Pubdate: Mon, 07 Jul 2003 Source: Birmingham News, The (AL) ard.xsl?/base/opinion/105758910152900.xml Copyright: 2003 The Birmingham News Contact: http://al.com/birminghamnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 NOWHERE TO GO State must provide treatment, shelter to former inmates The state's rush to ease prison crowding by speeding up the parole of inmates has unveiled a glaring hole in the state's plan: Many of those being released have nowhere to go. Halfway houses that put a roof over the heads of former inmates and assist them with counseling and job training are full with waiting lists. So, too, are drug-treatment programs that many of the newly released desperately need. And there is little state money to give such programs and other services a badly needed boost. The plight of newly released state prisoners was illustrated well in a Thursday story by The News' Carla Crowder. Crowder told readers about 30-year-old Charla Smith, who was paroled in May after 8 years at Tutwiler Prison for Women. Smith says she's been on drugs since age 13 and never held a job or balanced a checkbook. "I've been here so long, I'm afraid I won't know how to interact in society," she said before her release. Yet four days later, she walked out of prison with a $10 check from the state, a bus ticket to Birmingham and a 10-day supply of the pills she takes for bipolar disorder. Smith is one of the lucky ones. She's found a temporary home at a halfway house in Forestdale through a new state-funded program and is receiving counseling and classes. But the scarcity of beds and the special parole board dockets to speed up paroles mean some released felons can be left out in the cold. While the parole board received $1 million from the state to hire more parole officers, there was no money for halfway houses. That puts a heavy burden on nonprofit organizations for meeting much of the housing, drug-treatment, training and other needs of the flood of former inmates. The state, however, can't afford to neglect these after-release needs while focusing on incarceration. As one state mental health official said about the necessity of drug treatment, "Otherwise, we're just spending money for nothing." Whatever it costs to improve the chance of former prisoners making it on the outside is a bargain compared to the societal costs of them returning to the life of crime that landed them in prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh