Pubdate: Sat, 16 Jul 2005
Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY)
Copyright: 2005 Lexington Herald-Leader
Contact:  http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240
Author: Brett Barrouquere, Associated Press

JAILS A RAPIDLY GROWING EXPENSE, AUDITOR SAYS

In Some Counties, They Use Up 20% Of Budget, Luallen Says

LOUISVILLE - Kentucky's county jails are a rapidly growing expense 
eating up increasing amounts of local resources, state Auditor Crit 
Luallen said Thursday.

Luallen, speaking to a gathering of county executives in Louisville, 
said some counties are contributing as much as 20 percent of their 
general funds to jails. The crisis has reached grave proportions in 
some areas with the state taking over jail management or advising 
closure of some facilities, Luallen said.

"Jail expenditures are a rapidly growing component of county budgets, 
and many simply cannot remain financially viable without an 
ever-growing infusion of precious county resources -- resources that 
could be used for many other services for taxpayers," Luallen said.

Luallen used the speech to the Kentucky County Judge/Executives, 
Magistrates and Commissioners Convention to announce an expanded 
audit of county jails. Luallen's office is sending a survey to 
jailers and county executives in an attempt to measure the scope of 
the jail funding problem, the auditor said.

The survey is 201 questions for counties with working jails. A 
shorter version is going to counties without jails. The surveys cover 
more than a dozen areas, including total medical expenditures and 
what portion is paid by the counties, meal expenses per inmate and 
jail phone services.

The results, which will be presented to the 2006 General Assembly, 
will break down each county's expenses and compare them with those of 
other counties in the state, Luallen said.

"You will be able to see exactly what you are getting for what you 
are paying," Luallen said.

Jailers will get preliminary results in December at the Kentucky 
Jailers Association conference at Barren River State Park.

Lt. Gov. Steve Pence told the gathering that some things are being 
done to help lower the jail population. Pence cited efforts at 
providing drug rehabilitation to inmates as a way to keep inmates 
from returning to the prison system.

"As long as they're sitting in there, let's give them treatment," Pence said.

Pence said programs such as Alcoholics Anonymous cause the 
repeat-offender rate among inmates to fall into the single digits, as 
opposed to as high as 30 percent among untreated inmates.

"It's hard to argue with those statistics," Pence said.
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MAP posted-by: Beth