Pubdate: Sun, 7 Nov 2010 Source: Maui News, The (HI) Copyright: 2010 The Maui News Contact: http://www.mauinews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2259 Author: Netra Halperin Note: Netra Halperin is a social worker. Her work has included being a substance abuse counselor supervisor at Maui Community Correctional Center. She lives in Kihei. Cited: Justice Reinvestment http://justicereinvestment.org/ INVEST IN EFFORT TO STOP CRIME RATHER THAN NEW JAIL The Hawaii Department of Public Safety is proposing to build an 835-bed jail in Puunene. Before spending $250 million of our tax dollars, we must assess whether this will get us the most public safety for our limited funds. The U.S. prison population has exploded in the last three decades. We now hold 25 percent of the world's prisoners but only 5 percent of the world's people. We incarcerate more citizens per capita than any other country in the world. Yet few people know how this huge portion of our tax dollars is being spent. Myth: Hawaii's jails and prisons keep dangerous criminals off the street. Fact: 85 percent of women and 63 percent of men incarcerated in Hawaii (and Mainland prisons) are nonviolent drug and property crime offenders. Hawaii leads the nation with 37 percent of incarcerated youth held behind bars because of status offenses (truancy, curfew violations, incorrigibility, running away, etc). It costs us well over $119,000 per year to incarcerate a youth, not including education or mental health services. Myth: Giving tough sentences to drug dealers will reduce the use and sale of illegal drugs. Fact: The war on drugs has cost the U.S. $42 billion so far this year yet illicit drugs are more available than when this policy began. Myth: Prison is an effective deterrent to crime. Fact: For 85 percent of inmates either drugs or alcohol were involved in their crime. People with drug addictions or under the influence simply do not consider the consequences of their actions. Myth: Inmates receive drug treatment in prison. Fact: Less than 15 percent of inmates receive treatment. Myth: Prison doesn't cost us much money. Fact: DPS' budget has almost doubled in the last 10 years. A five-year prison term costs us $200,000. Myth: The Puunene jail would be financed by capital improvement project bonds, so if we don't borrow money to build the jail, the money will be lost. So the suggestion to use the money for education instead is invalid. Fact: Bonds, like all loans, must be repaid. $250 million for a new prison will cost us $20 million in debt servicing and $27 million in operating costs per year - which absolutely decreases funds available for education. Myth: Shipping Hawaii's inmates to Mainland private prisons is a cost-effective way to deal with prison overcrowding. Fact: In the cost analysis for private prisons, transportation and extra costs families of prisoners must bear aren't factored in. There are also moral questions: Israel's supreme court recently ruled that private, for-profit prisons severely violate prisoners' basic human rights to dignity and freedom. Corrections Corporation of America's (which runs Hawaii's Mainland prisons) annual report shows a declining occupancy rate, which the report complains "could cause a decrease in revenue and profitability." Private prisons have no incentive to rehabilitate inmates as it curtails profits. For the third quarter of 2010, Hawaii taxpayers contributed to CCA generating a net income of $42.0 million. Myth: Hawaii's judges decide the lengths of sentences. Fact: While the judiciary sets the maximum lengths of sentences, Hawaii Paroling Authority sets the minimum. There are no educational or professional requirements to be a member of this panel. Members are appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Senate. Myth: Repeat offenders aren't responding properly to incarceration and should be put away for even longer. Fact: There are no respected psychological or criminological theories that claim that punishing a person who is addicted to drugs, has serious psychological problems and few marketable job skills, with extended incarceration will transform them into a law-abiding citizen. Instead of continuing on this exorbitantly expensive, destructive path there is another option. Justice Reinvestment is already helping 12 states take tax dollars out of the bottomless pit of incarceration and reinvesting resources in the communities from which most offenders come. Council Member Gladys Baisa (developer of MEO's BEST prisoner reintegration program) will transmit a resolution in support of Hawaii partnering with the Justice Reinvestment program. Please come to Council Chambers at 9 a.m. Tuesday and support this measure, which will save us money and return integrity to the criminal justice system of Maui and all of Hawaii. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake