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Prison Spending Outpaces All
but Medicaid
By SOLOMON MOORE
Published: March 2, 2009
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/03/us/03prison.html?_r=1
One in every 31 adults, or 7.3 million Americans, is in prison,
on parole or probation, at a cost to the states of $47 billion
in 2008, according to a new study.
Prison Boom
Criminal correction spending is outpacing budget growth in
education, transportation and public assistance, based on state
and federal data. Only Medicaid spending grew faster than state
corrections spending, which quadrupled in the past two decades,
according to the report Monday by the Pew Center on the States,
the first breakdown of spending in confinement and supervision
in the past seven years.
The increases in the number of people in some form of
correctional control occurred as crime rates declined by about
25 percent in the past two decades.
As states face huge budget shortfalls, prisons, which hold 1.5
million adults, are driving the spending increases.
States have shown a preference for prison spending even though
it is cheaper to monitor convicts in community programs,
including probation and parole, which require offenders to
report to law enforcement officers. A survey of 34 states found
that states spent an average of $29,000 a year on prisoners,
compared with $1,250 on probationers and $2,750 on parolees. The
study found that despite more spending on prisons, recidivism
rates remained largely unchanged.
Pew researchers say that as states trim services like education
and health care, prison budgets are growing. Those priorities
are misguided, the study says.
“States are looking to make cuts that will have long-term
harmful effects,” said Sue Urahn, managing director of the Pew
Center on the States. “Corrections is one area they can cut and
still have good or better outcomes than what they are doing
now.”
Brian Walsh, a senior research fellow at the
conservative-leaning Heritage Foundation, agreed that focusing
on probation and parole could reduce recidivism and keep crime
rates low in the long run. But Mr. Walsh said tougher penalties
for crimes had driven the crime rate down in the first place.
“The reality is that one of the reasons crime rates are so low
is because we changed our federal and state systems in the past
two decades to make sure that people who commit crimes,
especially violent crimes, actually have to serve significant
sentences,” he said.
Over all, two-thirds of offenders, or about 5.1 million people
in 2008, were on probation or parole. The study found that
states were not increasing their spending for community
supervision in proportion to their growing caseloads. About $9
out of $10 spent on corrections goes to prison financing (that
includes money spent to house 780,000 people in local jails).
One in 11 African-Americans, or 9.2 percent, are under
correctional control, compared with one in 27 Latinos (3.7
percent) and one in 45 whites (2.2 percent). Only one out of 89
women is behind bars or monitored, compared with one out of 18
men.
Georgia had 1 in 13 adults under some form of punishment; Idaho,
1 in 18; the District of Columbia, 1 in 21; Texas, 1 in 22;
Massachusetts, 1 in 24; and Ohio, 1 in 25.
Peter Greenwood, the executive director of the Association for
the Advancement of Evidence Based Practice, a group that favors
rehabilitative approaches, said states started spending more on
prisons in the 1980s during the last big crime wave.
“Basically, when we made these investments, public safety and
crime was the No. 1 concern of voters, so politicians were
passing all kinds of laws to increase sentences,” Mr. Greenwood
said.
President Bill Clinton signed legislation to increase federal
sentences, he said.
“Now, crime is down,” Mr. Greenwood said, “but we’re living with
that legacy: the bricks and mortar and the politicians who feel
like they have to talk tough every time they talk about crime.”
Mr. Greenwood said prisons and jails, along with their powerful
prison guard unions, service contracts, and high-profile
sheriffs and police chiefs, were in a much better position to
protect their interests than were parole and probation officers.
“Traditionally, probation and parole is at the bottom of the
totem pole,” he said. “They’re just happy every time they don’t
lose a third of their budget.”
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