Pubdate: Mon, 15 Mar 1999 Source: Oakland Tribune (CA) Copyright: 1999 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: 66 Jack London Sq., Oakland, CA 94607 Website: http://www.newschoice.com/newspapers/alameda/tribune/ Author: Matthew B. Stannard PRISON POPULATION 1.8 MILLION, RISING Officials Disagree On Causes And Effects If you know 150 people, chances are at least one is doing time in prison, according to a new government report. More than 1.8 million people -- or one out of every 150 U.S. residents - -- were in state and federal prisons or local jails in the middle of 1998, according the U.S. Department of Justice report. In other words, there are more people in jail now than there are residents of San Diego. The prison population is more than twice what it was in 1985 and the largest in the nation's history. And it's still growing. There are a lot of reasons for that growth, said statistician Darrell Gilliard, who wrote the report. But with 52 jurisdictions reflected in the final numbers, it's hard to nail down why the numbers continue to climb. Yet, others were eager to share their theories on the causes and effects of the nation's booming prison population. One is Jenni Gainsborough, a spokeswoman for the Campaign for an Effective Crime Policy in Washington, D.C., which is critical of the way the nation now handles criminals. "The main reasons why we have this huge imprisoned population at the moment really is sentencing length," Gainsborough said. "We're not only locking up more people, but we're locking them up for a longer and longer period of time." The problem is particularly evident in California, Gainsborough said. The report found there are more prisoners in California's state and federal prisons than in any other jurisdiction -- 158,742. Gainsborough, said California should consider repealing or modifying its "Three Strikes, You're Out" law. A proposal to modify the law by requiring a third strike to be a felony is already before the state Senate. "I think that would be a huge step forward to do that," she said. "You've reached the frightening situation, if you lock too many people up, that going to prison instead of being a shocking event just become part of the growing-up experience." Morgan Reynolds, director of the National Center for Policy Analysis in Texas, takes the opposite view, Reynolds said get-tough laws and increased jail time have reduced crime by taking criminals off the streets and making potential or repeat offenders think twice before committing more crimes. But Gainborough and Reynolds do see eye-to-eye on at least one issue: how best to reduce the national inmate population. "One of the things that's clearly going on is more hardliners on crime are saying, 'maybe this war on drugs needs to be re-examined,'" Reynolds said. "If we could free up some of the bed space that would be released from drug offender use, we could use that for the predatory crime convictees." That proposal won hearty support for Gainsborough, who also likes Reynolds' suggested replacement for the war on drugs: a policy allowing state and local governments to design their own treatment programs. "Ever the people who have made the argument that locking up a lot of people is making the crime rate go down ... have said we've now gone as far as we can with this," she said. "With drugs, what we need to be focused on is treatment and prevention and nut just incarceration." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea