Pubdate: Mon, 14 Apr 2003 Source: Daily Tar Heel, The (NC Edu) Copyright: 2003 DTH Publishing Corp Contact: http://www.dailytarheel.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2001/09/28/3bb4e48629448 Website: http://www.dailytarheel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1949 Author: Susie Dickson, Staff Writer PROGRAMS SEEK TO LOWER JAIL NUMBERS With the number of prison inmates in North Carolina on the rise, two programs in Orange County focus on keeping offenders out of jail. In North Carolina, the prison population rose by 5.2 percent last year. Structured sentencing, which went into effect in 1994, might have something to do with the increase, according to court officials. Orange County has two programs that focus on finding alternatives to incarceration -- Sentencing Services and the Community Resource Court. Sentencing Services is a statewide, locally administered program that recommends "more than probation but less than prison" said Joyce Kuhn, director of the Orange County program. The program provides information to judges at sentencings to assist them in identifying the most effective correctional resources available. Most of the offenders who receive alternative sentences have committed property or drug crimes. "With more serious crimes, (the judges') hands are tied," Kuhn said. Structured sentencing, which went into effect in October 1994, mandates minimum jail time for certain, more serious crimes. Kuhn attributed the rising jail population to structured sentencing, under which judges choose sentences for offenders from within a range of months, depending on the type of crime and the number of prior convictions. Assistant District Attorney James Woodall agreed. "There are always a lot of people in jail," he said. "(But) structured sentencing requires that (offenders) stay in prison for limited terms." Woodall also said he believes Sentencing Services, more than any similar program, helps to keep numbers down in Orange County. Established in 1983 by the N.C. legislature, Sentencing Services requires that offenders work to provide restitution to victims and society for their crimes. Offenders must serve a period of supervised probation, during which they must be employed, pay court costs and undergo therapy. In Orange County, 50 to 60 offenders a year go through the Sentencing Services program. Kuhn said the program is far less expensive than sending the offenders to jail. "It costs $26,000 a year to send someone to prison," she said. "One person going through the program costs $4,000." Cost is an important issue as overcrowding becomes more and more of a problem. The number of people in U.S. prisons and jails surpassed 2 million last year for the first time, according to government reports. The federal prison population grew by 5.7 percent, while the overall growth rate of state prisons was just under 1 percent nationally. Another program to keep incarceration numbers down is the Community Resource Court, which is designed to prevent incarceration for offenders with mental health issues. "(The program) is an effort to divert certain folks from an incarceration path," said public defender Timothy Cole. "The court system needs more than the traditional options (for certain offenders)." According to Cole, 50 percent of the program's participants successfully complete the program. Participation in the program is voluntary. Participants agree to accept whatever treatment recommendation is given instead of a fine or jail sentence. Although many participants would not face incarceration without the program, some offenders would face jail time, according to Marie Lamoureaux, program director. Although the state's prison population is rising, programs such as these are helping to hold down incarceration rates. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek