Pubdate: Sat, 14 Dec 2002 Source: Tulsa World (OK) Copyright: 2002 World Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.tulsaworld.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/463 Author: Barbara Hoberock, World Capitol Bureau DRUG SENTENCES FILL PRISONS Growth In Drug-Related Convictions Straining State's Resources OKLAHOMA CITY -- Drug convictions are continuing to drive up the state's bulging inmate population at a time when funding for additional bed space appears scarce. K.C. Moon, director of the Criminal Justice Resource Center, said the state has space for 21,500 offenders but houses 23,000. It depends on private prison contracts for some of that space. Oklahoma will add another 600 inmates in fiscal year 2004 at a cost of $9 million to $10 million, Moon said. Another 822 beds will be required in fiscal year 2005, costing $12.3 million, according to a report released this week by the Oklahoma Sentencing Commission. But those figures are contingent on sentencing and crime trends remaining the same, Moon said. Oklahoma Department of Corrections' figures show an actual fiscal year 2002 prison population of 22,981. The prison population is projected to increase to 23,638 in fiscal year 2003, rising to 25,113 by fiscal year 2005. "Drug offenses are the No. 1 offense that people go to prison for," Moon said. "It is about 40 percent of all receptions." Ten years ago, drug crimes represented 23 percent of all prison receptions. "Drug crimes are consistently going up every year," Moon said. Drug arrests have increased to 14.2 percent of all arrests in 2001 from 8 percent in 1989, according to the Sentencing Commission report. The increase is a 78 percent hike, according to the report. Drug arrests include sale, manufacturing and possession of drugs. Meanwhile, arrests for crimes such as murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary and larceny have decreased 26 percent, from 14.5 percent of total arrests to 10.7 percent during the same time, according to the report. The average prison sentence for an offender convicted of simple drug possession in 2001 was 5 years and 4 months, Moon said. An offender convicted for drug distribution was sentenced to prison in 2001 for nearly 10 years, about the same as an offender sentenced for assault and battery, a violent crime, he said. The Department of Corrections received a supplemental appropriation of $9.8 million for fiscal year 2003 during a recent special session. The money was needed to delay staff furloughs until April, Department of Corrections Director Ron Ward has said. "Delaying the furloughs will mean that employees may have to absorb the furlough days within a shorter time frame if significant fiscal improvement is not realized, supplemental appropriations are not provided or additional revenue shortfalls occur," Ward said in a Nov. 18 director's update. The department is projected to need another $18.4 million in funding for fiscal year 2003, said Department of Corrections spokesman Jerry Massie. "The Legislature hasn't funded corrections to the extent that the Department of Corrections wanted because the Legislature has other priorities, clearly -- education, roads, tax breaks," Moon said. In addition, administrative changes within the department have caused inmates to serve more time, which in turn costs more money, Moon said. "Early release alone will hardly make a dent in the problem," Moon said. "We can let 1,000 offenders out today and those beds will be refilled in four months." Reform of sentencing laws, a tax increase, a drop in the crime rate or an improved economy could help offset the funding woes faced by the department, Moon said. The Oklahoma Sentencing Commission next month is expected to issue recommendations to lawmakers about how to deal with the state's prison populations. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom