Pubdate: Sat, 19 May 2001 Source: Tulsa World (OK) Copyright: 2001 World Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.tulsaworld.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/463 NO END IN SIGHT TO CORRECTIONS DEMANDS News that the Corrections Department needs more money is now so routine that citizens probably pay little attention to it. The latest request was related in a seven-paragraph article on page A-11 of Wednesday's Tulsa World, headlined in typical fashion: "Prison budget hikes called not enough." Will it ever get through to lawmakers and others that throwing money down a bottomless pit is not going to address corrections problems? Even a scorecard won't keep you up to date on the endless requests. The latest article indicated that a $7 million supplemental appropriation and an $11 million supplement already approved will not be enough to finish out this fiscal year. Corrections officials say the department needs another $12 million to make it through June 30. At the same time, lawmakers were putting the finishing touches on a $387 million corrections budget for the upcoming fiscal year -- a sum that certainly will not be enough. Corrections is a resource gobbler, annually sucking tens of millions of dollars from more worthwhile purposes, such as education. But the state continues to send ever-larger numbers of offenders to prison for longer sentences. This view is not altogether sound, as the experience of other states demonstrates. Most other states send fewer offenders to jail yet do not have substantially different crime rates. Certain offenders -- nonviolent and drug offenders, among others -- sometimes can be "rehabilitated" through measures other than long prison terms. Oklahoma has tinkered with this concept, through establishment of drug courts and pilot community sentencing efforts, but hasn't exactly warmed up to the idea. Paying more attention to the front end -- with adequate education and early childhood services and programs for those who might end up in prison -- is another approach finally being embraced. But again, it's only been dabbled in. Unless Oklahoma gets more serious about how to address criminal behavior in ways other than draining the treasury to fund prisons, that will continue to be where most of the money goes. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew