Pubdate: Sun, 06 Jun 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: Dan Walters (Sacramento Bee) PRISONS NEAR CAPACITY ROBERT Presley, the highly respected former cop and state senator who heads the state's correctional agency, says that in just two years, "every nook and cranny" in the state's huge prison system will be filled with inmates. There are 160,000 inmates now, eight times the 1980 prison population, thanks to get-tough policies adopted by legislators and voters. And despite massive prison construction in the 1980s and early 1990s, all but a few inmates are doubled up in cells designed for one person or housed in gymnasiums and other temporary quarters. The projected moment at which the system will be filled to the absolute brim has changed from time to time. But there's no question that it's coming and that it will arrive before more prisons can be built, due to construction lead time. No one knows what will happen when absolute capacity is reached. But prisoner rights groups probably will ask a federal court to begin ordering releases on humanitarian grounds and if they succeed, an unknown judge would assume effective control of prisons. The politics of the situation are, to say the least, complicated. For years, former Gov. Pete Wilson asked legislators to restart prison construction, but liberal legislators, who disliked the concept on principle, and conservatives, who disliked spending the money, formed an odd-bedfellows alliance to rebuff Wilson's demands. Both said they wanted the state to explore less intensive and/or less expensive alternatives to incarceration. A major player has been the powerful California Correctional Peace Officers Association, which paid lip service to alternatives but backed construction. More prisons mean more guards and more CCPOA members. The CCPOA, which had been a strong supporter of Republican Wilson, last year became an equally ardent and generous backer of Democrat Gray Davis' ultimately successful campaign for the governorship. And this month, Davis returned the favor by designating $355 million from the state's revenue windfall to build a new prison at Delano and begin designing another near San Diego. It also burnished Davis' carefully nurtured image of being a Democrat who's as tough as any Republican on crime. Legislative Democrats just as quickly trashed Davis' prison construction program. "Keep prisons for those who are violent," Assembly Speaker Antonio Villaraigosa said this week. And that's where the situation sits as the annual budget dance begins its final steps. Republicans are not displeased with Democrats' no-prisons posture. "Let's say a federal judge steps in and begins releasing inmates and let's say one of them rapes and murders someone," muses one senior Republican legislator. "Who'll get the blame?" Still another factor in the prison melodrama is Corrections Corporation of America, which has built a 2,300-bed prison on speculation in the Southern California desert and is offering, in effect, to help the state solve its overcrowding problem. One of the Legislature's leading opponents of state prison construction, Senate Democratic floor leader Richard Polanco, is openly championing the private prison campaign. But the ever-powerful CCPOA is, for obvious reasons, strongly opposed, and the Davis administration has given the private prison firm a cold shoulder. So how will all of this play out? Negotiations are under way among legislators and Davis aides on a compromise -- similar to one last year with Wilson -- that would add a few prison beds in return for more nonprison treatment programs. The only certainty, however, is that as each day passes, the moment the prisons overflow grows closer. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart