Pubdate: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 Source: Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) Copyright: 2004 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Jeffrey Collins PRISON DIRECTOR BACKS ALTERNATIVE SENTENCING New Bill Would Apply To Nonviolent Offenders COLUMBIA--Corrections Director Jon Ozmint says his agency needs alternatives to prison for some nonviolent offenders and greater flexibility on cutting inmate's sentences for good behavior. The alternatives are needed in part because lawmakers will not keep giving the prison system more money even though South Carolina will finish 2003 with 1,100 more inmates than the year before, Ozmint said. On behalf of Ozmint, House Speaker David Wilkins and three other lawmakers have prefiled a bill that would allow nonviolent offenders serving less than five years in prison to be eligible for programs such as house arrest, electronic monitoring and daily supervision. In an opinion article published Dec. 27 in The (Columbia) State, Ozmint said alternative sentences have been successful in new drug courts across the state. "This would be an entirely new idea in sentencing, giving offenders a 'real prison' experience first, while offering an opportunity to advance to an alternate form of incarceration," Ozmint wrote. He decided on the proposal after considering what lawmakers would accept in this session. "This is just the first step," Ozmint told The Associated Press on Friday. Other ideas Ozmint set aside for now include reducing sentences for nonviolent inmates who get their high school diplomas and releasing inmates at their last parole hearing before their sentence ends instead of waiting months for them to "max out." The current proposal would expand to more inmates good behavior credits that can shorten sentences while giving prison administrators more power to issue or take away the credits. Violent offenders, which make up about half of all inmates, would not be eligible for the alternative sentences, and the new time for good behavior policy would not effect anyone serving a life sentence. "The enactment of this legislation should result in a gradual, but slight reduction in the growth of our inmate population in a manner consistent with public safety considerations," Ozmint wrote in the newspaper opinion article. The Corrections Department will end this year with more than 24,000 inmates, an increase of 2,500 prisoners in three years, and requires a budget of close to $300 million, Ozmint wrote. The agency ran a $21 million deficit last fiscal year and has lost more than $70 million in funding since the state's budget woes began about four years ago. On one side, the budget constraints have made South Carolina prisons the second-most efficient in the nation, spending about $12,300 per inmate per year. On the other side, Ozmint and his predecessors have slashed so much the director has said there is almost nothing left to cut. The proposals reverse a get-tough trend in South Carolina of harsher sentences. "We've painted all our felons with the same brush for some years," said Senate Corrections and Penology Committee Chairman Mike Fair. "But there is some validity to treating violent and nonviolent offenders differently." Fair and Wilkins, both Greenville Republicans, expect the bill to get serious consideration when the Legislature reconvenes this month. Democrats who have been calling for a different approach to the state's "lock them up and throw away the key" mentality likely will support the measure, too, said committee member Sen. Kay Patterson. Republicans "haven't had a change of heart," said Patterson, D-Columbia. "They just know they don't have any more money to keep locking people up." Violent offenders need to stay in prison, he said, but he has never seen a reason to keep nonviolent criminals in prison for long stretches. Another provision of the law would allow prison officials to restore some good behavior credits to inmates who lose them because of misbehavior. Also, inmates who commit "a particularly meritorious act" that prevents or lessens an attack on an employee or other person can have up to 180 days shaved off their sentences, according to the bill. The bill has a few sticks to go along with the carrots. If a court determines an inmate is filing frivolous lawsuits, the credits can be taken away. Prisoner advocates appreciate the moves but also want changes made to a parole system that rarely releases offenders until they reach the end of their sentences, said Lillian Swanson, director of the South Carolina chapter of Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens