Pubdate: Tue, 11 Feb 2003 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2003 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Will Harrell, Vincent Schiraldi NONVIOLENT OFFENDERS ARE COSTLY FOR STATE'S PRISONS Texas is facing a budget shortfall of almost $10 billion, maybe more. This week, at a hearing evaluating the state's mushrooming prison budget in light of the current fiscal crisis, Texas lawmakers will have an opportunity to shave costs. With crippling budget deficits, falling or stabilizing crime rates and mounting public support for a more balanced approach to criminal justice, even some very conservative states are finding ways to cut corrections costs without jeopardizing public safety. The National Governors Association has announced that states are facing their worst fiscal crisis since World War II. According to an association survey, that could mean severe reductions in education, Medicaid and social services. State governments spend more than $30 billion annually on corrections. In fact, one of every 14 general-fund dollars is spent on prisons. Because prisons have been one of the fastest growing items in state budgets, officials can save substantially by cutting corrections instead of school budgets or health-care coverage for the working poor. Texas alone spends more than $2.5 billion annually on its prison system. Texas prisons grew faster than any other system in the country during the 1990s, adding nearly one out of every five prisoners to the nation's prison boom. About 750,000 people - one out of every 20 adults in Texas - are in prison, jail, probation or parole, an extraordinary level of government control over the population. While Texas spends less per capita than the rest of the nation on education, health care and roads, the state spends substantially more on housing inmates. In 2000, there were 89,400 people in Texas' prisons and state jails for nonviolent crimes. Texas' nonviolent prison population is the second largest incarcerated population in the country (after California) and is larger than the entire prison population of New York, the nation's third most populous state. Those are precisely the kinds of inmates the public believes should be held accountable in ways other than prison. According to a recent poll by Hart Research Associates, two-thirds of Americans support sentencing nonviolent offenders to probation instead of imprisonment, and a substantial majority of the public supports eliminating mandatory sentencing laws and returning sentencing discretion to judges. Moreover, a recent poll by the University of Houston Center for Public Policy found that the prisons were one of only two budgets that Texans favored cutting in the current fiscal crisis. Nearly 30 percent supported big cuts in the corrections budget, while another 40 percent preferred smaller cuts. As public opinion has shifted in favor of sensible alternatives to incarceration and state budgets have tightened, a number of states are rethinking their prison policies. In 2000, Louisiana, the state with the nation's highest incarceration rate, eliminated mandatory sentences for certain offenses and returned sentencing discretion to judges. Michigan recently followed suit, abolishing mandatory sentences for drug offenders. In California, more than 30,000 drug offenders have been diverted from prison into treatment since 2000. Instead of squandering money on the incarceration of nonviolent offenders, Texas lawmakers should pass sensible reforms, too. They could start by requiring the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles to increase the parole of lower-risk offenders. Lawmakers also should reduce penal code sentences for low-risk, nonviolent offenders and increase jury and judicial discretion to evaluate an individual's circumstances. Those proposals will reduce prison populations in a way that saves money, assures public safety and returns some balance to Texas' penal policies. If a conservative state like Louisiana can create a more balanced approach to public safety, so can Texas. Will Harrell is executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas. Vincent Schiraldi is president of the Justice Policy Institute, a research and public policy organization. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens