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January 22, 2007

Michigan's Prison Spending Eats Large Hole in Budget

Michigan's prison spending eats large hole in budget

David Eggert / Associated Press
Sunday, January 21, 2007 http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070121/POLITICS/
701210308/1022

LANSING -- Some politicians are as wary of freeing prisoners as they
are of raising taxes.

But with Michigan facing a daunting $800 million-plus budget hole
this year, it's harder to ignore how much the state spends locking up
criminals.

States such as Illinois, Ohio and Pennsylvania have more residents
than Michigan but incarcerate fewer inmates. Michigan's per-capita
incarceration rate is the country's 11th-highest, ranks higher than
seven other Great Lakes states and is fourth-highest among the 11
most populous states.

"The easy thing is to say, 'Don't let anybody out,'" said state Sen.
Michael Switalski of Roseville, the top Democrat on the Senate
Appropriations Committee. "Then you've got to pay the bill. But we're
having trouble paying the bill."

About 1,500 more inmates are being housed in state prisons this year
than officials anticipated -- for a record-high total of more than
51,000.

Tom Clay, a budget guru with the nonpartisan Citizens Research
Council of Michigan, has given hundreds of talks about the state's
fiscal status in recent years. He says people are startled to learn
that Michigan spends more on prisons than public universities.

Clay said during a November conference that Michigan's annual prison
budget is $1.9 billion -- roughly a fifth of the general fund -- but
would be closer to $1.4 billion if the state's incarceration rate
wasn't 40 percent higher than that of its Great Lakes neighbors.

About 17,000 people, or one-third of all state employees, work for
the Corrections Department.

While Michigan was hardly alone in the nationwide "get-tough"
movement of recent decades, its crackdown on crime was harsher, says
Clay. Truth-in-sentencing laws passed in 1998 require offenders to
serve more of their sentence. Release rates for parolees also are
lower than 15 years ago, which means Michigan inmates are staying in
prison longer.

Clay notes that corrections is one of just two state departments
covered by the general fund whose spending is higher now than six
years ago. The other is the Community Health Department, which
provides health care for the poor.
Health care costs are rapidly rising throughout the entire state
budget and broader health reforms are needed at the national level,
but Michigan can directly reverse or slow prison spending, Clay says.

State officials agree.

"We're definitely going in the wrong direction," corrections
spokesman Russ Marlan said of a rise in prisoners the past two years,
which follows earlier declines. "We're not seeing communities that
are much safer. What are we getting for (higher spending)? That's
what we need to look at."

It's unclear what sort of changes, including major reforms, could be
proposed when Gov. Jennifer Granholm unveils her budget plan in early
February. But some legislators warn against closing prisons.

"When you let more bad people out on the streets, more people are
going to be less safe," said Sen. Alan Cropsey, a DeWitt Republican
who oversees the corrections budget. "Public safety has got to be No.
1, and (Patrick) Selepak proved that."

Selepak was mistakenly released from prison and killed three people
last February in Macomb and Genesee counties. Republicans criticized
Granholm and made it an issue in the Democratic governor's re-
election campaign.

Selepak is likely a big reason why the state is housing 3 percent
more inmates than expected in the budget year that started Oct. 1,
according to prison officials and others.

The state hadn't expected to reach 51,000-plus prisoners until
September 2008.
Selepak "made the Parole Board very gun-shy and extremely cautious
about any paroles," Switalski said.

Immediately after the Selepak slayings, the Michigan Parole Board
granted fewer requests for parole, and corrections officers sent more
parolees back to prison for violations.

"All it takes is one crazy getting out and performing some heinous
crime," Clay said. "If you're a politician, you're afraid you're
going to get blamed for it and chances are if you're a high-level
politician, you will be blamed."

Barbara Levine of the Citizens Alliance on Prisons and Public
Spending, a prisoner advocacy group, says many parole-eligible
inmates could be safely released today. The Parole Board should free
more prisoners at low risk of re-offending, along with sick and older
inmates and those denied parole under the so-called "life means life"
policy, she argues.

"The bottom line is we ought to start looking at other states,"
Levine said. "Our crime rates aren't different. There's simply no
evidence whatsoever that dropping parole rates has actually made
anybody safer."

An area that policymakers may re-examine is sentencing guidelines.
Judges are sending drug offenders and non-assaultive criminals to
prison at twice the rate that was projected when the guidelines
started in 1999, Marlan says.

Those offenders could instead serve jail terms or go on probation,
enter substance abuse programs, undergo drug testing and daily
monitoring, or wear electronic tethers -- less expensive options than
prison. The average annual cost to house a prisoner is about $32,000.

The state also wants to expand a program that aims to reduce the
number of released inmates returning to prison.

If Michigan brought its incarceration rate of 489 inmates per 100,000
residents closer to those of surrounding states, Clay and Levine say
it could save hundreds of millions of dollars.

"Maybe we need to be a little smarter on crime," Marlan said.

Posted by lois at January 22, 2007 09:17 AM

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