Pubdate: Mon, 01 Mar 2004 Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Copyright: 2004 Columbia Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.showmenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/91 Author: Henry J. Waters III Note: Prints the street address of LTE writers. JAIL CROWDING Working On The Problem The Boone County Jail remains overbooked. With the aid of a good task force, local officials study ways to relieve the pressure. The financial strain is serious. Already this year the county has paid nearly $80,000 to out-of-county jails for room and board. Almost any conceivable option would be less expensive. Most favorable would be reducing the numbers of people sentenced to jail. Instead, in recent years, law-'n'-order guidelines instead have resulted in more incarceration, putting pressure on jail space everywhere. Now moves are afoot, particularly in Boone County, to find alternatives. Local drug and mental health courts divert offenders from jail, substituting focused intervention and counseling. In years past, many or most of these people languished in jail, taking up expensive space and getting little or no rehabilitative help. Many jail inmates await trial. They have been arrested but not yet convicted of any crime. They are in jail only because they can't make bail to be released. The only reason for jailing these people is to ensure they will show up for trial or will not commit additional crimes in the meantime. In the past, Sheriff Ted Boehm has suggested the courts release more of these people without bond - on their own recognizance - or on reduced bond. He believed the consequences would be benign and the number of inmates sitting in jail could be reduced substantially. Courts, however, contend every detainee's case is carefully evaluated and bond amounts are not too high. Courts are bound to err on the side of caution. The last thing they want is for a released offender to commit a crime. In many cases, they set high bail amounts as much to keep suspects in jail as to provide a means for them to go free before trial. There are two sides to this. I think courts could be more lenient with bonding, not only to relieve jail populations but as a matter of individual rights. As a general principle, people should not be kept in jail without having been provided due process of law and proved guilty. However, I believe local court evaluations are diligent and most citizens probably favor caution. If this means we have several more people in jail regularly, so be it. Regularly, certain offenders who otherwise would be in jail are housed in nearby Reality House, a lower-cost, lower-security facility. Officials are considering adding to Reality House. Short of diverting inmates from jail altogether, this is the best solution to crowding and would be another step in developing our commendable system of local community corrections services as alternatives to prison. The jail crowding problem persists. Good evaluation is under way. Good options are on the table. We can expect a reasonable outcome. Henry J. Waters III, Publisher, Columbia Daily Tribune - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin