Pubdate: Mon, 20 Oct 2003 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2003 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: John L. Petterson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) DESPITE DRUG LAW, KANSAS UNEASY ABOUT PRISON SPACE TOPEKA - New projections showing fewer inmates entering the state's crowded prisons are giving Kansas officials extra time to figure out how to house prisoners. The prospect of bulging prisons and expensive solutions, however, still haunts corrections officials, Gov. Kathleen Sebelius and the Legislature. The latest reprieve is a new law that requires low-level drug offenders to be sentenced to treatment programs rather than to prison. The Kansas Sentencing Commission, which first developed the proposal, estimates that the treatment plan will save about 500 prison beds over the next decade. But that legislation might take awhile to implement because of confusion over just when judges can begin using its provisions. The new law "is a delaying tactic to give us more time to figure out what our long-term response is going to be," Corrections Secretary Roger Werholtz said. The law will give the state another year or two to come up with a plan for dealing with the continually expanding population, Werholtz said. If Kansas decides to build a new prison, estimates are that work must start two years before it will be needed. Sen. John Vratil, a Leawood Republican and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, echoed Werholtz's views. "Unless the Legislature does something to relieve the burden of prison space or something happens, the Legislature will have breathing room in the 2004 session, but by the 2005 session we'll have to take further action," Vratil said. "One of those potentials is to build new prison space." With the new law, he said, "We bought a little time, but precious little time." Kansas now has space for 9,244 male and female inmates. Last week, 9,098 prisoners were behind bars. Projections from the commission are that sometime in the 2007 budget year, which begins July 1, 2006, the prison population will reach 9,241. In 2013, the end of the projection period, the state is expected to have 10,131 inmates competing for space. The projections are based on a computer model used by the commission. Over the years, the Corrections Department has filled almost every available space with beds for prisoners. Now, other options are being considered. Besides a new state prison, the possibilities include: . Contracting with owners of private prisons in other states to house Kansas inmates. The Corrections Department already has an agreement for medium-security bed space in a private prison in Texas. . Starting an early release plan for inmates or developing an alternative, nonprison program for other types of offenders. . Leasing beds in Kansas county jails. . Encouraging construction of a private prison in Kansas. The one bit of relief that prison officials are counting on to free some beds already has potential problems. The drug treatment law, Senate Bill 123, went into effect July 1, but sentencing to community treatment programs isn't to take place until Nov. 1. In the legal community, questions have been raised about just when judges can sentence drug users to the treatment programs, which last 18 months. Wyandotte County District Judge Ernest Johnson will be discussing the law at a judicial conference Tuesday in Overland Park. Johnson, chairman of the Sentencing Commission, said there are two interpretations of the law and both have legitimate support. One holds that if a crime was committed after July 1, the date the law took effect, sentencing to the treatment program could occur after Nov. 1. The other position is that both the crime and the treatment sentencing would have to occur after Nov. 1. Vratil, whose Senate committee recommended the legislation, agreed that the wording of the law can leave lawyers and judges puzzled. "My belief is the Legislature intended for those crimes committed after July 1 to have the drug treatment program available after Nov. 1," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin