Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jun 2010 Source: State, The (SC) Copyright: 2010 The State Contact: http://www.thestate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/426 Author: Seanna Adcox GOVERNOR SIGNS BILL REFORMING SENTENCES IN SC COLUMBIA, S.C. =AD A sentencing reform measure signed into law Wednesday was praised by South Carolina lawmakers as getting smart on crime and "soft" on taxpayers. The law is designed to put fewer people in prison on minor offenses, and instead help them turn their lives around through improved oversight and training while on parole. The sentencing changes apply to people arrested Wednesday and thereafter. "Unless we're going to build a bunch more jails, we've got to look at alternatives," Republican Gov. Mark Sanford said before signing off on it. "This bill does that." The four most common offenses for South Carolina prison inmates are drug charges, burglary, check fraud and driving under suspension, in that order. Proponents say the new law will ensure there is prison space for high-risk, violent criminals, who will serve longer prison terms. The legislation was the culmination of more than 40 meetings by a study committee that included House and Senate members of both parties, state judges and the Corrections Department director, with input from various law enforcement agencies and victims' advocates. Its chairman, Sen. Gerald Malloy, D-Hartsville, called it an example of what can be done when people put aside politics to improve the lives of South Carolinians. "This is turning people from being tax burdens to taxpayers," he said. The changes were embraced by the GOP-controlled Legislature partly because of the state's budget crunch, Malloy has said, noting that incarcerating someone costs $14,500 a year, compared to roughly $2,000 for supervised probation. Harsh sentencing that arose through the war on drugs has not worked, but has turned prisons into a criminal training ground, turning nonviolent offenders into violent ones, Victoria Middleton, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in South Carolina, has said. South Carolina spends the second lowest amount per inmate in the nation. But South Carolina's inmate population and its cost to taxpayers have soared since 1983, from less than 9,200 costing the state $64 million, to 25,000 costing $394 million. If trends continue, there will be 3,200 more inmates in five years, costing an extra $141 million to house and feed them, and several hundred million more for construction of new prisons, the committee report said. Sen. Chip Campsen, a study committee member, said the law's community-based alternative sentencing gives people incentives to leave crime behind, while providing more relief to victims, such as making restitution easier. "It's smart on crime and soft on the taxpayer," said Campsen, R-Isle of Palms. The bill allows more inmates to participate in work release programs in their sentence's final three years, if they pass a screening process. It also mandates 180 days of re-entry supervision for nonviolent inmates. Currently, many choose to max out their sentences rather than go through parole or probation. Other changes in the lengthy bill include deleting mandatory minimum sentences for a first conviction on simple drug possession, allowing the possibility of probation or parole for certain second and third drug possession convictions, and removing sentencing disparities between crack and powder cocaine possession. The bill changes the status of two dozen crimes from nonviolent to violent - including sex crimes involving children - meaning those inmates can't be paroled until they serve at least 85 percent of their time. The law allows home detention for people convicted a third time for driving under suspension, and route-restricted drivers' licenses on first- and second convictions, while increasing penalties for habitual offenders who gravely injure or kill someone while driving on suspension. Lily Lenderman of Spartanburg said the law will bring justice to her grandson Michael, who was hit and killed while on his mo-ped in 2002 by a man driving with a suspended license. The man served four months in jail for failing to yield the right of way to her grandson, only to be re-arrested 18 days later. "From a grandma's heart, I couldn't understand that," said Lenderman, who has been advocating ever since for increased penalties for habitual offenders who injure or kill someone. "I feel my ordeal has been worth it." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart