Pubdate: Sun, 29 Jun 2003 Source: Ledger-Enquirer (GA) Copyright: 2003 Ledger-Enquirer Contact: http://www.l-e-o.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/237 Author: Dusty Nix, for the editorial board Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) THERE MUST BE A BETTER WAY The 50,000 inmate "milestone" Georgia passed this year is just a number. Here is some context: Georgia is the 10th-largest state, but has the nation's sixth-largest prison system and the one that has grown faster over the last four years than any other. In just four years, from 1998 to 2002, the state Department of Corrections' budget swelled by 31 percent, from $738 million to $968 million. Perhaps worst of all, we have a higher percentage of people behind bars, on probation or on parole than any other state. This is not something anybody aspires to rank first in. The mandatory sentencing laws so politically in vogue in the flush 1990s, when the economic consequences were something both taxpayers and politicians could conveniently ignore, aren't necessarily a problem in the case of brutal criminals who need to be locked up for the long haul under any circumstances. But the result of some of these "three strikes"-type laws has been to swell prison rolls with nonviolent offenders, especially drug offenders. And the prison population is aging, just as the general population is aging. According to Department of Corrections figures, there were 570 convicts 50 and older in Georgia prisons in 1979; by June 1999 there were 3,050. At the current rate of growth, that number is expected to top 5,000 by next year, and 9,000 by 2010. With aging come familiar health issues -- worse for the average prison inmate, whose lifestyle choices were probably not healthy ones even before incarceration. Health care, as we know all too well, is a staggering expense; in the case of prisons, it's a staggering public expense. Something's got to give. Muscogee is currently the only county in Georgia to offer job training and GED opportunities to inmates; it might be a wise investment -- especially in the face of Georgia's 37 percent recidivism rate -- for the state to offer incentives to local governments to follow Muscogee's example. Gov. Sonny Perdue has suggested more emphasis on education and on reinstituting parolees and former inmates into society at the state level as well. At the front end, it now seems clear that taking discretion from courts and parole boards was not the solution, however strongly officials may have felt that abuse of that discretion was abetting crime. That taking up prison time and space with petty offenders does not serve the public interest is by now well beyond obvious. Creative and responsible ways of keeping people out of prison has to be better than coming up with more and more circumstances for putting them there. Even if we could afford a prison construction boom, surely this is not what we want Georgia's growth industry to be. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom