Pubdate: Fri, 7 May 2004 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2004 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Mark Gladstone, Mercury News Sacramento Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm (Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) TRYING TO MAKE SENSE OF INMATE INCREASES Parole Violators, New Convicts Among Reasons SACRAMENTO - While Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger hopes to trim $400 million from the state's prison budget, the Department of Corrections on Thursday said the prison population has reached an all-time high. As of April 30, the nation's largest correctional system swelled to 162,858 inmates, 355 above the previous record set in September 2000. "It's very difficult for them to cut $400 million from their budget if we keep piling prisoners in there," said state Sen. Sheila Kuehl, D-Los Angeles, after the latest figures were disclosed at a Senate budget subcommittee hearing. Besides casting a cloud over Schwarzenegger's budget plans, the mushrooming prison population raises questions about whether the system can meet the challenge of successfully returning inmates to society. Next Thursday, Schwarzenegger is scheduled to disclose his revised state budget, including details of a $400 million prison cut he proposed in January. But the surging inmate population already has caused his administration fits, especially since they expected the numbers to fall. The influx of convicts hit home last month when state officials were forced to declare a state of emergency to move inmates around the state's 32 prisons. It prompted triple bunking in cells designed for two bunks and placement of more beds in corridors and gymnasiums, raising health and safety issues. Corrections officials know they are receiving more inmates, especially from larger counties, but they are at a loss to fully explain what's driving the growth. In the last six months of 2003, new admissions and parole violators arrested on new crimes grew 12.5 percent compared with 2002. For the state's 10 most populous counties, the figures were all over the map. For instance, Santa Clara County experienced an 11 percent jump in new state prison admissions and parole violators arrested on new offenses. Alameda County, however, saw an 11 percent drop. The biggest jump was 50 percent in Orange County. Wendy Still, the department's chief financial officer, said the profile of new inmates shows they were imprisoned predominantly for crimes related to drugs, violence and theft. Violent crime in the state's largest jurisdictions last year actually dipped 3.1 percent, while property crimes went up 2.8 percent, according to recent figures from Attorney General Bill Lockyer. Still noted that incarceration rates typically swing up during economic downturns. She also said the department is seeking to determine whether some of the prison population increase is due to people flunking out of Proposition 36 drug-diversion programs and being sent to prison. Proposition 36, a 2000 ballot initiative, removed a judge's option to jail first- and second-time drug offenders who are deemed non-violent and aren't drug dealers. They are automatically ordered into treatment and remain free. Still said the higher-than-anticipated prison population "doesn't put a monkey wrench in our plans" to cut $400 million. In recent years, the department has spent hundreds of millions over its budget, which has hovered around $5.3 billion. Another reason the population is higher than expected, Still said, is that various parole reforms initiated last year have not fully kicked in. Steve Fama, an attorney with the Prison Law Office, which has sued the state over the operation of Pelican Bay State Prison, said overcrowding is causing security and cleanliness concerns. And, he said, it will be harder to provide medical and mental health treatment. Asked to speculate about what's behind the surge of inmates, Fama said: "We have a sentencing scheme that in many ways is skewed toward incarceration, and we have a parole-supervision process that in recent years has been skewed toward returning people to custody." A spokesman for the prison guards union could not be reached for comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake