Pubdate: Mon, 10 Sep 2007 Source: Express-Times, The (PA) Copyright: 2007 The Express-Times Contact: http://www.pennlive.com/expresstimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1489 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) BURSTING AT THE SEAMS As Corrections Spending Balloons, Officials Look At Alternatives To Locking Up Nonviolent Offenders Overlooked amid the discussion of the state's dire transportation needs and pressing issues on the health care and energy fronts is that spending on corrections is bursting at the seams. Corrections is the third largest expenditure in the state budget, after education and public welfare. Taxpayers are footing the $500 million bill for three new prisons that will be filled in less than five years, given current inmate population trends. That's on top of state prisons operating at 110.4 percent of capacity as of July 31, according to the Department of Corrections. State budget projections are that each of the 45,625 inmates will cost taxpayers $34,012 to house this fiscal year, plus $4,497 per inmate for health care. It's not much better on the county level, most of which are operating close to capacity. Just ask the Cumberland County commissioners, who are looking at possibly having to raise taxes to pay for a $31 million expansion of a prison that was just built in 1985. Many of these inmates, particularly those in state prisons, are doing hard time for violent crimes and sex offenses, and deservedly so. But there are also large numbers of nonviolent offenders caught up in the now three-decades-old War on Drugs or who encountered elected officials and judges who ran for office on get-tough-on-crime platforms. That philosophy appears to be changing. What have amounted to patchwork attempts at alternative sentencing and early release programs for those committing nonviolent crimes are being joined on a statewide level. Gov. Ed Rendell is advocating sentencing reforms and has picked up support from key lawmakers of both parties, district attorneys and county commissioners. The proposals discussed so far include a heavy emphasis on drug and alcohol treatment or other rehabilitation programs to make some inmates with good behavior eligible for early release, or allowing other people to avoid conventional prison terms altogether. One variation is so-called "intermediate punishment," in which a nonviolent offender would receive rehabilitation treatment while in prison and progress to less secure settings closer to their homes. Some of this is unlikely to sit well with those with a tough law-and-order philosophy, who believe the threat of jail time is the only real deterrent. But the inmate statistics in state and county prisons suggest otherwise. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom