Pubdate: Tue, 21 May 2002 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (MS) Copyright: 2002 The Clarion-Ledger Contact: http://www.clarionledger.com/about/letters.html Website: http://www.clarionledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/805 Author: Eric Stringfellow, Clarion-Ledger Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) PRISON REPORT SHOWS STATE'S CRISIS OF VISION In a sense, it's old, stale news. The nonprofit Grassroots Leadership group on Monday told us something we already knew - that in Mississippi, like many other Southern states, we spend millions of tax dollars to lock people in cages, money we could spend to educate them to become productive citizens. In a report titled "Education versus Incarceration: A Mississippi Case Study," the Charlotte, N.C.-based organization also observed that: a.. Mississippi's appropriations for corrections rose 115 percent from 1989 to 1998, while its higher education appropriations increased less that 1 percent over the same period. b.. The state built 16 new correctional facilities in the 1990s, including six private prisons. c.. There are nearly twice as many African-American men in state prisons as there are enrolled in the state's institutions of higher learning. Again, we already knew most of this, but the dichotomies are only growing. If there was ever a time to call "time out" and develop a fresh approach - especially on diversity and our business plan for private prisons - that time is now. State's cupboard bare It's no secret that the state has broken all the piggy banks in its quest to address its current budget woes. The state Division of Medicaid is projecting a budget deficit of $120 million for the fiscal year that begins July 1. The state Department of Human Services has said it will cut employees and reduce services if it doesn't receive an additional $19.8 million for the next budget year. The state College Board last week hiked tuition 8 percent for the 2002-2003 school year, as its budget has been slashed more than $98 million since 2000. And the Legislature cut $60 million from the public schools' budget. But lawmakers included in the Department of Corrections' budget language that guaranteed that private prisons be paid in full while other agencies, including state-run prisons, be underfunded. This type of public policy is criminal. Those who own private prisons - and apparently those charged with paying their bills - have a vested interest in the fate of citizens who become involved in criminal activity. That's one explanation why, according to the study, 67 percent of Mississippi prisoners are incarcerated for nonviolent offenses - which suggests that viable, less expensive alternatives to incarceration are available. Demographics tell tale But one of the most disturbing elements of the study's findings deals with prison demographics. More than 72 percent of those in Mississippi prisons are African-Americans, while only 33 percent of those enrolled in college are African-American. That fact suggests that mentoring programs like Big Brothers and Big Sisters and similar initiatives designed to keep those at risk headed in the right direction must get even busier. Those statistics also suggest something else. Nationwide research has long illustrated that while people of color are more likely to be imprisoned for a drug offense, they are not the majority among perpetrators of drug crimes. "African Americans constitute only 13 percent of all monthly illegal drug users, but they account for 35 percent of all arrests for the possession of the drugs, 55 percent of all drug convictions and 74 percent of all those receiving drug-related prison sentences," according to the report, which cited the work of author Joel Dyer. Again, most of this is old news. But to continue a public policy that favors an unbalanced system that sends more of us to cages than to college is simply insane. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom