Pubdate: Sun, 03 Dec 2006
Source: Times, The (Gainesville, GA)
Copyright: 2006 Gainesville Times
Contact:  http://www.gainesvilletimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2701
Author: Stephen Gurr, The Times

IS GEORGIA'S PRISON POPULATION GROWING?

Statistics Show 1 In 15 Adults In Georgia Is Under  Correctional
Supervision

Much has changed in Georgia's prison system since Terry  Barnard was a
freshman state lawmaker in 1994.

Back then, the state had about 24,000 prisoners and a  corrections
budget of $400 million.

But in the wake of stiff crime bills, mandatory  sentences and a
general public approval of getting  tough on crime, that budget has
ballooned to almost $1  billion. There are now more than 53,000
inmates in  Georgia's prison system, with another 166,000 on
probation or parole.

A U.S. Department of Justice report released this week  revealed that,
as of December 2005, one in every 32  adult Americans is under some
form of correctional  supervision. But in Georgia, that number now is
one in  15.

"It doesn't sound very good," allowed Barnard,  R-Glennville, chairman
of the House State Institutions  and Property Committee.

"I wish that number was much lower. It is a sad  commentary that so
many people are locked away in  Georgia. But they didn't get there for
any other reason  than they broke the law and a judge and jury made
the  decision that they needed to spend some time away."

Georgia, with the ninth-largest population in the  United States, now
ranks fifth in prison population,  passing Michigan last year.

State corrections officials balked when the Justice  Department report
claimed Georgia had seen a 4 percent  decrease in prisoners in the
past year. Georgia  Department of Corrections spokeswoman Yolanda
Thompson  said that figure was incorrect.

"During fiscal year 2006, we had a major increase in  prison
population, by 9.4 percent," she said. "Our  population has steadily
increased over the past 18  years, and continues to increase."

Bureau of Justice Statistics spokesman Stu Smith said  he was unaware
of the discrepancy.

"We get our numbers from state officials," he said.

Kara Gotsch, director of advocacy for the Washington,  D.C.-based
Sentencing Project, says Georgia's high  incarceration rate is
creating problems for the  African-American communities from which
many of the  inmates come.

More than 60 percent of Georgia prisoners are black, a  statistic that
Gotsch calls "staggering," considering  that blacks make up only 28
percent of the state's  population.

With many of its men locked up, "the collateral  consequences of
incarceration has an impact on  communities," Gotsch said. "These
black men are  missing, and it has a direct impact on the children in
these neighborhoods."

Gotsch blames the U.S. prison boom on the war on drugs  and mandatory
minimum sentences that have effectively  taken discretion out of the
hands of judges. She says  the high rate of recidivism -- about
two-thirds of all  prisoners will re-offend within three years of
their  release -- is an indication of a justice system that  fails to
provide adequate support after imprisonment  and bars opportunities
for convicted felons.

"There's a black mark put on anyone leaving the prison  system," she
said. "Many of them can't find jobs; they  can't find housing. The
cards are stacked against  them."

And the number of those out on probation is growing. In  Hall County,
there are about 2,000 felony probationers,  according to Kim O'Neil,
manager of the county's state  probation office. O'Neil has a staff of
10 probation  officers to handle that caseload.

"We see the bulk of those each month," she said. "At  the end of the
month we are slammed. The parking lot is  full. We stay busy."

Women, too, are contributing to the inmate population  growth. While
traditionally a small part of the prison  population, the number of
female inmates has increased  by 2.6 percent nationally since 2005,
according to the  Justice Department. In Georgia, the female prisoner
population grew by more than 28 percent in the past  year, from 2,763
to 3,553.

And the demographics of the female population is  changing as it
grows, Thompson said.

In October 2005, 49.2 percent of female prisoners were  white. Today,
the majority of women in Georgia prisons  are white -- 53.5 percent.

"You see how meth is impacting the system," Thompson  said, referring
to a drug that is consumed more by  whites than blacks. "Part of what
is driving the  increase of women in the prison system is the
methamphetamine epidemic. And more women across the  board are
committing more serious offenses."

Barnard believes citizens are in favor of the  billion-dollar
corrections budget that has come as the  result of tough crime bills.

"When you get tough like that, it's going to cost," he  said. "But to
this day, I have not had a constituent  call me and say we're spending
too much on  corrections."

Gotsch, of the Sentencing Project, believes the public  would favor
alternatives to prison for nonviolent  offenders and thinks the
government should re-assess  what constitutes a felony.

"If someone possesses drugs because they're a drug  user, that's not a
criminal justice issue, that's a  public health issue," she said.

Barnard said lawmakers are open to sentencing  alternatives for some
nonviolent offenses, but said  it's wrong to dismiss drug offenses as
victimless  crimes.

"You can't take them as not being serious," he said.

Ultimately, he said, the citizens of Georgia dictate  the policy, and
for now at least, that policy is one of  "locking people up and
keeping them locked up for a  good long time," Barnard said.

"There may come a time when that changes, but what I  hear is we've
got to continue to do more to make sure  that we're safe," Barnard
said.
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