Pubdate: Wed, 15 Aug 2001
Source: Appleton Post-Crescent (WI)
Copyright: 2001 The Post-Crescent
Contact:  http://www.wisinfo.com/postcrescent/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1443
Author: Ed Culhane, Post-Crescent staff writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)

OUTAGAMIE BOARD REJECTS NEW JAIL

Citing Drug War, Supervisors Say The Answer Lies In Incarcerating Fewer People

A sharply contentious Outagamie County Board rejected the recommendations 
of its own space needs committee, and the wishes of County Executive Toby 
Paltzer, by voting Tuesday against building a new jail.

The proposed $17.7 million Huber law jail and sheriff's department 
administration building is the centerpiece of a $31.2 million building and 
remodeling program designed to accommodate an expanding district attorney's 
office, new courts and continuing increases in the number of people 
sentenced to jail with work-release privileges.

The resolution supporting a new jail failed on a 23-14 vote.

The board also rejected a second key component of the plan a recommendation 
by the Space Needs Project Oversight Committee that the county's old health 
care center be razed, allowing the new jail to be built in its place, at 
the county's 38-acre campus on W. Brewster Street in Grand Chute.

In rejecting the plan, several supervisors said the proposed jail, designed 
to meet criteria established by the Department of Corrections for housing 
state inmates in leased cells, would cost too much. They also railed 
against state laws and local prosecutors who send more people to jail every 
year.

Several supervisors responded to arguments that the county will incur large 
costs to transport its inmates to other counties if it does not add new 
jail beds by suggesting fewer arrests and alternatives to jail, such as 
electronic bracelets that allow authorities to monitor a person outside jail.

"We won't have to transport people if they are not in the jail to begin 
with," said Supv. Al Schmidt. "The jail should be for protecting the public 
from criminals. We should not jail people who are not a threat to society."

Supv. James Duncan pointed to initiatives on the West Coast designed to 
keep first-time offenders out of jail. He said the United States 
incarcerates too many of its citizens.

"Quite frankly, our war on drugs has become a war on the American people," 
Duncan said. "We incarcerate more people than anyone."

He said a new jail would be "a monument to our failures."

Supvs. Dean Culbertson, Cliff Sanderfoot, Lloyd Kloehn, Mike Meyers and 
others sought to keep attention focused on the research conducted by the 
special space needs committee.

"I will vote for this resolution, not because I want to, but because I 
think it makes better sense down the road," said Meyers, who cited 
long-term savings on staff costs that can result from a new and efficient 
design.

"I can't support this," responded Supv. Bob Spahn. "If we can't build a 
cheap building for these guys (inmates), let's put them in bracelets."

Culbertson said calls for changes in state law and a desire for less costly 
alternatives will not solve the county's space crunch.

"Those are good ideas, but how realistic are they?" he asked. "It's a 
beautiful dream but it's not going to happen. Vote as you think you have 
to, but don't think this situation will go away."

Sheriff Brad Gehring, who observed the proceedings, said afterward that 
Culbertson was right, that laws will not change quickly enough, if at all, 
to help the county. New laws creating or enlarging jail penalties are 
adopted every year, he said.

"The state Legislature has been riding this wave of get tough on crime, and 
now we are reaping the cost of that," Gehring said.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager