Pubdate: Wed, 04 Sep 2002 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2002 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Note: The Journal does not publish letters from writers outside its daily home delivery circulation area. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) TOO MANY PRISONERS? Maybe the recent story in The Economist will be the prod that causes some long, hard introspection in America regarding its prison system. The land of liberty is a cruel joke for a too-large percentage of the U.S. citizenry. Consider some statistics: For almost 50 years, from 1925 to 1973, an average of 110 Americans for every 100,000 were in federal and state prisons. By 2000, the incarceration rate had risen to 478 per 100,000. Add in the local jail population, and almost 700 of every 100,000 Americans is behind bars. Some sociologists have done some broad calculations that indicate that as many as 13 million U.S. citizens, about 7 percent of the adult population and 12 percent of the adult males, have been convicted of a felony. While not all are behind bars, the felony conviction is a deal breaker in many job applications. And the numbers are far worse for black males. Drug offenses and the efforts of the war on drugs are a major contributor to the increases in incarceration. In 1980, 15 of every 100,000 Americans were in jail on a drug conviction. In 1986, the number was 148. A recently released U.S. Justice Department report noted that there were 5.3 million adults either incarcerated or under the supervision of the criminal justice system in 2001. In North Carolina, the report said, 46,500 people were incarcerated and 113,600 were on probation in that same period. As the magazine notes, the United States has passed Russia as "the world's most aggressive jailer." This incarceration rate is accompanied by an appalling indifference about what happens when convicts are released from prison. Some more statistics: In California, a survey showed that half the inmates were functionally illiterate. In the United States, it's estimated that three out of four released prisoners have been on drugs. Surveys suggest that a majority of employers won't knowingly hire a convict. Fewer parole decisions are made by parole boards, thanks to mandatory sentencing, which means that prisoners do their time and are released pretty much no matter how unprepared they are. Those who break parole represent the fast-growing element in prison admissions. More than half the parolees break parole. About two-thirds of released prisoners are arrested again within three years, and two in five are already back in jail within that period. Rehabilitation as an objective of incarceration fell from favor in the 1970s, when studies appeared to show that efforts did not affect recidivism. Today, research results have done a 180. A study showed that federal prisoners who completed a drug-treatment program were 73 percent less likely to be arrested again than those who did not. But programs have become harder to join. As recently as 1991, a quarter of state prisoners received treatment. By 1997, the ratio was one in 10. Job training has also been shown to reduce recidivism, but there's less of it now. The magazine holds out a slender reed of hope, noting that some eyes are beginning to open. The Justice Department recently put $100 million into helping released prisoners. Better than nothing, it's not a lot when compared to the $54 billion we spend annually on the prison system. There is growing skepticism about the effectiveness of the war on drugs, which should lead to some reform. It's about time. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager