Pubdate: Wed, 29 Jun 2005 Source: Montgomery Advertiser (AL) Copyright: 2005 The Advertiser Co. Contact: http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/customerservice/letter.htm Website: http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1088 Note: Letters from the newspaper's circulation area receive publishing priority Author: John Davis PRISON PANEL WEIGHS CRISIS Gov. Bob Riley's task force on prison overcrowding heard tales of woe Tuesday as corrections officials talked about leaky roofs, 80-hour workweeks and vehicles with more than 200,000 miles on them. "Overcrowding and understaffing drives most of the big issues," said Greg Lovelace, deputy commissioner of operations for the state Department of Corrections. Lovelace and others from the department gave details regarding how a prison system at double its designed capacity faces trouble at almost every corner, from its kitchens to its sewer facilities. The state prison system currently houses about 27,732 inmates. The governor formed an 11-person Prison Task Force to find ways to relieve overcrowding and stop inmate population growth. Tuesday marked the group's second meeting. "Our operating capacity has increased by stacking beds," said Lovelace, noting that in some cases cells designed to hold one inmate are holding three and that closets have been turned into living quarters. Lovelace told the task force that the Department of Corrections has no replacement schedule for equipment, and corrections officers are carrying weapons that are 20 years old while transporting prisoners in trucks that have more than 200,000 miles on them. Kitchens in the overworked system, Lovelace said, often operate 20 hours a day, seven days a week, a pace that is wearing out equipment faster than it can be replaced. Task force member Bob Harper, a retired Lee County circuit judge, asked whether putting more convicts in community corrections programs could solve the department's problems. The short answer from DOC: No. "It has a place in the solution, but it is not the entire solution," Lovelace said. In his budget presentation to legislators earlier this year, DOC Commissioner Donal Campbell asked for $578 million, a figure that included $151 million for two new prisons that would house a total of 4,000 inmates. The Legislature did not take such a large budget request seriously, though many agree that the problems facing the department are dire. When the Legislature reconvenes for a special session on the General Fund, it is expected to give DOC a supplemental appropriation of $20.5 million to cover payroll, inmate medical care and lawsuit expenses. "In some way, we've got to either slow down or change the numbers or build new facilities," said Randy Hillman, director of the Alabama District Attorneys Association and a member of the task force. Seven of the 11 members showed up Tuesday. The others were Rep. Victor Gaston, R-Mobile; Mike Stephens, a Birmingham businessman; Lynda Flynt, executive director of the Sentencing Commission; Jim Hill Jr., a St. Clair County district judge; and Miriam Shehane, a victims' advocate. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth