Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jul 2003 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2003 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Joe Johnson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) CROWDING CALLS FOR NEW SOLUTIONS Clarke County Jail: Report Gives Options for Better Use With not enough room at the inn, many inmates at the overcrowded Clarke County Jail are sleeping on the floor, inside hard plastic shells. Those shells are actually inverted mattress platforms, but jailers say the inmates choose to turn them upside down and sleep in them, rather than on top. Whether on top or inside, the platforms are being used to accommodate many of the 430 inmates in a jail designed to hold 338. The number of inmates housed there while awaiting their day in court is only expected to grow, but it is hoped that within four years a new jail will be open for business and able to handle all comers. With a new jail being the priority item of a Judicial System Needs Assessment, county officials next week will begin interviewing seven architectural firms to determine which will be chosen to prepare a design for the $50.8 million project. The new facility is one of several recommendations on how to cope with a growing jail population made in the needs assessment, prepared by a consulting firm for Athens-Clarke County commissioners. If all goes as hoped, funding for a 609-bed facility to replace the current 338-bed jail will be on the ballot for a November referendum for funding with special-purpose, local-option sales tax (SPLOST) funds, with construction to be completed by a 2007 target date. The present jail was constructed in 1981, at a time when it housed an average of 100-150 prisoners, according to Clarke County Chief Jailer Brett Hart. During a recent tour of the Clarke County Jail, overcrowded conditions were clearly evident. In housing units C-3 and C-4, many inmates were seen lounging in their blue plastic "Stack-A-Bunks." Hart said when inmates have to live on top of one another, problems increase for them as well as their caretakers. "Most disturbances arise from overcrowded conditions," he said. "The more people you put in there, the more people get on each other's nerves." Fights will begin in overcrowded conditions for the simplest of reasons, Hart said. "Someone might not like the sound of your voice or thinks your feet stink," he said. A new jail would eliminate the current linear design, in which many cells are adjacent to each other in a straight row. Such a design means jailers must walk down the hall, checking in on each cell. A new jail would incorporate "direct supervision," employing horseshoe-shaped cell blocks that a single jailer could monitor from a central location, Hart said. The new jail should be designed so that it could one day be expanded to become a 1,000-bed facility if needed, a consulting firm recommended to county commissioners. Building a bigger and better jail is not the only means of addressing the growing inmate population. In its Justice System Needs Assessment report to county commissioners last month, the Carter Goble Associates Inc. consulting firm recommended certain measures the courts can take to alleviate jail overcrowding. "The overall focus of this needs assessment is concerned with the unified government's jail and the development of criminal justice system improvements that can help to limit the growth of the jail and thereby help to control related costs," the consultant's report states. The recommendations include creation of a pre-trial release program that would reduce jail admissions and length of stay by diverting non-violent offenders to community-based supervision while their cases are pending in court. Another recommendation is to expand to Superior Court the "drug court" program, which is now used only in State Court. As part of the expansion plan, a "judicial outpost" would be built at the jail in which judges can preside over arraignments and other matters. The outpost would also be headquarters for the drug court. The court would have a dedicated docket of only drug cases, with the emphasis placed on obtaining treatment, rather than incarceration, for drug abusers accused of committing crimes. "Our jail is overcrowded mainly because of the drug problem," Superior Court Judge Steve C. Jones said. "I'd say 65 to 70 percent of crimes are directly or indirectly related to drugs. If we could treat the ailment, some of these people won't be coming back to jail." Jones said he handles up to 400 criminal cases annually, an estimated 30 percent increase of his caseload from when he first took the bench in 1995. A "mental health court" should also be established, the consultant suggested, as another means of trying to ensure prisoners receive the help they need so they hopefully will not commit future offenses. According to the consultant, the jail population has increased largely because the lengths of stays for inmates have increased while awaiting trial. "Although the jurisdiction's court system was found to be operating efficiently, opportunities exist for reducing pre-trial lengths of stay," the consultant wrote. To reduce the lengths of prisoner stays, the consultant recommended further "case flow intervention enhancements," such as that undertaken by Superior Court beginning last year, when a judge was added to speed up the time it takes to hear probation violation cases. "These actions resulted in a marked decline (10%) in jail population at the end of 2002," Carter Goble Associates wrote. The consulting firm also suggested the construction of a 72-bed diversion center at the jail site, located behind the Athens-Clarke County Police Department on Lexington Road. This would be a minimum-security facility for non-violent offenders, and also a reporting center for prisoners involved in work-release programs, the consultant said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake