Pubdate: Sun, 28 Feb 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: Kit Murphy McNally, Executive director, The Benedict Center Milwaukee COMMUNITY ALTERNATIVES A BETTER ROUTE Why was George Mitchell invited to flamboyantly attack the motives of 400 men and women who were about to convene outside Madison to examine the human cost of current spending policies for education and prisons (Crossroads, Feb. 14)? The Task Force on Money, Education and Prisons Conference on Restoring the Balance convened to search for rational justice policies in a time of irrational spending on incarceration. The menacing powers of the prison industrial complex grow awesome on the fallow farmland of virtually every state. The prison industry's lucrative tentacles embrace architects, builders, vendors, consultants, policy makers, rural towns and urban corrections. Prison operations are now measured in billions, not millions, of dollars. Still, no one holds prisons accountable for a failure rate over 60%, based on recidivism. No one holds private profiteers accountable for dollars spent on salaries or rehabilitative services relative to dollars banked for profit. There are safe, effective and affordable alternatives that draw on community resources to resolve problems in the community, instead of waiting for offenders to return from prison less able to conform than when they left. The Benedict Center Women's Program and Milwaukee's new Community Justice Center for Day Reporting are two examples of working alternatives. Community programs for non-violent offenders are typically 60% to 75% less expensive than prisons, which consume $20,000 to $30,000 annually for every inmate. Community alternatives forgo multimillion-dollar construction costs and hire providers and vendors who work in the community and who understand its problems. Dollars saved on prisons are dollars available for smaller classrooms, special education and innovative teaching that will do more to deter high-risk children from lives of crime than all the prisons on earth today. Mitchell blows a golden horn. But those who gathered for the conference scratched the surface of that golden horn, and the gilt fell away, exposing the crude metal beneath. Kit Murphy McNally Executive director The Benedict Center Milwaukee - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck