Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jan 2004 Source: Oshkosh Northwestern (WI) Copyright: 2004 Gannett Co., Inc. Contact: 224 State Street Oshkosh, WI 54901 Website: http://www.wisinfo.com/northwestern/index.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2640 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) TIME IS RIGHT FOR PRISON REFORM Almost two decades ago, the Wisconsin mantra toward criminals was to build more prisons to keep more criminals off the streets. To feed the desire, voters clamored for tougher sentences. Perception, though, met reality. We watched while sister state Minnesota had different results in reserving prison for the hard-core criminal and allowing more offenders into alternative sentencing programs. Wisconsin's series of budget crises over the past three years forced another hand to be dealt: cost controls on the prison system. Steps into this newfound territory come lightly and slowly. Reform of the state's prison systems must begin by changing attitudes. The size of the system is what makes this difficult. Some steps will march forward. Some will march backwards. One small step forward came this week in the form of a bill that state Sen. Carol Roessler, R-Oshkosh, is writing. She wants a law that expands the success of drug and alcohol treatment programs that have seen success in counties like Dane and La Crosse. People who are sentenced receive lighter penalties in exchange for successful completion of drug treatment programs. If criminals fail to finish the programs, they face stiffer consequences. What this does is place the state in a position to reduce future crime. Not every person will be a success story. The success is in the state changing its attitude. Wisconsin is placing more emphasis on treating the illness. Minnesota shows the success of this model. It has about one-third the prisoners Wisconsin has. Thousands more are enrolled in community probation programs. Minnesotans understand that offenders under counseling are less disruptive of family life and can become stable wage-earners. The tricky part of Roessler's bill will be the means by which it shifts money to counties. This will require some convincing of her fellow Republicans of cost-shifting in the budget. Roessler certainly has the social services background to make a convincing case. Significant, too, is that Roessler is a Republican. That's the traditional party of "lock 'em up and keep 'em out of sight." A Republican who is a reformer in prison issues is a rare instance. Perhaps there is a conversion process at work in her party's ranks. Whatever the other sideshows, the spotlight is on Roessler to produce. She wants to push the state forward. That's the kind of innovation Wisconsin needs and Roessler's timing couldn't be better. The Final Thought: State Sen. Carol Roessler, R-Oshkosh, showed the innovation Wisconsin needs to keep its laws and prison system from becoming too much of a burden on the taxpayer. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh