Pubdate: Mon, 23 Mar 2009 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2009 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/contact/#editor Website: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 MOVE CAUTIOUSLY ON NC PRISON OVERCROWDING With a 22% growth rate within a decade, there isn't much room. Now that Gov. Bev Perdue has released her first budget proposal, analysts are busy picking it apart. That's normal practice even in good economic times, and with a series of budget cuts in this year's proposal, critical scrutiny has begun in earnest. One of Perdue's key budget moves was to save money and eliminate state jobs by closing seven inefficient prison units, saving $25 million over two years. That's a rational choice, given that the legislature's Government Performance Audit Committee recommended closing such costly units back in the 1990s. It's about time. But Perdue's plan to house the 1,031 inmates in those units by transferring them to more efficient facilities creates another problem that could wind up costing the state a lot of money. The governor said Tuesday the plan was to house most of those inmates by "double-celling" them at newer prisons built to accommodate more inmates in a pinch. It may also mean putting beds in prison dayrooms to handle the additional inmates. But it's important to recognize that this is not a good long-term solution. Why? Because the state's prison population of 40,644 inmates is already near capacity, and the state expects the prison population to grow by an additional 9,000 inmates in less than a decade. The state expects 2,300 new inmates in the next 15 months alone, The News & Observer of Raleigh reports. While the public probably isn't overly concerned about prison crowding during a prolonged economic recession, it's important to remember what happened the last time North Carolina handled its prison problems by packing more inmates into existing space: It got sued for not providing a minimal amount of living space, and led to a costly prison replacement program during the Martin administration. The state wisely created a Sentencing Policy and Advisory Commission to make projections about the need for space, and the legislature appropriated many hundreds of millions to build new units. So it seems highly likely that a new round of prison overcrowding could lead to additional costly litigation. If Perdue's plan is only a stopgap measure to get us through the current budget crisis until more space can be built, the costliest impact may be avoided. But the shifting of inmates at a time of declining state revenues points to alternatives. One of them is to alleviate crowding by making better use of punishment alternatives, including shorter sentences for non-violent criminals, more widespread use of drug courts and other alternatives to incarceration so the state has enough room to keep violent offenders behind bars. Perdue may not be ready to embrace alternatives to prison, but when the tab starts rolling in for new prisons to accommodate offenders the state expects by 2018, she may be more willing to consider another way to dispense justice. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart