Pubdate: Tue, 28 Nov 2006 Source: Times Union (Albany, NY) Contact: http://www.timesunion.com/forms/emaileditor.asp Copyright: 2006 Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation Website: http://www.timesunion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/452 PRISONS AND CRIME Prisons And Crime - New Data Show That Locking Up More Criminals Doesn't Always Bring Down Crime Rates It seems to be so self-evident, so intuitively correct: The more criminals are locked up, and the longer they are held behind bars, the more crime will decrease. That is the reasoning behind "get tough on crime" laws in many states that are intended to keep offenders off the streets for many years. But there's one problem with this reasoning: It doesn't always pan out in the real world. Take California as an example. It is known for the "Three Strikes and You're Out" law that sends repeat offenders to jail for life once they have been convicted of a third offense, even a petty one. But it hasn't helped to reduce crime the way that advocates had said it would. Instead, California has a 70 percent recidivism rate - a statistic that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger acknowledges he must bring down. Or take New York state. The 1973 Rockefeller Drug Laws mandated long prison terms as a way of reducing drug crimes. But after more than 30 years, the laws have proven largely ineffective. Instead, alternatives such as drug treatment programs and drug courts have helped offenders stay on the right track and out of jail. Or take New York City. A report by The Washington Post, reprinted in Saturday's Times Union, shows there were 21,449 inmates in city lockups in 1993; today, there are 14,129. Homicides, meanwhile, declined 70 percent during the past 10 years. By contrast, the prison population in Idaho soared by 174 percent during the same period, while violent crime shot up 14 percent. Why these counter-intuitive results? Some answers are well known. For example, California's "Three Strikes" law resulted in prison overcrowding, forcing many localities to release prisoners early to avoid a crisis. The inmates were suddenly back on the streets, with few support services to draw upon to help them readjust. Not surprisingly, many of them turned again to crime. The experience in New York City shows the wisdom of sensible programs that help inmates stay out of prison once they finish their sentences. Indeed, the Doe Fund, a New York City-based nonprofit organization that provides job development services to the homeless and ex-inmates, has just proposed a new plan to state lawmakers to combat recidivism. It includes a $25 million wage subsidy program to motivate businesses to hire ex-offenders and improved job training that will enable former inmates to fit into today's changing workplace. Sentencing reforms, drug treatment programs, ways to help ex-offenders readjust to life on the outside: More and more, these approaches seem to get results that "get tough" laws do not. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek