Pubdate: Tue, 15 Aug 2006 Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC) Copyright: 2006 Asheville Citizen-Times Contact: http://www.citizen-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/863 JAILS ARE THE NEW GROWTH INDUSTRY The cost of keeping people in jail adds up. Consider: The Buncombe County Jail, which opened 10 years ago cost taxpayers about $14 million to build. The budget approved by the county Board of Commissioners includes $4.5 million to open and operate a new addition to the jail, scheduled to be completed in February. The jail and jail annex are designed to hold 356 people. The new addition will increase capacity by 248 beds. That totals 604 beds and should be sufficient for about a year to a year and a half after the addition is completed, said Bill Stafford, county construction project director and former jail administrator. That means another addition will be needed before long. The average daily inmate population in Buncombe County rose from 294 in 2001 to 442 in 2005, a 50 percent increase. Female prisoners contributed much of the growth. Until the addition is completed, Buncombe must make arrangements with nearby counties to house prisoners for whom it has no room. The cost to Buncombe County taxpayers: $40 per day per inmate. Factors contributing to the inmate explosion include population growth, more drug trafficking arrests, more defendants who are financially unable to post bond and more people in jail for violating domestic violence protection orders, according to District Attorney Ron Moore. Population growth is inevitable, and we're all for stricter laws and aggressive enforcement when it comes to drug trafficking and domestic violence. But something's wrong with this picture. Far too many people are ending up in county jails. And it isn't just Buncombe County. Local jails nationwide held 747,529 prisoners, up from 621,149 five years earlier, according to Bureau of Justice statistics. Since 1995, the nation's jail population on a per capita basis climbed 31 percent. What's wrong begins long before the overcrowded court system finds itself dealing with drug dealers and prostitutes and vicious spouses. It starts with young people who grow up without learning the skills they need to earn a living, to manage their finances, to resolve conflict peacefully, to find gratification in their accomplishments and service to others. In some cases, it starts with young people who suffer from undiagnosed mental or emotional problems. The number appears to be increasing, not only numerically but as a percentage of the population, as well. The overcrowded jail is just a symptom of a larger problem, and it's one that should cause us and our leaders to do some soul-searching. Would it not be better from almost every point of view to spend more money identifying youngsters who are in need of serious help and providing that help than to wait for them to grow into mal-adjusted adults who will cost society far more in the long run? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake