Pubdate: Fri, 26 Jun 2009 Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL) Copyright: 2009 The Gainesville Sun Contact: http://www.gainesville.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/163 FOR SMART JUSTICE Gov. Charlie Crist recently signed a bill that gives the state the option of exporting inmates to out-of-state prisons in the event that Florida's own penal system gets too crowded. Call it the out-of-sight, out-of-mind bill. Whatever you call it, it's a terrible idea. It diffuses state accountability and it hinders rehabilitation by removing prisoners ever further from the possibility of contact with family members. Here's a better idea. Stop investing in new prison cells and start investing in things that will keep people out of prisons: Job training, mental health counseling, substance abuse treatment and the like. This week an impressive coalition of criminal justice professionals wrote a letter to Gov. Charlie Crist calling for a "bold and serious conversation about justice reform." Among those who signed the letter were three former Florida attorneys general; Jim Smith, Bob Butterworth and Richard Doran, as well as former corrections chief James McDonough. The group asked Crist to activate a Correctional Policy Advisory Council (already authorized by law) to examine ways to reduce the state's prison population by employing a variety of treatment and rehabilitation programs. "At a time when Florida is in serious recession and facing a deep state budget crisis, the $2 billion-plus (corrections) budget ...has grown larger; and without reform that budget will continue to grow at a pace that crowds out other mission-critical state services such as education, human service needs and environmental protection," the letter from the group, which has dubbed itself the Coalition for Smart Justice, stated. It warned that failing to act will result in "too many non-violent individuals being incarcerated, too many prisons needing to be built at astounding public cost, too many young people moving from the juvenile justice system into the adult justice system." Former Monroe County Sheriff J. Allison DeFoor II, a member of the coalition, told the Miami Herald this week: "I can flatly tell you that 75 percent of the people in the system - probably more than that - - have substance abuse and psychological problems." Butterworth put it even more succinctly: Spending billions to incarcerate drug addicts and mental health patients is "nuts," he told the Herald. "There's just got to be a better way." Corrections remains one of Florida's few "growth industries," but it is ultimately an unsustainable one. The fact that the state has now given itself the option of exporting surplus prisoners elsewhere is a damning admission that the state's "lock-em-up-and-throw-away-the-key" mind-set toward criminal justice is doomed to failure. The Coalition for Smart Justice has challenged Gov. Crist and the Florida Legislature to find another way. Will Tallahassee accept that challenge? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake