Pubdate: Mon, 07 Jun 2010 Source: Greenville News (SC) Copyright: 2010 The Greenville News Contact: http://greenvillenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/877 SENTENCING REFORM IS 'SMART ON CRIME' Lawmakers and Gov. Mark Sanford deserve credit for passing and signing a sentencing reform bill that this state needed in order to make residents safer and save taxpayers money. The bill enacts reforms that mirror the recommendations of the South Carolina Sentencing Reform Commission that was empanelled by lawmakers. The goal of the reforms is to save taxpayers money, help the Corrections Department run more efficiently, equip nonviolent offenders with the skills they need to become productive citizens and ensure that the state's prisons have room for the most dangerous offenders. If estimates prove accurate, the new rules could save the state more than $400 million over time. That's important for a Corrections Department that is already the most frugal in the nation yet faces significant financial struggles. In a news release praising the bill, Sanford rightly summarized its benefits: =93It's designed not only to make our Corrections process even more lean and effective =85 but also to reduce overall crime and consequently improve the quality of life we enjoy as South Carolinians.=94 The need for these sentencing reforms is obvious. According to the findings of the Sentencing Reform Commission published earlier this year: The state's prison population has increased to more than 25,000 inmates from 9,137 in 1983. Nearly half of the state's inmates are being held for nonviolent offenses. The percentage of inmates being held for drug-related offenses has tripled in the past 29 years. The four most common offenses for state prison inmates are drug charges, burglary, check fraud and driving under suspension, according to an Associated Press report. If the trends continue, it could cost the state $317 million to add prison space needed to house the growing inmate population. The Corrections Department's budget has increased more than 500 percent =AD to $394.1 million from $63.7 million =AD between 1983 and 2008. According to the commission, the changes could save taxpayers $92 million in operating costs over five years in addition to the expense of building a new prison. At the same time, it would divert nonviolent offenders out of prison to ensure there's space in the existing institutions for the most violent inmates. The law, which took effect last week, will allow some nonviolent offenders to avoid prison and will help those on probation and parole better adjust to life outside of prisons. That will help reduce repeat offenses, prevent those on probation or parole from being returned to prison for technical violations, and reduce the Corrections Department's expenses. The bill also redefines what offenses are violent offenses. These changes were needed. Their implementation will save money, it will make our prison staff and residents safer, and it will give nonviolent offenders a better chance at becoming productive citizens. As Sanford said in a recent report in Charleston's Post and Courier , this bill is =93smart on crime.=94 All of those who helped make these significant changes deserve credit for their efforts at enacting sensible sentencing reform. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart