Pubdate: Thu, 12 Dec 2002 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2002 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: Deborah Yetter 500 STATE PRISONERS MAY GO FREE Patton Orders Plan To Reduce Corrections Costs Gov. Paul Patton, citing the state's looming budget crisis, yesterday ordered corrections officials to draw up a plan for the early release of as many as 500 inmates to get prison costs under control. Patton told officials to have a plan ready by late tomorrow for releasing nonviolent offenders who are near the end of their sentences. The state pays counties to house many of them in their jails. The governor said in an interview that he expects county jails to bear the brunt of the cuts. The state pays jailers about $28 per day to house nonviolent inmates convicted of offenses such as drug crimes or theft. "Everybody we take out of a county jail is a direct reduction of state expense," Patton said. If the state carries out the plan, it would be the first mass early release of prisoners since 1935, when Gov. Ruby Laffoon commuted the sentences of 560 inmates to ease prison crowding. Savings could be as much as $5 million a year if the state removes 500 inmates from county jails. But cuts to county jail budgets could be deeper because the state also is considering cutting the rate it pays by $1.90 per day -- which could result in additional savings to the state but losses to the counties, said Oldham County Jailer Mike Simpson, a board member of the Kentucky Jailers Association. Simpson was among jailers and county judges who met with Patton last week. He said the governor briefed them on steps the state was considering to cut corrections costs. State law requires Class D offenders to serve their sentences of one to five years in county jails and allows the state to place some nonviolent Class C offenders in county jails. Class C offenders serve sentences of five to 10 years. Currently, about 4,200 state inmates are in county jails -- about 500 more than anticipated in the current budget. The state pays jails more than $40 million a year to house inmates. Simpson said jailers are concerned both because of the potential loss of revenue and because counties use state inmates for public works projects such as picking up trash and cleaning public buildings. "It's a double hit," he said. "It's a loss of revenue and a loss of labor." LaRue County Judge-Executive Tommy Turner said county officials are concerned because some counties in recent years were encouraged by the state to expand their jails to house state inmates. "It's going to create some severe financial difficulties for some communities," said Turner, vice president of the Kentucky County Judge-Executive Association. But state Sen. Gerald Neal, D-Louisville and a member of the state Criminal Justice Council, said it's past time the state looked for better ways to manage the prison population. Neal said he has long argued that many nonviolent inmates could be safely supervised outside jails or prison at lesser cost with more potential for rehabilitation. "We've got to have a more rational and a more practical approach to this," he said. Neal said some lawmakers may object to the idea of releasing inmates but they don't have a lot of choice. "In this budget arena, it's not going to make much difference how we feel about it," he said. "We're going to have to cut wherever we can or raise more revenue." Patton said yesterday that there's no guarantee that some inmates wouldn't commit new crimes if released. "There's no 100 percent guarantee," he said. "We release people from prison every day that eventually violate the law again." But with corrections costs rising and the budget shortfall growing, "I don't see any alternative," he said. Patton announced last week that the state is looking at a projected budget shortfall of $500 million by mid-2004 -- and that it will be seeking all possible ways to cut costs. Simpson said the jailers plan to meet next week to discuss the matter. "Our association may not like it and we may take positions against some aspects of this," he said. "But what we get, we're going to have to deal with." Staff writer Tom Loftus contributed to this story. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom