Pubdate: Tue, 06 Mar 2001 Source: Herald & Review (IL) Copyright: 2001 Herald & Review Contact: The Editor, PO Box 311, Decatur, IL 62525-0311 Fax: (217) 421-6913 Website: http://www.herald-review.com/ Author: Jeannine Koranda -- H&R Springfield Bureau Writer NEW RULES IMPROVE PRISON SAFETY Corrections Head Cites Reductions In Violence, Drug Use SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (March 6) -- The state prison director said Monday that tighter inmate discipline has led to a safer environment for prisoners and employees. Behavior controls were just one change highlighted by Donald N. Snyder Jr., director of the Illinois Department of Corrections. "The system that we were used to wasn't working; we had to change the status quo," he told graduate students from the University of Illinois at Springfield. Snyder described the penalties for assaulting either staff or other inmates. "If you touch or assault a corrections officer or staff or anyone in the population, you are going to go to disciplinary segregation for a year," Snyder said. Disciplinary segregation means an inmate has fewer visiting privileges, less access to the commissary and decreased television and radio privileges. The punishment is also used for drug users. Snyder said that when he began, 50 percent of inmates were testing positive for drug use. Now if inmates are shown to use drugs, they are sent to disciplinary segregation for six months. He said positive drug tests have dropped to below 2 percent. He credited the changes with creating a safer prison environment. However, the union that represents guards and other prison employees disputed some claims. Henry Bayer, executive director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said the union's figures showed that the number of assaults on guards went up from fiscal year 1999 to 2000. Bayer also said some improvements occurred before Snyder took charge of the prison system. State Rep. Charles A. "Chuck" Hartke, D-Teutopolis, a member of the House Prison Management Reform Committee, said Snyder had done a "fantastic" job improving the prison system. Snyder said that while the prisons are filled beyond capacity, the crime rate has been dropping. He credits the drop to the strong economy, which provides jobs; the baby boomers growing out of their "mischievousness;" and the department developing programs to keep inmates from returning. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens