July 27, 2003 - Associated Press
Growing prison population is growing problem for cash-strapped
states
By Curt Anderson
WASHINGTON America's prison population grew again
in 2002 despite a declining crime rate, costing the federal government
and states an estimated $40 billion a year at a time of rampant
budget shortfalls.
The inmate population in 2002 of more than 2.1 million represented
a 2.6 percent increase over 2001, according to a report released
Sunday by the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Preliminary FBI statistics
showed a 0.2 percent drop in overall crime during the same span.
Experts say mandatory sentences, especially for nonviolent
drug offenders, are a major reason inmate populations have risen
for 30 years. About one of every 143 U.S. residents was in the
federal, state or local custody at year's end.
"The nation needs to break the chains of our addiction
to prison, and find less costly and more effective policies like
treatment," said Will Harrell, executive director of the
Texas American Civil Liberties Union. "We need to break
the cycle."
Others say tough sentencing laws, such as the "three
strikes" laws that can put repeat offenders behind bars
for life, are a chief reason for the drop in crime. The Justice
Department, for example, this year ordered Bureau of Prisons
officials to stop sending so many white-collar and nonviolent
criminals to halfway houses.
"The prospect of prison, more than any other sanction,
is feared by white-collar criminals and has a powerful deterrent
effect," Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson said in
a memo announcing the change.
Yet the cost of housing, feeding and caring for a prison inmate
is roughly $20,000 per year, or about $40 billion nationwide
using 2002 figures, according to The Sentencing Project, a nonprofit
organization that promotes alternatives to prison. Construction
costs are about $100,000 per cell.
Even as these costs keeping climbing, the federal government
is tackling a giant budget deficit and 31 states this year are
cutting spending most often across all programs to
deal with shortfalls, according to the National Conference of
State Legislatures.
"The prison population and budget figures, taken together,
should be setting off alarm bells in state capitols," said
Jason Zeidenberg, director of policy and research for the Justice
Policy Institute, a nonprofit organization focused on ending
reliance on incarceration.
Drug offenders now make up more than half of all federal prisoners.
The federal penal system, which has tough sentencing policies
for drug offenses, is now the nation's largest at more than 151,600
an increase of 4.2 percent compared with 2001.
Over the same period, state prison and jail populations grew
just 2.4 percent. Prison alternative advocates credit moves in
some states to divert drug offenders to treatment programs and
other innovations for that lower growth rate.
Texas, for example, recently passed a drug treatment alternative
law and saw its prison population remain virtually unchanged
from 2001 to 2002. Ohio, which revised its sentencing and parole
guidelines in the late 1990s, had its prison and jail population
rise just 0.8 percent last year compared with 1.9 percent for
the Midwest as a whole.
"The way to reduce prison spending is to reduce the number
of people in prison and the number of prisons, like some states
across the country have done," said Rose Braz, director
of Critical Resistance, a California-based group opposed to prison
expansion.
At the same time, the Justice Department report found that
17 states reported increases of at least 5 percent year-to-year
in their prison populations, with Maine's increasing by 11.5
percent and Rhode Island's rising 8.6 percent. The federal prisons
and almost all state corrections systems are over their capacities,
with 71,000 offenders serving their state or federal sentences
in local jails.
Other key points in the report:
As of last Dec. 31, there were 97,491 women in state or federal
prisons, or about 6.8 percent of all inmates and one in every
1,656 women. There were over 1.3 million male inmates, or about
one in 110 men.
About 10 percent of all black men between 25 and 29 were incarcerated
last year, compared with 1.2 percent of white men and 2.4 percent
of Hispanic men. Overall, the 586,700 black men in prison outnumbered
both the 436,800 white males and 235,000 Hispanic males. Black
males account for about 45 percent of all inmates serving a sentence
longer than a year.
Privately operated prisons held 93,771 inmates, about 5.8
percent of state prisoners and 12.4 percent of those in federal
jurisdictions.
At year's end 2002, the federal government held 8,748 people
at immigration detention facilities, 2,377 at military jails
and 16,206 in U.S. territorial prisons.
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