Pubdate: March 21, 1999 Source: Capital Times, The (WI) Copyright: 1999 The Capital Times Contact: http://www.thecapitaltimes.com/ PRISON POLICY IS BOTH COSTLY AND IRRATIONAL When he ran for governor last year, Ed Garvey complained that Gov. Tommy Thompson's vision for Wisconsin's future was one of "big highways connecting big prisons.'' What neither Garvey nor anyone else knew at the time was that the most expensive "highway'' was the one being used to ship Wisconsin prisoners -- and tax dollars -- out of state. The state Department of Corrections has requested an additional $120 million over the next two years to cover the skyrocketing costs of transferring prisoners to prisons in states such as Tennessee. At a time when state officials say they do not have the money to keep tuition at the University of Wisconsin affordable, to provide adequate consumer protection services or to develop mass transportation systems, there is enough money to send a steady stream of Wisconsin tax dollars to southern states and private prison corporations. Why does Wisconsin need to ship thousands of prisoners out of state at the same time as the Department of Corrections is spending $228 million to open four new prisons over the next two years? It's not because the crime rate is rising. Since the current economic upturn began in the early 1990s, crime in Wisconsin has declined. It's not because Wisconsinites want prisoners sent out of state. Every indication is that the vast majority of Wisconsinites share the view of state Senate President Fred Risser, D-Madison, who says, "We're in effect sending this (corrections) money out state. We talk about bringing industry to Wisconsin. Well, prisons are a big industry. That money would much better be used in state.'' And it's not because every space in Wisconsin's prison system is filled -- in fact, quite the opposite. The DOC is actually closing down entire units that have been used for housing at existing prisons; since the start of the year, the Oakhill and Columbia correctional institutions have closed whole sections of their facilities. "It certainly isn't good public policy, nor does it make good sense,'' says Risser of the the idea of pouring hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars into building and maintaining under-utilized prisons in Wisconsin while spending hundreds of millions more to house prisoners in other states. Risser has asked the DOC to review its policies. If an honest review is conducted, there can be only one logical conclusion: The transfers should stop. The practice of sending convicts to other states is, by any measure, a bad one. Religious leaders, psychiatrists, social workers and academics agree that separating prisoners from links to their families and communities is a bad move -- it makes the rehabilitation process more difficult and virtually ensures that the return to their hometowns will be more turbulent. The practice is also far more costly than keeping prisoners in state. While the department claims that it costs an average of $15 less per day to house Wisconsin prisoners out of state, the reverse is actually true. According to guards in Wisconsin prisons, only the best (read: least expensive to manage) prisoners are shipped out of state. This creates a circumstance where, according to Rick Gondert, president of the guards union at the Racine Correctional Institution, Wisconsin prisons become more violent, more difficult to manage and, yes, more expensive. The only explanation for current corrections policy is that the agency has had access to too much money for too long. With an annual budget of almost $800 million -- which is expected to surpass $1 billion early in the coming century -- the DOC has simply forgotten how to budget responsibly: It spends money to build new prisons, while spending money to shutter functional sections of existing prisons, while spending money to transfer prisoners to other states. The department is spending, spending, spending. And it will keep doing so until legislators impose fiscal restraint -- not to mention common sense. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea