http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-catania22-2009feb22,0,7098709.story
From the Los Angeles Times
As California faces an order to reduce its
prison population by more than 55,000, an expert talks about
what the state should do before opening the cell doors.
Earlier this month, a panel of three
federal judges issued a tentative ruling that California must
reduce its state prison population by more than 55,000 to relieve
intense overcrowding and poor medical and mental health care.
If the order holds, the state will have to figure out how to
release prisoners on a scale never before seen.Joan Petersilia,
professor of criminology, law and society at UC Irvine and the
author of "When Prisoners Come Home," spoke about the ruling and
its potential effects with Opinion page contributor Sara
Catania. What follows is an edited transcript of their
conversation.
Is there a precedent for an early release of this magnitude?
Never on the scale we're talking about here. The most dramatic
example occurred in Illinois in the 1980s, when the state released
1,200 people early.
Did crime increase as a result?
No, but there are crucial differences in the circumstances of the
Illinois release and the proposed California release. In Illinois,
the total number of prisoners released was a fraction of what
we're looking at for California. The Illinois numbers were low
enough that if all the released prisoners were rearrested, it
probably wouldn't affect the state's overall reported crime rate.
Illinois also had some ability to limit releases to lower-level
offenders.
Do you think early release can work in California?
I'm in favor of early release at a lesser level. I think we could
safely release 15,000 to 18,000 prisoners. That would include very
low-level technical parole violators, the elderly and low-level
drug offenders. Nearly everyone who has studied this issue
recommends removing less serious parole violators from state
prisons.
How does the poor economy affect early release?
In two primary ways. First of all, whether you are conservative or
liberal, everyone agrees that we don't want to be spending $46,000
a year to house a prisoner who represents no public safety risk
when it takes about $12,000 a year to fund a really good
community-based program for that person.
Unfortunately, the services these former prisoners would need
revolve primarily around substance-abuse treatment, and those are
exactly the programs that are being cut. Limited early release is
a good idea, but it could not be happening at a worse time. Just
opening up prison doors and releasing 55,000 prisoners with no
preparation is harsh to the offender and dangerous to the public.
Is there an early release approach that might mitigate the
fallout?
Yes. In 1994, California's Legislature created the Community-Based
Punishment Act. It was never funded, but now people are talking
about reactivating it. Under the act, if you've got prison-bound
parole violators and you're willing to keep them locally rather
than sending them to state prison, you get a kickback from the
state to pay for programs to ease their reentry into society. This
approach could include short-term incarceration, intensive
supervision, house arrest with electronic monitoring, enrollment
in a work-release program, day reporting and mandatory
substance-abuse treatment.
In our prisons, the overcrowding crisis is caused by parole
violators returning to prison. Every year, we send some 70,000
parolees back to prison, about 30,000 of those from L.A. County
alone. Most serve two to three months. Everybody knows this
revolving door does not protect the public and in fact puts it at
greater risk. These are the lower-level people who may have been
in drug treatment, may have found a job and housing. When you send
them back to prison, you break those connections and destabilize
them. A few months later, they're back on the street and expected
to start all over again.
You recommend a far more limited early release than the one
being proposed. Is it possible to do the release right with four
times as many prisoners than you recommend?
No, not with the way California currently operates its prison and
parole system. If we start releasing prisoners in such high
numbers, those who are released are bound to include prisoners
with lengthy criminal histories and violence in their backgrounds.
The best way we can reduce the risk these more serious prisoners
represent is to transfer them from prison to intensive residential
reentry facilities, or perhaps to electronic monitoring and house
arrest. Once there, parole agents and community providers would
need to closely monitor the prisoners' behavior and try to
interest them in rehabilitation and work training. Simply
releasing this larger group of prisoners without the necessary
housing and services is asking for more crime.
Is anyone talking about how to pay for the community approach,
or are already overworked probation and parole officers just going
to have bigger caseloads?
There is a lot of discussion going on in Sacramento about how to
fund "intermediate sanctions" to be used instead of sending
someone back to prison. If a prisoner who violates parole, for
example, no longer returns to prison but remains in the community,
who is responsible for his surveillance and services? We can't
ignore their parole failures because often those failures are a
signal that the parolee is slipping. Other states have used
intermediate sanctions, such as those described in the
Community-Based Punishment Act. But in order to employ this model,
we have to provide money to counties to expand these types of
intermediate sanctions. If we can transfer the state prisoner to a
community-based program, we save money -- and perhaps more
important, provide services that might actually help the prisoner
stay out of crime in the long run -- which, of course, saves even
more money.
Even if early release went according to the best possible plan,
there will still be the same number of cells and the same level of
administration. Will there really be much in the way of savings
inside prisons?
No, we won't see any cost savings immediately. If prisoners are
released, the remaining prisoners will simply spread out so as to
not be as crowded, thereby satisfying the court's requirements.
Of the $46,000 we spend a year to house a prisoner in California,
$2,500 goes to food and clothing, $9,000 goes to healthcare and
$2,000 goes toward education and employment training to prepare
the inmate for release. That's a total of $13,500 per prisoner.
More than two-thirds of the cost of housing an inmate in
California goes toward security and operations, making the overall
cost of housing a prisoner in California the highest in the
nation. There are no plans to close prisons any time soon, so the
cost of running the prison system will remain rather unchanged for
quite some time.
If the early release order is enacted on the scale proposed,
there is a risk of a high level of recidivism, which carries a
hefty price tag. In the end, will any money be saved?
The key to all of this -- the real money -- is in the California
prisons, to the tune of $10 billion a year. If we're to solve the
state's prison crisis, we've got to figure out how to shift some
of that away from state prisons and into local programs. If we
don't, we're setting the system up for failure.
Without sufficient financial support, we're going to release these
people and they're going to fail. You'll wind up with another
victim, plus the cost of the prisoner's reincarceration. If we
don't do this right, all of these people will be back in prison.
We will have saved in the short term, but the long-term
consequences will be huge.