Pubdate: Wed, 14 Feb 2007 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2007 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Mark Binker BASNIGHT RESISTS NEW PRISONS RALEIGH -- The Senate's top leader says the state should find ways to sentence non violent criminals to house arrest as part of an effort to avoid building more prisons. Sen. Marc Basnight, a Dare County Democrat, was speaking to a room full of police officers, court officials, community activists and mayors visiting the legislature on Tuesday. "We have proposals before us to build two more prisons," said Basnight, who allowed that he and other senators "despise this thought." Instead of building more prisons, Basnight said he hoped the state could find alternate ways to punish offenders, reserving incarceration for violent and habitual criminals. After his talk with the law enforcement group, Basnight said the idea was first pitched to him by a customer at his Manteo restaurant. "When we think of the economy and costs and needing space for violent offenders, you'd think we'd prioritize," Basnight said. "If a person can stay at home at a savings of dollars and open up a bed for a violent person, the community would do better by that." He said some of the cost savings should then be used for education and helping the prisoner find work. No bill has been drafted concerning this idea, but Basnight said he has asked "a team of people" to look at the concept. Sen. Phil Berger, an Eden Republican and his party's leader in the Senate, said whether someone is violent or nonviolent should not be the dividing line between who is sentenced to prison and who is not. "A drug manufacturer could be classified as a non violent offender but would be someone I think needs to be locked away," Berger said. He said that judges already have discretion to sentence those convicted of lesser crimes to alternative programs. The state, he said, needs to invest more in district attorneys, other court officials and prisons to ensure those criminals can be prosecuted and punished. "We need to prioritize our spending, and the first priority we fund needs to be protecting the public," Berger said. That was a starkly different message than either Basnight or House Speaker Joe Hackney shared with a decidedly law-and-order-focused crowd. Both of the legislature's top leaders stressed education as a top priority for the General Assembly, despite talking to a group that had come to express frustration with what it says is a backlog in the court system. "At some point, the needs of the court system are tested against the needs of education, Medicaid and the other focuses of government," Hackney told the crowd. He said that good schools would help cut down on law enforcement's workload by helping children stay out of trouble. "If we can get them engaged and trained for a meaningful occupation that is fulfilling, that has an impact on you all as well," Hackney said. Although briefings on the state budget have already begun, lawmakers will begin building the $19 billion tax and spending plan in earnest later this spring. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek