Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jul 2003 Source: Laurel Leader-Call (MS) Copyright: 2003 Laurel Leader-Call Contact: http://www.leadercall.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1662 Author: Associated Press BARBOUR: DRUG FIGHTING DOLLARS HAVE DROPPED UNDER MUSGROVE JACKSON (AP) -- Democratic Gov. Ronnie Musgrove's administration has slashed drug-fighting budgets and badly handled prison spending the past 3 1/2 years, Republican Haley Barbour said Thursday. Barbour, who hopes to face Musgrove in the Nov. 4 general election, said Mississippi should move some inmates out of state-run prisons and put them in private prisons or regional jails, where he said the state could get a better financial deal. "It is time to quit playing politics with public safety," Barbour said during a news conference in Jackson, where he was surrounded by about a dozen law officers. Prison spending has been a hotly disputed topic at the state Capitol the past several years, with some lawmakers pushing to put more prisoners in regional jails -- a move that's politically popular with sheriffs who run the regional lockups. Musgrove, who became governor in January 2000, has said it's more cost-efficient to house inmates in state-run prisons. He shut the privately managed Delta Correctional Facility near Greenwood last year, and Leflore County is renovating part of the prison for local use. Barbour said shutting the prison near Greenwood was a bad move. Musgrove campaign manager Lisa McMurray said: "I'm still not clear what Haley's proposal was, other than spending more of taxpayers' dollars on convicted felons. The Mississippi criminal justice system should not be a jobs program. The governor is opposed to the building of prisons for economic development and doesn't believe profits should be gained from crime." Barbour said most crimes are tied to drugs and the state Bureau of Narcotics budget has dropped since Musgrove became governor. Barbour said the bureau's budget is down 41 percent from fiscal 2000, which ended June 30, 2000, through fiscal 2003, which ended June 30, 2003. An Associated Press check of Legislative Budget Office records showed the Bureau of Narcotics budget had dropped 27.9 percent for that period. Barbour said with a significant decrease in spending on fighting drugs, "it doesn't take a genius to understand that drug crimes will only get worse." Barbour, a former Republican National Committee Chairman, faces lawyer Mitch Tyner in the Aug. 5 GOP primary. Musgrove faces four little known opponents in the Democratic primary. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake