Pubdate: Mon, 31 Mar 2008
Source: Santa Maria Times (CA)
Copyright: 2008 Lee Central Coast Newspapers
Contact: http://www.santamariatimes.com/contact/letter/
Website: http://www.santamariatimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/396
Author: Gary Murray
Note: Gary Murray is a Santa Maria resident.

LOOKING AT NEGATIVES OF A N. COUNTY JAIL

It isn't always easy to see the long-range wisdom in  the actions of 
our county supervisors, but this time I  am simply amazed at the 
actions recently taken for a  North County detention center.

Apparently, no one has a clue how to cover the full  construction 
costs - let alone the ongoing costs - of a  large, modern jail, but 
we hurry now to build it  anyway. To what benefit?

If I understand this correctly, we are about to engage  in a 
questionable use of legal maneuvers to grab a  working piece of 
private property so we can apply to a  cash-strapped state for a 
grant we know will cover only  part of the initial costs, and none of 
the ever-increasing ongoing operating costs. And we are  doing this 
so we can get a 500-bed release center that  will be rotating 
prisoners into our city.

Who thinks this stuff up? Hint: It was probably not the  teachers who 
just got pink slips due to lack of  education funds.

History shows us that under-funded public projects are  often paid 
for with increased property taxes and  increased service costs. Big 
jails are very bright,  very loud and bring an unwelcome increase in 
traffic.  Despite the clamor from the sheriff about the need for  a 
new detention center, there is little apparent  benefit for Santa 
Maria citizens, and I believe our  on-going quality of life would be 
negatively affected  by this project.

A bit of research shows that an 800-bed jail facility  would, of 
necessity, be so bright that it would be the  brightest feature in 
the valley, very visible from  Highway 101. Kiss the night sky 
goodbye, if this is  built. You probably wouldn't be able to see the 
stars because of the light pollution.

Did you know jails and prison rehab/release centers are  also loud? 
Loudspeakers, bells and alarms would likely  change the quiet 
character of this valley forever.

In addition, the traffic from official vehicles to  daily visitors 
would burden local roads and add to the  increasingly poor air quality in town.

And has anyone asked how much ground water an 800-bed,  brightly 
fenced detention center would use?

Is there future facility expansion built into this  plan? Where is 
the benefit to Santa Maria?

Perhaps the benefit is in the release facility itself -  500 beds 
specifically for prisoners about to be  released back into society. 
Officials say 500 beds, but  no mention of how many times per year 
those beds are  rotated out. Will it be once per year, or up to four 
times per year? It is easy to se that 500 plus  prisoners released 
per year into our city is not going  to improve the quality of life here.

Given the recidivism in prisoner populations, it is not  hard to 
imagine our local crime rates soaring, as  parolees are released onto 
our streets.

Again, where is the benefit for Santa Maria?

What county supervisors appear to have approved is more  light 
pollution, noise pollution, traffic congestion,  under-funded 
construction costs, unfunded operating  costs, the potential for 
unknown environmental snags,  and the real possibility of increased 
crime in our  city. This should be stopped before going any further.

A story in this newspaper stated that our nation has  more people in 
prison than any other industrialized  country, and another article a 
few weeks ago said that  up to 80-85 percent of prisoners are in jail 
for drug  charges. Apparently we have filled the jails with the  drug 
war now, but if you look around, you see that  drugs are still 
everywhere. Perhaps we should rethink  that strategy.

Maybe we should take the money we throw at prisons and  fund more 
prevention programs and treatment centers.  Prisons apparently don't 
work to stop the problems, and  building one here certainly will not 
improve anything.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom