November 26, 2003 - Front Page, Statesman-Examiner (Colville,
WA)
Report Claims New Jail Imperative
Committee opts for $12 million facility
By Kathleen Boyd, S-E Staff Reporter
The issue of whether or not a new jail is needed in Stevens
County was discussed at a public meeting hosted by the Stevens
County Board of Commissioners.
The Detention Facility Needs Citizen Advisory Committee, made
up of residents from all areas of the county, has spent the last
15 months studying the Issue. They presented their formal recommendation
to the public at the Nov. 17 meeting.
The committee recommended building a $12 million dollar facility
which would be built to the south of the Courthouse and would
Incorporate a skybrldge that would connect to a renovated second
floor of the courthouse.
Those attending the meeting were met with a comprehensive
explanation of why the committee was formed. the data gathered
concerning costs of operation of both the present facility and
several alternatives, and the committee's recommendation for
a new facility. The inadequacies of the present jail were-also
detailed.
Need for changes obvious
The jail, which Is now housed In the basement of the courthouse,
has several pressing issues that need to be dealt with. According
to the study, the jail's narrow corridors, blind corners, tiny
cells and day rooms present an ever-present danger to corrections
officers dealing with inmates. The cramped quarters can lead
to aggressive behavior by Inmates and 10 of the 11 permanent
jail staff have been hurt while on duty. One female staff member
is on permanent disability because of injuries she suffered while
trying to help restrain an unruly inmate.
The cramped quarters also make It hard to recruit new corrections
officers, according to Corrections Chief Shane Moffitt.
Also, because of the lack of an outside exercise area, inmates
cannot be held for more than 90 days. This fact, along with the
chronic overcrowding of the present facility, which only holds
43 inmates, means that Stevens County spends over $250,000 a
year on out-of-county jail keep costs by sending prisoners to
Ferry and Spokane Counties.
Committee's recommendation
The option proposed by the committee would Incorporate a new
jail building that would accommodate 116 prisoners.
Stevens County Sheriff Craig Thayer feels that this option
would solve most of the problems of the current facility.
Not only would a new jail of this size be more than large
enough to hold current jail populations, it could potentially
generate future income by renting out cells to other counties,
Thayer said.
Other options studied by the committee spanned everything
from building a completely new Law and Justice Center which would
incorporate a new jail, sheriff's office, District and Superior
Courtrooms and related support space at a proposed cost of almost
$22 million dollars, to simply remodeling the existing jail into
a holding facility and contracting with other counties for jail
beds at a cost of approximately $2.5 million.
Opinions varied
Opinions from those attending the informational meeting ran
the gamut from outright objection to a new jail to full fledged
support.
Nora Callahan, who has worked for many years as the executive
director of the November Coalition to fight stiff drug sentencing,
felt that a new jail would keep judges from considering alternative
sentences.
"How much money are we going to spend on locking people
up when maybe we could consider some alternatives?" she
asked.
Also speaking against the new jail was defense attorney Helen
"Dee" Hokom. She said she felt that officials should
concentrate on the committee's stated goal of reducing incarceration
by 25 percent through sentencing alternatives such as electronic
home-monitoring and work release programs.
Unfortunately, according to Stevens County Prosecuting Attorney
Jerry Wetle, such alternatives are unrealistic. "In my opinion,
home monitoring is a joke," Wetle said. "If you look
at all the reasons that a home monitored offender can use to
legally leave their house, you will find that he or she could
be out every day. They can go to the doctor, to the grocery store,
to their counselor, to church...there are just so many loopholes.
"I am philosophically opposed to home monitoring. I don't
believe it's punishment. One of the reasons for sentencing someone
for breaking the law is to hold them accountable and make them
not want to break the law again. Incarceration does that, with
the embarrassment that goes along with being sent to jail, as
well as the misery of being locked up," Wetle said.
"I tell judges 'I'd rather you not sentence them at all
than to sentence them to home monitoring,'
"It just isn't punishment in my eyes," Wetle surmised.
"For this county to go to the expense and trouble of setting
up a home-monitoring system, I think, would lose money rather
than save it."
Welte also pointed out that most felony offenders would not
qualify for home monitoring or work release. According to statute,
an offender is only eligible for work release during the last
six months of his sentence. Even fewer would be eligible for
home-monitoring.
The current sentencing scheme in Washington State does not
allow the judge much discretion in the amount of time an offender
is sentenced to. In most cases, a judge must follow a strict
sentencing grid that stipulates a set sentencing range for each
crime, which is increased by their criminal history, if any.
There Is no alternative for the judge except to declare an exceptional
sentence, which most judges hesitate to do because an exceptional
sentence can be appealed while a sentence within the statutory
range cannot.
Other supporters
Barry Lamont, executive director of Rural Resources, said
there is far too little money for social intervention to prevent
crime, so a new jail Is a necessity. Marcus Mayor Fran Bolt said,
"It's just silly to expect that the current jail, which
was built when the county had 20,000 to 25,000 residents, is
adequate now that we have over 40,000."
Stevens County Commissioner Malcolm Friedman asked those present
to help generate support for the new jail. "Unlike schools,
jails are all negative," Friedman said, "It's all our
failure in society, and we're building a monument to it.
"But what we have downstairs is not upholding public
safety," Friedman continued, "so I'll do all that I
can."
Commissioners plan to hold another meeting In the next month
or two, according to commissioner Tony Delgado. "We just
can't let the fire die out," he said.
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