Pubdate: Mon, 20 Apr 1998 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Section: Sec. 1, page 14 Contact: http://www.chicago.tribune.com/ THE HIGH COST OF JAILING MOTHERS CHICAGO - At tax time it is natural to question where our tax dollars are going and to wonder if they are being used wisely. Too much money is being spent constructing and running prisons when cost-effective alternatives for minor, non-violent offenses are cheaper and far more effective in reducing crime. These alternatives are absent from the headlines because for the most part, our policymakers have failed to use them. This failure is a crime, in particular regarding women prisoners. The number of women in Illinois prisons has tripled in the past 10 years. More than two-thirds of these women were convicted of non-violent offenses, and 68 percent were first-time offenders. Most women sent to prison last year were sentenced for Class 3 and Class 4 felonies - crimes such as shoplifting, passing bad checkes and possession of small amounts of drugs. More than 80 percent of these women are mothers who left behind small children. The average Illinois taxpayer pays $1,170 a year in state personal income tax. It costs $25,621 a year, the total tax collected from you and 20 of your neighbors, to house one woman in Dwight Correctional Center for a year. According to the National Council on Crime and Delinquency, each new cell we build costs $72,479, and debt service adds $105,000 to the cost of each new prison cell. At least 25,000 Illinois children are affected each year. When fathers go to prison, mothers usually keep the family intact. When mothers go to prison, children often end up in foster care, at a cost of $20,000 per child each year. Small children experience grief and many blame themselves for the loss of their mother. As taxpayers we pay twice - now for the costs of prison and foster care and later with increased risks of psychiatric hospitalization, delinquency and eventual incarceration of prisoners' children. Community-based sentencing under a model called Family Unity is a solution. In 14 states, Family Unity programs are enormously successful at preventing repeat offenses. They keep mothers and children togehter at a cost that is less than prison and foster care. Women complete substance-abuse treatment, parenting and educational programs so that they re-enter the community as productive, law-abiding citizens and better parents. The programs are not located on prison grounds but near the women's communities so that ties to families, the most important factor in reducing future crimes, can be maintained. This is not "coddling" criminals; some participants find the programs so demanding they opt for prison instead. But those who complete the programs have the gift of a normal family life, a vital investment in our future. The Illinois Department of Corrections is starting a 10-bed program in which women convicted of non-violent offenses will live in a secure facility with their babies. Taxpayers should demand that Family Unity programs be expanded to include all eligible parents. Otherwise, we will keep paying for repeat offenses and the destruction of families. Joanne Archibald Chicago Legal Aid to Incarcerated Mothers