Pubdate: Sun, 27 June 1999 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 1999, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Contact: 414-224-8280 Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ Forum: http://www.jsonline.com/cgi-bin/ubb/ultimate.cgi Author: Richard P. Jones, of the Journal Sentinel staff DEMOCRAT: DON'T MOVE ON PRISON State Should Keep Options Open For Now, Burke Says Madison - The leading opponent of a proposal to buy or lease a private prison under construction in Stanley says Wisconsin likely will end up acquiring the prison. But it's not a move the state should make now in the state budget, according to Sen. Brian Burke (D-Milwaukee), co-chairman of the Joint Finance Committee. When Senate Democrats offered their budget alternative last week, absent was a provision giving the Thompson administration the authority and funding to buy or lease the 1,200-bed medium security prison. The Dominion Venture Group, based in Edmond, Okla., expects to complete the project northeast of Eau Claire in February. Dominion has proposed leasing the prison to the state for $6.25 million a year, but has not said how much it would cost to buy it. "It essentially means that we're keeping our options open," Burke said of the Senate Democrats' decision to exclude the Stanley prison option from their budget alternative. "We may very well end up owning the Stanley prison one way or the other eventually," he said. "This might even put the state in a better bargaining position. It might either prompt an offer to sell by the private company, or the state may exercise the power of eminent domain in the future." The budget amendment approved by the committee says that the Building Commission would have the power to condemn and claim the prison for a fair price. But Burke argued the state already has that authority. When the finance committee added the amendment, Burke and others objected, saying the state should decide the location of prisons, not private companies that build them on speculation, hoping to take advantage of Wisconsin and its crowded prison system. The Stanley prison posed a dilemma for many Democrats. They opposed shipping inmates to other states to relieve crowding in Wisconsin's prison system. They also objected to what they considered Dominion's arrogance in building the prison and expecting the state to buy it. Sen. Bob Jauch (D-Poplar) had voted for the Stanley budget amendment on the finance committee. He lost the argument in his caucus, but he held out hope that the authority and funding might win the Legislature's approval before the budget goes to the governor's desk for his signature. "I'm disappointed," Jauch said. "There is a sense of spite by many legislators and I believe by the administration about the manner in which the Dominion Group developed this prison. There is anger about their arrogance. "I believe the reluctance to embrace the prison is more representative of a disdain for the company, the way they developed the project and seemed to be holding the state hostage, than it is out of a desire not to use the facility." Jauch said the state remains in dire need of beds, and Stanley deserved the jobs and economic benefit more than communities in Oklahoma, Texas, Tennessee and West Virginia, where the state now sends inmates. If the state purchased or leased the Stanley prison, it could save $25 million on so-called contract beds in other states under the finance committee version of the budget. In excluding the Stanley project from their budget, Senate Democrats restored the $25 million, bringing to $55 million the total funding allowed for contract beds during the next two years. Thompson had proposed spending an additional $101.2 million to rent space elsewhere for 6,161 more prisoners. His budget anticipated an inmate population increasing from roughly 18,000 to approximately 26,823 by July 2001. However, the Legislative Fiscal Bureau estimated the population would be just under 24,000 inmates by July 2001. In their budget alternative, Senate Democrats also included the following provisions: Require corrections to return 1,000 inmates from out-of-state prisons in 2001 and place them in Wisconsin county jails if counties have space and can house them for $57 a day or less. Expand a controversial community corrections program known as intensive sanctions but allow only non-violent offenders to be released to a program involving electronic monitoring. The program now has about 475 offenders, but Thompson proposed reducing that to about 200. Senate Democrats would allow as many as 1,075 offenders and provide 69 more agents to supervise them. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea