest "supermax" prisons have filed lawsuits complaining about 
abusive conditions and racial discrimination at the new buildings, which 
restrict the movement of prisoners more sharply than in most prisons. Marc 
Mauer, deputy director of the Sentencing Project, a nonprofit group that 
supports prisoners' rights, said he expected that questions regarding 
treatment of prisoners at new institutions would eventually overtake 
crowding as the principal concern of advocates. "Crowding only tells you 
whether there are enough beds for all the inmates," Mr. Mauer said. "It 
doesn't tell you how many vocational or treatment programs there are, or 
what life is like inside the prisons 24 hours a day." If the prison 
population continues to stabilize or diminish, it could have a substantial 
economic benefit to states and localities. State prisoners now cost an 
average of $23,000 a year to house, so the 65,810 prisoners added between 
1998 and 1999 increased the nation's prison expenditures by about $1.5 billion.

By contrast, the following year, only 18,558 prisoners were added, a 
difference of more than $1 billion. But prison-building remains popular 
with many politicians and voters, and new prisons often provide a boost to 
rural economies.

Few people in the field expect building to stop. "We're a long way from the 
point where crime is not a major political issue," said James Alan Fox, a 
professor of criminal justice at Northeastern University. "The political 
agenda is still heavily weighted towards punishment, and many states are 
much more willing to spend money on prison construction than on new schools."
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