Pubdate: Fri, 15 Dec 2006 Source: Reading Eagle-Times (PA) Copyright: 2006 Reading Eagle Company Contact: http://www.readingeagle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1399 PRISON POPULATIONS NEED TO BE REDUCED The Issue: The number of people incarcerated in the United States sets a record. Our Opinion: More drug treatment programs need to be developed as alternatives to jailing non-violent offenders. The get-tough-on-crime policies that were in vogue three decades ago have resulted in jails and prisons across the country bursting at the seams. Last month, the U.S. Department of Justice reported that at the end of 2005 there was a record high of 2.2 million people behind bars in this country, an increase of 2 percent over 2004 that saw a similar increase over 2003. In fact, the number of inmates in American jails has increased 35 percent in the past decade. Additionally there were 4.1 million people on probation at the end of last year and another 784,000 on parole. In all, seven million Americans -- 3 percent of the U.S. population -- were either locked up or under some type of supervision by the country's criminal justice system. As James Alan Fox, a criminal justice professor at Northeastern University in Boston, noted: "These numbers are not worthy of celebration. We are becoming more punitive." According to The Sentencing Project, an advocacy group that supports alternatives to incarceration, the United States is the most punitive country in the world in terms of incarcerations. At the end of 2005, the United States had 737 people behind bars for every 100,000 people. By comparison, Russia, with its history of locking up massive numbers of political prisoners as well as criminals in Siberian prisons and gulags, had only 611 people in jail for every 100,000 population. Other countries had far lower per capita numbers. Britain had 448, Germany has 95 and France 85. Canada, which shares many similarities with the United States in terms of culture and society, had only 107. The reason for the high number of people behind bars in the United States is no great mystery. America's war on drugs has been the driving force behind the increase in the prison population. At one point most states, including Pennsylvania, and the federal government had passed mandatory-minimum sentencing laws, which often resulted in lengthy prison terms for relatively minor drug offences. Many of those laws have been relaxed or eliminated in recent years, but that hasn't stopped prosecutors and judges from dealing harshly with non-violent drug offenses. According to The Sentencing Project, a person convicted of a drug crime today has a greater chance of serving a long jail sentence than he would have 30 years ago. As a result a large percentage of those 2.2 million inmates in U.S. prisons are there because of drug convictions, and a large percentage of those for minor drug offenses such as possession. In 2003, 55 percent of the inmate population in federal prisons had been sentenced for drug crimes, according to the Justice Department. And the cost of housing these inmates is not cheap. According to The Sentencing Project, the average cost of a cell, three meals a day and medical care is roughly $20,000. There has been a lot of talk about developing more drug treatment programs as an alternative to jailing these non-violent offenders, but the steadily increasing prison-population figures provide strong evidence that talk is all that's being done. That needs to change. Not only would a person arrested for simple possession get more from a treatment program than a prison sentence, it almost certainly would cost less. - --- MAP posted-by: Amy