Pubdate: Wed, 21 Dec 2005
Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
Page: A1
Copyright: 2005 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.wsj.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487
Author: Gary Fields
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)

COURSE CORRECTIONS

To Cut Prison Bill, States Tweak Laws, Try Early Releases Cost Nears $35 
Billion a Year, Driving Programs to Keep Prisoners From Returning Some Over 
65 Get Paroled

When Theresa Lantz took over as Connecticut's corrections commissioner in 
early 2003, the state's prison and jail population had hit a high of 19,320 
inmates. Prisons were so crowded that 500 state inmates were being housed 
in Virginia -- at an annual cost of $12 million -- and an additional 2,000 
were about to be shipped.

Less than three years later, the state's prison and jail population is down 
6.2%, and state inmates are all housed in Connecticut. Ms. Lantz credits a 
state law that promoted the release of less-dangerous offenders -- for 
example, by letting those accused of minor crimes stay home while awaiting 
trial.

Connecticut is one of many states taking steps to reduce its prison 
population. That has little to do with any change in tough-on-crime 
thinking and a lot to do with dollars and cents. Housing criminals is 
expensive: The average cost was $22,650 a year per person in 2001, the last 
year for which figures are available.

Strict adherence to tough sentencing laws "became incredibly expensive 
without necessarily enhancing public safety," says Ms. Lantz.

The two-decade trend of severe penalties has led to a surge in corrections 
spending. In fiscal year 2006, states are expected to spend $34.6 billion, 
up 24% from five years earlier, according to the National Conference of 
State Legislatures. Only Medicaid has grown faster in the past decade among 
state budget items. "Something has got to give," says Scott Pattison, 
executive director of the National Association of State Budget Officers.

Raising taxes to pay for more prisons or repealing mandatory minimum 
sentences would ease crowding, but neither step is politically palatable in 
most states. As a result, corrections officials and some politicians are 
looking at other ways -- none of them magic bullets -- to ease the 
financial pain:

Re-Entry Programs

Recidivism is one of the largest contributors to overcrowding. The 
storyline is familiar: A convict gets released but has no job, no skills, 
no money and no place to live so he resorts to crime and pretty soon is 
locked up again. Of the estimated 650,000 inmates released annually, 
two-thirds are re-arrested within three years and more than half end up 
behind bars again, according to the Department of Justice.

Sen. Sam Brownback, a Kansas Republican, has introduced a bill this session 
that would provide $200 million to help inmates readjust to society. The 
bill has bipartisan support but is pending in the Senate Judiciary 
Committee. It would provide grants to state and local governments to fund 
programs including mentorship, housing, education and job training and 
engagement with community colleges. It also would include grants for 
programs to help families of inmates.

Mr. Brownback's state has one of the most promising re-entry programs. It 
started as a pilot project in Shawnee County three years ago and now is 
expanding statewide. The program identifies inmates who are due to be 
released within 18 months and assesses their education, job skills, 
addictions and living arrangements. It also tries to pinpoint industries 
where workers are needed.

Before release, each inmate is given an individualized re-entry program and 
a counselor who helps them obtain housing, find a job and reconnect with 
their families. In one-to-one and group sessions at the prison, counselors 
also teach emotional and interpersonal skills -- for example, how to 
negotiate for what you need without resorting to underhanded tactics.

One of the biggest hurdles facing ex-convicts is getting identification. As 
a result, parole officers in Kansas are certified by the motor-vehicle 
department to administer the written driver's license exam inside the 
prison. A police officer does a background check to determine if the 
inmates have outstanding fines and citations that might prevent them from 
getting driver's licenses.

"That sounds real basic but when you dig into the issue you find a lot of 
the men and women have suspended licenses or outstanding tickets" that 
prevent them from getting licenses, said Margie Phelps, state director of 
re-entry programs.

Also as part of the program, housing and credit specialists determine if 
there are debts and bills in arrears that would stop the prisoners from 
getting apartments.

The initial results from the program are encouraging. Officials have 
tracked a group of 29 of the state's highest-risk ex-convicts who took part 
in the program when it first began in Shawnee County three years ago. The 
recidivism rate is 13.7%, says Ms. Phelps, far better than the 80% that's 
typical for such a group.

Releasing Older Prisoners

Lengthier sentences have led to a surge in the number of older inmates, who 
tend to pile up larger health-care bills. In 2004, there were 67,200 
prisoners aged 55 or older nationwide, up from 19,160 in 1990. That's still 
a small fraction of the 1.4 million state and federal inmates, but it's a 
number that is expected to rise sharply. State inmate health-care costs 
rose to $3.7 billion in 2003, up 42% in one year.

Many criminologists and corrections officials believe that prisoners get 
significantly less dangerous after the age of 40 or so, although the 
reasons aren't well-understood. Inmates themselves sometimes talk about 
"criminal menopause."

Virginia revised its laws in 2001 to allow prisoners who are at least 65 
years old and have served at least five years in prison to apply for parole 
on the basis of their age. Prisoners who are 60 or older and have served 10 
years also may apply to the board. Inmates serving time for capital murder 
aren't eligible.

Only 400 of the system's 30,729 inmates were eligible to apply as of Dec. 
15, so the process hasn't led to much change in the prison population so 
far. "Down the line you will get people who may have been 25 or 30 when 
they committed their crimes and then when you're looking at them at 60 or 
65, it will be a different situation than we're seeing now," says Helen 
Fahey, the chairwoman of the Virginia parole board.

Some states also have mechanisms for releasing critically ill prisoners. 
Washington state will release inmates with serious medical conditions if 
there is a cost savings for the prison and it's safe to let them out. Under 
a Mississippi law passed in 2004, an ill prisoner can be released if a 
medical official certifies that the illness is permanent with no chance of 
recovery and the state would incur unreasonable medical costs by keeping 
the inmate locked up.

Tweaking the Laws

Connecticut's experience shows that major statutes don't need to be tossed 
out to reduce prison overcrowding.

Like many states, Connecticut has truth-in-sentencing laws that require 
inmates to serve at least 85% of their sentence. A study commissioned by 
state legislators found in 2003 that hundreds of inmates were serving more 
than 85% of their sentences even when there was no compelling reason to 
hold them longer. It projected that 850 prison beds could be freed up with 
a rule change to get inmates out more quickly. This discovery and others 
prompted tweaks that reduced crowding and allowed out-of-state inmates to 
be brought home.

A major change was to reduce the number of people incarcerated for 
technical violations of probation and parole. Those violations include 
flunking a drug test or failing to appear before the parole officer. A law 
passed in 2004 mandated that the department develop a system to cut those 
violations by 20%. The state now allows offenders to remain free for 
violations such as changing residence without permission.

The legislature also allowed sentencing judges to divert some offenders 
into treatment for alcohol and drug addictions instead of sending them away 
for mandatory minimum sentences. And it gave the state corrections 
department -- which also runs local jails in Connecticut -- authority to 
release those charged with less serious crimes while they are awaiting trial.

"You want to reserve prison beds and jail beds for those individuals who 
constitute a threat to the public. You don't want somebody in a jail bed 
who can be appropriately supervised in the community," says Ms. Lantz, the 
state corrections commissioner.

The state prison and jail population has fallen by more than 1,000 inmates 
since March 2003 and stood at 18,103 as of last week. Meanwhile, Federal 
Bureau of Investigation crime statistics show the violent crime rate in 
Connecticut is also down. That suggests the people being released aren't 
committing many new crimes, says Ms. Lantz. "It is a philosophical and 
cultural shift" from the "confinement model which was to lock people up 
their entire sentence," she says.

Restoring Parole

One of the simplest ways to reduce the prison population is parole. But at 
the federal level, there is no parole for people sentenced after 1987. And 
at the state level, parole is increasingly unpopular because officials 
don't want to take the blame for releasing someone who later commits a 
crime as a parolee.

Between 1995 and 2004, the number of people under the supervision of 
corrections officials -- in jail, prison, probation or parole -- rose 31% 
to seven million, but the parole population rose only 13% over the same 
period to 765,355, according to the Department of Justice.

"Truth in sentencing is always construed as lengthy sentencing but inmates 
should be able to earn good time if they aren't considered a threat," says 
Richard Stalder, president of the National Association of State 
Correctional Administrators and secretary of corrections and public safety 
in Louisiana.

In June 2003, Alabama's inmate population was at 28,440, forcing the 
corrections department to send hundreds of inmates out of state while 
hundreds more languished in local jails, unable to move into state prisons 
because of overcrowding. Gov. Bob Riley and the state Legislature created a 
second parole board to look at a special docket of nonviolent inmates to 
determine if they could be paroled earlier than anticipated. The state 
hired more than two dozen parole officers to handle the added caseload.

More than 4,000 nonviolent offenders were released that year through the 
second parole board, bringing the population down to 26,220 by October 
2004, a decrease of 7.8%. The state's corrections department spokesman says 
the drop allowed the state to move all of its out-of-state prisoners back 
to Alabama and cleared the overflow of state inmates being held in local jails.

This year, the state's tough sentencing laws have pushed the population 
back up to 27,842. Still, all the inmates are being housed within the 
state. Mr. Riley recently received recommendations from an 11-member panel 
on prison crowding that suggested lighter punishment for technical parole 
violators. Those offenders could report to a halfway-house-type facility. 
The governor is calling on the state legislature to take up the 
recommendations next month.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom