Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Author: Dan Walters, The Sacramento Bee Pubdate: Fri, 6 Mar 1998 Contact: Mail: Letters Editor, San Diego Union-Tribune, P O Box 191 San Diego, CA 92112-4106 Fax: (619) 293-1440 Website: http://www.uniontrib.com/ PRISON SYSTEM OUT OF CONTROL The eight Corcoran State Prison guards indicted on federal cruelty charges must, of course, be held personally responsible for their own actions, whatever they were. Such accountability is, after all, the philosophical core of the penal system itself. But the semi-official line from the state Department of Corrections and the Governor's Office -- that if there was wrongdoing, it was solely the misdeeds of rogue guards -- is not acceptable. There's something more fundamentally amiss with the department. As any business executive knows, one of the most perilous circumstances is unbridled, unmanaged growth, and the Department of Corrections has been, by a wide margin, the state government's fastest-growing segment. It has added dozens of new facilities, hired some 35,000 new employees, expanded its spending 10-fold and absorbed more than 130,000 new inmates since 1980. Californians and their political representatives demanded that expansion, decreeing that those who commit felonies would be treated more harshly than in the past. The state's crime rates have fallen since the prison-expansion program began and its advocates and defenders credit it with that drop. Whether that credit is warranted, or not, it's clear that the rapid expansion of California's penal system has had several interlocking effects on the system itself, to wit: As tens of thousands of young men were sucked into the inmate population by tougher new laws and harsher judicial and parole policies, many brought with them gang-centered, violence-prone codes of conduct; Despite construction of new prisons, the system was packed well beyond its designed capacity, becoming a human warehousing network rather than a correctional program; Drug treatment, basic education, job counseling and other programs that might have reduced recidivism were reduced to near-nothing by a lack of money, a lack of space and a lack of political will; Tens of thousands of new guards were hired, shoved into the cellblocks and guard towers with minimal training and acculturation but imbued with god-like powers over inmates; Expansion and retirements meant rapid promotion into management of people who were only scantily prepared, thus creating what one former Corrections official calls "a loss of institutional leadership;" The prisons themselves tended to operate as independent units, rather than components of a centralized department accountable through politicians to the public, with wardens viewing themselves as captains of warships on the high seas; An unholy political alliance developed between those who were supposed to be managing Corrections, including the governor, and the California Correctional Peace Officers Association, which became the state's single most powerful labor union and lubricated its political relationships with tons of campaign money; Prison officials have restricted the ability of the media and legislators to find out hat's been happening behind prison walls. Wilson and the department also have resisted proposals to establish an independent watchdog such as an inspector general - even though the governor says he wants such an independent inspector for public schools. Given all of those conditions, it's a minor miracle that California's prison system hasn't experienced more misconduct and mismanagement. But the conditions that bred what happened in Corcoran remain unaddressed. Indeed, the indicted guards contend that they were only following departmental orders when they put rival gang members together. We -- taxpayers and voters -- should insist that those we elect get control of an institution that appears to be out of control. Copyright 1998 Union-Tribune Publishing Co.