Pubdate: Sat, 23 Jun 2001 Source: Waco Tribune-Herald (TX) Copyright: 2001 Waco-Tribune Herald Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/485 Website: http://accesswaco.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) A QUALIFIED VICTORY Texas Officials Have Made Commendable Progress In Their Effort To Regain Control Of The State's Prison System. On Monday, U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice allowed the Texas Department of Criminal Justice to once again assume control over several parts of the giant 143,000-inmate prison system. The fact that Texas officials only regained partial control of the state's prison system, and that it has taken decades to win this fragmentary victory, takes some of the glow off the celebration. In one form or the other, Texas officials have been fighting a handwritten lawsuit filed by Austin inmate David Ruiz since 1972. Ruiz argued in his lawsuit that conditions in the Texas prison system amounted to cruel and unusual punishment, a violation of the U.S. Constitution. Ruiz was right. In 1981, the state lost control of its prison system when the federal court ruled in favor of Ruiz and declared inmates in Texas suffered under unconstitutional conditions in many areas of prison life. Texas officials have spent years fighting the Ruiz lawsuit and federal control of the nation's largest prison system. Now Texas Attorney General John Cornyn has said he will continue that fight by appealing Justice's recent 33-page decision that concluded parts of prison system remain unconstitutional and under federal control. Texas officials should be in control of Texas prisons, as long as they can do it in a constitutional manner. That's been the problem for decades. More energy should go to correcting the problems than to finding a way to overturn Justice's rulings. Earlier this week Justice returned control over staffing, crowding, visiting, death row and health services, among other areas. That's nothing to sneeze at. All those areas had been run unconstitutionally by Texas prison officials. Justice retained federal control over inmate safety and administrative segregation, especially of mentally ill prisoners. He also ordered Texas officials to find constitutional methods to protect inmates from assault and abuse by other inmates and to come up with solutions to the excessive use of force against inmates. If Justice is right about the conditions, then he also is right to maintain federal control until the problems are corrected. Besides working on conditions inside Texas prisons, more needs to be done to prevent Texans from turning to crime. The state prison population more than tripled in the 1990s. The latest census figures and population projections point to another spurt in inmate growth, which could again land the prison system solidly under federal control. Texas not only needs to correct problems inside its prisons, it also must put more emphasis on education, job training, drug treatment and other measures that keep its citizens out of prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew