Source: San Luis Obispo County Telegram-Tribune Contact: Saturday, January 1, 1998 Author: Dan Walters Section: Opinion Page: B-4 FACILITIES CRISIS STILL UNSOLVED SACRAMENTO - Gov. Pete Wilson, accompanied by law enforcement and victims rights representatives, launched an advertising campaign Tuesday to warn Californians of a new law that will sharply toughen penalties for those who use guns in crimes. The program - television spots and printed notices to inmates, probationer and parolees - is dubbed "use a gun and you're done." Wilson said he wants to "put gun-wielding criminals in jail for a very long time." Few law-abiding Californians would argue the concept of hammering those who use guns in crimes. That's why lock-'em-up measures are so popular with politicians. Likewise, the single most popular thing that Wilson and lawmakers of both parties have done in recent years is to redirect sate school aid into reducing class sizes in elementary grades. Wilson will propose another expansion of class-size reduction when the Legislature reconvenes next week and wants to engrave the program permanently into law via an education reform ballot measure next year. There is, however, another facet to such trendy political actions as locking up more criminals and putting school kids in smaller classes: finding space to do both. While Wilson and lawmakers have catered to the public, they have abjectly failed to come to grips with the prison and school facilities crises that have resulted. And when the Legislature returns to Sacramento, the politicians will have only a few weeks to reach agreement on prison and school construction programs if measures are to be placed before voters at the June primary election. Secretary of State Bill Jones is warning Wilson and lawmakers that bond issues need to be enacted no later than Feb. 9 to be included in the June voter's pamphlet - which is a virtual impossibility, given the serious political conflicts that remain unresolved. But even if Wilson and lawmakers want to push the envelope by authorizing a supplemental voters' pamphlet, Jones says, they would have only another month. The state has completed its last authorized prison, but Wilson and lawmakers of both parties have been deadlocked for several years on what to do next as prison populations continue to expand and approach the point when even double-ceiling of inmates will be insufficient. Although inmate populations have expanded slower than previously forecast after the "three strikes and you're out" law was enacted, the state still will run out of prison space around the end of the decade. Given the three-year lead time needed to construct new facilities, the real deadline for action may already have passed. Class size reduction, meanwhile, has imposed new demands on a school system that was already overcrowded, thanks to rising enrollment from a new baby boom that began in California in the mid-1980s. Cafeterias and libraries have been converted into emergency classrooms - mirroring the steps being taken in the prisons to warehouse inmates - but a school housing crisis grows worse by the moment while Wilson and lawmakers remain stalemated on how to deal with it. Educators want more state bonds and a lowering of the vote requirement on local bond issues, but the building industry is demanding curbs on school construction fees, and no one has found a magic formula that will also garner the required two-thirds vote in the Legislature. Locking up more violent felons and putting kids in smaller classes are fine policies to pursue - but only if we're willing to shoulder the multibillion-dollar costs that result.