Pubdate: Wed, 21 Feb 2007 Source: Ventura County Star (CA) Copyright: 2007 The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www.venturacountystar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/479 Author: Scott Hadly PRISONERS TO STAY PUT Already Crowded Jails Could Get More Inmates In the basement at the Ventura County Main Jail last week deputies searched one man who stood spread-eagle in front of a wall padded with a blue cushion while in nearby booking rooms small groups of four, five and even 10 men lay sprawled out and waited to be transferred to cells upstairs. After being searched, photographed and then booked, this was the man's welcome into the packed County Jail. Like most jurisdictions in California, Ventura County is running out of jail space. The county's two facilities -- the Main Jail next to the courthouse and the 12-year-old Todd Road Jail near Santa Paula -- have reached capacity. As the new inmates are moved upstairs, jailers scramble to find a place to put them. The new inmates typically sleep on bunks in a common day room until cell space is available. In other jurisdictions, mattresses are rolled out and inmates sleep on the floor. To relieve the crowding in Ventura County, the Sheriff's Department has siphoned off as many inmates as it could through early release, work furlough, drug diversion or other programs, said Chief Deputy Kathy Kemp, who heads the Sheriff's Detention Services Division. The remaining 1,705 inmates housed in the county's two jails need to be locked up, Kemp said. So planners at the Sheriff's Department are looking at building new cells, but they're not sure how many to build, in part because an even worse overcrowding issue within the state prison system is likely to blow back on local jurisdictions. Prison Capacity Exceeded Faced with a prison system bursting at the seams, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is considering a plan that could push those inmates back into an already overcrowded county jail system. The state has exceeded its prison capacity by about 70,000 inmates and is under a court order to deal with the problem. If California fails to come up with a solution, officials will have to start releasing prisoners early. As an emergency measure the governor began sending some inmates out of state, but this week a Sacramento Superior Court ruled against that relocation effort. The governor plans to appeal. "I will not release dangerous criminals to relieve overcrowding," Schwarzenegger said Tuesday in a prepared statement. "Our prison system is in desperate need of repair, and the transferring of inmates out of state is a prudent alternative to the risk of court-ordered early release of felons. Public safety and the interest of all Californians should prevail and this challenge to sound public policy must be defeated." In January in his preliminary budget, Schwarzenegger proposed another alternative suggesting that local jails keep any inmates sentenced to three years or less. The average stay for an inmate at the Ventura County Jail is about a year. Population Caps Installed With the stroke of a pen, the governor could make life more difficult for police and sheriff's departments across the state. Of the 58 counties in California, 32 have established population caps on their jails. Of those, 20 were ordered by a court. In places like Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Orange counties, the situation is dire, said Steve Szalay, executive director of the California State Sheriff's Association. In Ventura County, where officials are on the cusp of a plan to deal with a packed jail system, the governor's musings are enough to make local officials blanch. Kemp looked at what the governor's January plan would mean for Ventura County. She estimates that in a year the county's jail population would double. "That's a big deal," she said. Worse, over time the jail overcrowding would be compounded as new inmates crowd in on the heels of inmates serving sentences. In three years, the local inmate population could approach numbers planners didn't anticipate for another two decades. "It's very significant," said Sheriff's Cmdr. Brent Morris, who oversees the Todd Road Jail and has just completed a draft of a jail-needs assessment for the department. "I don't know exactly what the state program will entail, but the potential is that we'll have to build twice as many beds." The Board of Supervisors and County Executive Officer Johnny Johnston will be getting the draft in the next few weeks. But there are still open questions about what the state will do and whether it will give money to local jurisdictions to cope with the overcrowding. With such big unknowns, it is difficult to say what kind of problems the county faces. The bottom line is the biggest concern. Construction of a single cluster could cost between $80 million to $90 million, Sheriff's Department officials said. Staffing each node of the jail is costly as well, with each 750-bed cluster costing about $12 million. There is one cluster there now with the department's long-term plan calling for three by the year 2025. County officials have prided themselves in how forward-looking they were when they built the Todd Road Jail in 1995. They developed a master plan and created a facility that could be fairly easily expanded to handle the growth in inmates. But then reality set in. Although Ventura County hasn't seen the kind of overcrowding that has resulted in Los Angeles County inmates serving just 10 percent of their sentences, local officials are scrambling. And their efforts could be complicated further by whatever the state decides, Kemp said. One of the reasons for crowding locally is the loss of jail space when the county closed the Honor Farm near Ojai and a facility in Rose Valley. But there is a possible silver lining for the county. State officials are considering a plan that would create as many as 10 "re-entry" facilities for prisoners. In this scenario, the state has about $4 billion it could use to pay local jurisdictions to build and staff facilities where state prisoners would be moved before their release. Although there is some suspicion about whether the state will indeed cover the costs of operating these facilities, it is looking at counties that are ready to move. Because Ventura County already has the land and a plan for jail expansion, local officials believe they could be well positioned to qualify for state money to build more capacity. The Sheriff's Department expects some of these issues to be hashed out at the Board of Supervisors meetings in the coming weeks. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman