Pubdate: Wed, 30 Apr 2003 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2003 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Author: Mike Smith, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) DESPITE VETO THREAT, ANTI-CRIME BILLS SENT TO O'BANNON INDIANAPOLIS - The General Assembly sent Gov. Frank O'Bannon several bills designed to get tougher on crime without giving him the money he says is needed to expand prison operations. O'Bannon had warned legislators late in their session that unless they increased funding for the Department of Correction, he would consider vetoing any such legislation. "If there is to be no additional funding for Department of Correction expenses in the next biennium, it would be irresponsible for me to sign legislation that significantly increases the number of persons committed to the department," O'Bannon said in an April 23 memo to the Senate. The governor had not rejected any bill as of late yesterday afternoon, but his press secretary, Mary Dieter, said he had not backed away from the veto threat. Because of procedural hoops that had to be negotiated, dozens of bills - including some anti-crime legislation - had yet to reach his desk. Among other things, the legislature passed bills designed to crack down on methamphetamine; expand the definition of identity theft; make a second conviction for public indecency or possession of drug paraphernalia felonies; and make it a felony for registered sex offenders to change addresses without informing a law-enforcement agency. Some of the bills were passed before O'Bannon made the veto threat, but he had not acted on most of them as of yesterday. O'Bannon had said for weeks that he needed an extra $26 million to open and staff 1,576 new beds at two state prisons to meet a projected increase in adult male felons. But budget bills passed by the Democrat-led House and Republican-controlled Senate denied him the increased funding, as did the compromise two-year spending plan the legislature passed early Sunday morning before adjourning the regular session. O'Bannon plans to sign the budget bill into law, even though it essentially freezes appropriations for Medicaid and prisons at current levels. Minutes after the General Assembly adjourned, he touted economic-development initiatives and funding increases for education over worries about the state's bottom line. A provision in the budget bill appears to give judges additional discretion to send some nonviolent offenders to community correction programs dealing with mental illness and substance abuse instead of putting them behind bars. It also directs an advisory board to develop such programs. But the legislature rejected O'Bannon's request for authority to release some inmates convicted of Class D and C felonies early to keep the prison population down. Some lawmakers bristled at O'Bannon's veto threat. "It's going to be bad for the safety of citizens," Sen. David Long, R-Fort Wayne, told his colleagues in the Senate last week. "It sets a terrible precedent." But Larry Landis, executive director of the Indiana Public Defender Council, said he welcomed O'Bannon's veto threat. "I applaud the governor for reminding the legislature that they need to choose: If you are going to put more people in prisons, you have to give" corrections money to increase facilities and staffing, Landis said. "You can't have it both ways." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom