Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jan 2005 Source: Birmingham News, The (AL) Copyright: 2005 The Birmingham News Contact: http://al.com/birminghamnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 Author: Carla Crowder, News Staff Writer PRISON SENTENCE REFORMS URGED Commissoner Seeks Doubled Budget, Alternative Programs MONTGOMERY - Corrections Commissioner Donal Campbell's request for $580 million - more than double this year's budget for prisons - spawned calls for sentencing reform and more community corrections projects during a budget hearing Thursday. The biggest chunk of new money would be $151 million to build two 2,000-bed prisons, one each for men and women. A further $15 million would pay for more expensive medical care, legal fees and court monitors required in a series of lawsuits settled this year. "Something has to be done in this state to relieve the problems we face in corrections," said Rep. John Knight, D-Montgomery, who chairs the House of Representatives' committee that handles the General Fund and state operating budget. He said Campbell's $580 million request was "not in the picture." Alabama has the fifth-highest incarceration rate in the country, housing more than 26,000 prisoners in space for 12,000. "I don't believe that Alabama is any safer than our surrounding states, yet we have a higher incarceration rate," said Roy Johnson, Alabama's two-year college chancellor, who proposed an increase in short-term, intensive programs to teach prisoners skills such as welding. "There's a humane aspect to this, whether we warehouse these people, throw them into the scrap heap of society, or we rehabilitate them." For another solution, Joe Mahoney, who runs community corrections programs in Mobile, showed that community programs cost $9 per inmate per day, compared with prison costs of $26 per day. Community rehabilitation programs saved the state $4.9 million last year, he said. Campbell's budget asks for $2.1 million more for community corrections, but he said more community corrections program will not solve his problem. "The biggest part of it, we're going to have to change some of the sentencing laws in this state," Campbell said. Legislators discussed possibilities such as geriatric parole, more drug treatment, and parole for some of the 6,000 prisoners ordered to serve part of their sentences in prison and part on probation. Those inmates are banned from parole now. Some of these proposals have been brought up in the Legislature before but have not passed. Instead, lawmakers have passed bills calling for longer sentences, but without allocating money to pay for them. Knight vowed to put a stop to that. He said every bill this session that calls for more prison time must come with a funding stream. "It's easy to get up and demagogue on `tough on crime,' but you're not tough on crime if you don't come up with the funding," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFLorida)