Pubdate: Sat, 15 Aug 2009 Source: Free Press, The (Kinston, NC) Copyright: 2009 Kinston Free Press Contact: http://www.kinston.com/sections/contact/ Website: http://www.kinston.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1732 NON-VIOLENT CRIMES A SPECIAL CATEGORY As the clock wound down on the 2009 session of the General Assembly, lawmakers approved a bill decreasing the length of sentences for a number of criminals serving in our prisons, including some serving time for violent felonies. The change was aimed at reducing prison crowding, a not-so-insignificant issue during a time when tight budgets are resulting in the state closing a number of smaller prisons and transferring inmates to larger and more efficient facilities. With prison population hovering around 41,000 and the average cost of supervising a prisoner put at $27,911 a year, it's easy to see how lawmakers want to take a hard look at the possibilities of changing the sentencing guidelines in order to save taxpayers some money. North Carolina's population continues to increase. Included in that increase are a proportionate number of those who run afoul of the law. Critics question the wisdom in releasing prisoners, with recidivism rates being high. With that in mind, we suggest that lawmakers undertake an effort to make those who commit violent crimes and are a danger to the public server their time while reducing or finding alternative sentencing for those who are non-violent. According to the Department of Correction Web site, 3,444 people were serving time in North Carolina prisons on June 30 for non-trafficking drug charges. There were 5,067 behind bars on habitual felon charges and another 719 were serving time for non-DWI traffic offenses. Incarcerating those prisoners costs the state $257.6 million a year. Those who kill, rob, rape and severely injure others have violated their victims and deserve to be behind bars, both as a disciplinary measure and as a means of keeping them from harming us again. Non-violent offenders, however, are not in the same category. Too many people go to prison in North Carolina, and in America as a whole, but any effort to reduce those numbers should put as much value on the safety of our society. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake