Pubdate: Tue, 06 Jan 2004 Source: Spartanburg Herald Journal (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Spartanburg Herald-Journal Contact: http://www.goupstate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/977 SENTENCING OPTIONS CAN BE USED TO RELIEVE PRISON OVERCROWDING The General Assembly should support Corrections Department Director Jon Ozmint in his drive to use alternative sentences to reduce the state's prison population. That support will be necessary to keep South Carolina's prisons running safely and efficiently. State lawmakers have worked to get tougher on crime. They have passed longer prison sentences and other rules that keep offenders in prison longer. As a result, the prison population is growing. It grew by 1,100 inmates last year, by 2,500 in the past three years. But the number of guards has not kept pace with the growth in the inmate population. And the state continues to cut the Corrections Department budget. To avoid dangerous problems in state prisons, the state must either spend significantly more on the prison system or reduce the number of inmates. Ozmint's plan has been written into a bill pre-filed in the legislature by House Speaker David Wilkins. It would reduce the number of inmates by letting some nonviolent offenders serve most of their time under house arrest and electronic monitoring. They would still serve time in prison for a portion of their sentences, up to six months. Then they would serve the rest in an alternative form. These alternatives would not be used for those who pose a danger to the rest of the public. They would be used for nonviolent offenders -- those who sign fraudulent checks and the many drug users who fill the prisons. Under an alternative like electronic monitoring, sentenced to stay in their homes except for work, these offenders could continue to support their families. They could pay for their own punishment, taking that burden off the taxpayer. They could continue to pay taxes. Ozmint also wants lawmakers to give his department more flexibility in giving and taking away credits for good behavior that reduce an inmate's sentence. These proposals make sense. They would not only reduce the burden on the state's prisons, they would allow officials more leeway to create a punishment that fits an individual's crime and situation. Prisons should be reserved for violent criminals who must be incarcerated to protect the rest of society. Other offenders should be punished in a manner that makes it easier to hold their families together and for them to eventually rejoin the law-abiding public. For the social and economic health of the state and the safety of our prisons, lawmakers should give Ozmint the flexibility for which he asks. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake