Pubdate: Sun, 5 Jul 1999 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 1999, The Des Moines Register. Contact: http://www.dmregister.com/ Author: William Petroski PRISON BUDGET LIGHT ON TRAINING Programs aim to turn lives around Fort Dodge, Ia. - Shane Hagensick dropped out of school as a juvenile and was arrested for burglary and theft. He graduated to extortion as an adult. Ask Hagensick what he did before entering prison, and he shakes his head. "Nothing," he says quietly. Hagensick, 20, of Waukon, was recently freed from the Fort Dodge Correctional Facility and assigned to a work-release program in northeast Iowa. He worked hard while in prison to turn his life around. He studied writing, math, science and other subjects to earn a high school equivalency certificate. He learned how to lay concrete and helped build a new prison cell-house. Hagensick's efforts to improve himself stand out among Iowa's 7,300 prison inmates, but not all of them have that great a chance. Because of a lack of meaningful work, education and vocational programs, about 40 percent of Iowa's prisoners spend most of their time idle, said Iowa Corrections Director W.L. "Kip" Kautzky. "When I walked in the door here, I was as troubled as anybody else" about the lack of opportunities for inmates, said Kautzky, who assumed his post in July 1997. "Having said that, my hope is that this will be changing," he added. As the state has rushed to get tough on crime, Iowa prisons have not emphasized giving inmates opportunities to learn skills to keep them from returning - even though 27 percent of Iowa's inmates had been in prison before their current sen-tences. The education budget in C2Iowa's prisons is $3.3 million - just under 2 percent of the $170 million cost of running the prison system. The average education level of Iowa's inmates is slightly below 12th grade. The average reading level is lower than 10th grade. The Iowa Department of Corrections bolstered some education programs about four years ago to help illiterate inmates learn to read and write and to help school dropouts meet general educational standards. A total of 349 inmates completed the literacy program last year, and 588 inmates were awarded general education certificates. The extra help for illiterates and dropouts was paid for with money cut from prison vocational-technical classes and life-coping programs. Those programs taught inmates a variety of skills. They ranged from computer and building trades to how to be a good parent and how to manage family finances. Some courses have since been reinstated, although not at previous levels. Carolyn Waddell, who used to coordinate education programs at state prisons at Newton and Mitchellville, said the reduction in educational offerings was a big mistake. Literacy programs are extremely important, and so are general education courses, Waddell said. However, some inmates are incapable of reading and writing at even minimal levels, she added. "We are also talking about people who have totally fried their heads with drugs. And as long as we had to keep all of those people in classes, then we were missing the opportunity to help other people learn and do something productive," said Waddell, who is retired. She worked for Des Moines Area Community College under a contract with Iowa's prisons. Iowa's prisons have also had a difficult time finding enough meaningful work for inmates. State officials have attracted publicity in the past by assigning a handful of inmates to chain gangs watched by shotgun-toting correctional officers. The reality, though, is that many inmates spend long hours of idle time behind bars watching TV talk shows and lifting weights. The biggest prison work program - Iowa Prison Industries - employs about 400 inmates in jobs that range from making license plates and traffic signs to assembling furniture. Another 175 prisoners work for private companies doing telemarketing, factory work, egg-processing and other duties. Many inmates also work inside the prisons doing such chores as laundry, cooking and janitorial work. There is not enough work, however, to keep every inmate busy eight hours a day. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck