Pubdate: Sun, 6 Dec 1998 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 1998, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Contact: (414) 224-8280 Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ SHIPPING INMATES NO SOLUTION As Wisconsin prison chief Michael Sullivan admits, housing inmates out of state, originally a stopgap measure, is now a permanent feature of state corrections policy. That development bodes no good. Sure, as a temporary solution for catching Wisconsin's prison overflow, the use of out-of-state lockups makes sense. But over the long haul, the practice hurts efforts to reduce crime and thus prison congestion. People who work with convicts say that visits from family members helps rehabilitation, which in turn would mean less crime. But relatives can rarely visit if the inmates sit hundreds of miles away. A second reason to avoid out-of-state placements is that they're harder to monitor -- which may have figured into the trouble involving Wisconsin inmates last summer at the prison run by the private Corrections Corporation of America in Whiteville, Tenn. The trouble allegedly entailed the beating of a guard by inmates, the subsequent abuse of inmates and then a coverup of the abuse. The Wisconsin Legislature must keep in mind that the congestion problem is almost entirely of its own making. A rising crime rate is not driving the problem; in fact, crime is not rising. Rather, the Legislature's penchant for passing tougher and tougher laws is responsible. Some toughening may have been in order. But, irresponsibly, lawmakers dramatically lengthened sentences without adequately dealing with the predictable jump in prison population. In other words, lawmakers did the fun part -- stiffening the laws. They skipped the hard part -- paying for the stiffened laws. In passing truth-in-sentencing last session, lawmakers were true to form. Truth-in-sentencing has its virtue in that it clears up public confusion over how long a convict will spend in prison. But it will likely lengthen actual sentences. As if to ensure that outcome, legislators attached to the measure new, big increases in maximum sentences for felonies. Wisconsin must get a handle on the congestion problem -- by building new prisons in state, drastically beefing up rehabilitation efforts, making more use of alternatives to prisons, taking more steps to steer troubled youngsters away from a life of crime and restoring sanity to criminal legislation. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry