Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jul 2004 Source: Racine Journal Times, The (WI) Copyright: 2004, The Racine Journal Times Contact: http://www.journaltimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1659 Author: Rob Golub Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) TREATMENT MIGHT GET INMATES OFF THE COUNTY JAIL FLOOR RACINE - Deadbeat parents, the mentally ill and drug users appear to account for a relatively small number of Racine County Jail inmates, but if helping them reduced the jail population by just 5 to 10 percent, inmates might no longer need to sleep on the floor, according to a Journal Times analysis of jail statistics. Currently, approximately 20 to 50 inmates sleep on floor mattresses each day, said Lt. James Formolo of the Racine County Sheriff's Department. The total jail population is currently about 650 inmates. This means a 10 percent reduction in total inmates could largely solve the problem of inmates sleeping on the floor. Sleeping on the floor is a real problem. It may create a safety hazard and it could open Racine County up to lawsuits. "On the floor" means an inmate is literally sleeping on a thin mattress on the floor. This generally means a cell built for one bed is instead holding two beds plus a mattress on the floor for a total of three inmates. Racine County Executive William McReynolds and Racine County Sheriff Robert Carlson say the main way to solve the problem is to expand the Racine County Jail. More space would get inmates off the floor and it would allow for the expected future growth in the inmate But opponents to jail expansion say the way to solve the problem is through more treatment programs and other alternatives to incarceration. For example, Racine County Jail records show that on Thursday, July 15, there were 56 people charged, sentenced or otherwise held as deadbeat parents in the jail. If slightly more than half of these 56 people had jobs thanks to programs aimed at employing single parents who can't pay child support, there never would have been 29 people sleeping on the floor that day. Unfortunately, this is a simple analysis, easily called into doubt by questioning the hidden details. Could half of those 56 people really have been steered toward work by rehabilitative programming? Or are they unwilling to work, unable to work, or too incorrigible to maintain a job? Getting 29 people off the floor may alleviate the space problem today, but what will the jail's space problems look like in a few years? Don't we need to build a jail now to plan for the future? And doesn't the county already have at least some programming in place to assist deadbeat parents? How can we know new programming will do more than current programming? These kinds of questions frustrate Debra Hall, an anti-expansion activist who taught classes in the jail for two years. She feels strongly that jail crowding can be alleviated if some minor offenders are helped instead of locked up, but she doesn't have the numbers to prove it. That's why Hall and other members of the SAFER Racine Partnership, an anti-expansion group, are calling for a government-sponsored jail use analysis. The jail use analysis would be a study of the jail, similar to today's Journal Times analysis but in far greater detail. It could take three to six months. It could cost thousands of dollars. But it's not on the agenda. Literally. The County Board agenda for 6:30 tonight instead includes a vote on architect's fees for the design of the jail expansion. It's a step toward the proposed $17 million taxpayer-funded expansion of the jail. Protesters will call for a jail use analysis instead at a 5:30 p.m. rally outside the board meeting location, the Ives Grove Office Complex, 14200 Washington Avenue. "Our perspective is we can't talk about what we can afford until we talk about what we need," Hall said. "The jail use analysis would look at the whole comprehensive system." Carlson, the county sheriff who supports jail expansion, said he is not opposed to further study of jail usage, but he doesn't think waiting to study jail expansion would be a good idea. "We have been in this process for at least the last four to five years," he said. "I believe we are at a point where we need to get at least this very preliminary information." The County Board vote Tuesday will allow for an architectural study that merely gathers information, he said. "We need to keep focused on the idea that tomorrow night's vote doesn't approve building anything," Carlson said. He added that the jail crowding problem is so severe that no one solution is likely to be enough. He believes that both jail expansion and new programming ideas are necessary. But opponents to jail expansion worry that more beds will make it too easy to put aside alternatives to incarceration. Why pursue new ideas when you've got the space for inmates? Some opponents to jail expansion were happy to read in The Journal Times Sunday that at least one judge is reducing sentences in response to jail crowding. To them, the system is responding. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin