Pubdate: Wed, 02 Jul 2003 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2003 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Contact: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Adam Gelb Note: Adam Gelb is former executive director of the Governor's Commission on Certainty in Sentencing. Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) SENTENCING PLAN WOULD FREE UP LOGIC Georgia's prisons are packed. Crime is down. Whether the gigantic increase in incarceration deserves a lot or only a little of the credit for the drop in crime, one thing is certain: Getting tougher on criminals has gotten too tough on taxpayers. Over the past five years, Georgia's prison growth has been at or near the top in the nation. In the past couple of months, the inmate population has surged past 50,000 for the first time and is now approaching 51,000, with nearly 3,000 inmates backed up in local jails because there's not room for them in state facilities. The costs had been rising in sync, doubling since 1993 to $1 billion, but the budget-strapped 2003 General Assembly cut next year's Office of Corrections' budget by $41 million. If the situation continues much longer, Georgia will be forced to repeat unhappy history - asking the State Board of Pardons and Paroles to find a few thousand inmates to cut loose early. There is an alternative. If it is launched quickly, a new sentencing system designed by a recent Governor's Commission could help avert an early-release program and slow the exploding growth of inmates, as well as reduce disturbing disparities in sentences by race and region. When the commission's report was issued in December, few saw the need for the dramatic changes it recommended. Now, there is little choice. The prisons aren't being swamped by a jump in a crime - the number of offenders sent to prison has barely changed in more than a decade. Instead, the tidal wave of inmates has been whipped up by tougher laws and policies that have collided to create the criminal justice system's version of a perfect storm: lawmakers enacting mandatory minimum sentencing laws, judges handing out stiffer sentences, and the parole board keeping everybody longer behind bars. A Two-Pronged Strategy Former Gov. Roy Barnes saw the clouds gathering and in 1999 appointed a group of judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, law enforcement officials, victims' representatives and others to figure out how to stop the pattern before the next early release became inevitable. Their answer: establish a uniform set of sentencing guidelines. The Governor's Commission on Certainty in Sentencing - a follow-up commission led by one of the state's most respected judges and one of its most respected district attorneys - designed a guidelines system for Georgia. The commission's plan does two basic things. First, it establishes specific sentencing recommendations that would allow the state to predict how many prisons it needs and, more importantly, give it the ability to decide which types of offenders should go to prison and how long they should stay. The commission was tough on violent and career criminals, sex offenders and drug dealers: They would get locked up, in many cases, for longer than they do today. Judges could depart from the guidelines if the individual circumstances of a case demanded, but in general, the state for the first time would choose as a matter of policy which people should live in a $20,000-a-year taxpayer-funded cell. In addition, the commission proposed shrinking the power of the five-member parole board to release inmates, so the prison terms announced in open court by local judges would be served in full or close to it. Second, the plan outlines a strong system of supervision for the nonviolent, drug-addicted offenders who would not go to state prison under the guidelines. Instead of having to choose between punishment and rehabilitation, judges could assign this group to an "options system" that would deliver a blend of both at the same time. Offenders would be offered drug treatment, but those with dirty drug tests would find themselves quickly climbing a ladder of sanctions that leads to the detention center. Those who show up for treatment and stay clean would work their way down the ladder, earning fewer restrictions on their liberty. Such a system, with offenders receiving swift and certain doses of penalty and reward for their behavior, might be called "managed punishment." A Viable Alternative Using a similar carrot and stick approach, special "drug courts" in Georgia and elsewhere have cut recidivism by 50 percent working with a few hundred offenders at a time. The options system proposed by the sentencing commission would apply the strategy to an estimated 6,000 offenders per year, a scale large enough to make a dent in drug-related crime that could be felt in every community across Georgia. There are costs to creating the system, to be sure, but the price is far less than new prisons or new crimes by offenders simply released to probation and parole as we know them. After nearly 20 years of frustration with the current war on drugs, judges, prosecutors and the public all seem to agree that "something else" must be done with addicted offenders. But a clearly defined and credible alternative has been missing. With strong support from Gov. Sonny Perdue and the Legislature, sentencing guidelines and managed punishment can become that alternative, a port in the storm that rescues us from the paralyzing platitudes of liberals and conservatives alike. With the state budget busting and the prisons bursting, the sentencing commission offers a workable plan that strikes the right balance between public safety and public spending. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake