Pubdate: Thu, 18 Feb 2010 Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2010 Orlando Sentinel Contact: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/325 Note: Rarely prints out-of-state LTEs. REFORM FLORIDA'S SENTENCING LAWS A dormant advisory council must find ways to reform Florida's soft-headed sentencing laws. Whispered discontent over the skyrocketing costs of warehousing Florida's prison population has become a full-throated scream. Associated Industries of Florida last year called on lawmakers to stop spending millions on new prisons, and instead release thousands of nonviolent inmates nearing the ends of their sentences. Groups including the state Chamber of Commerce and TaxWatch have joined the powerful lobbying group in sounding the alarm. They say prison costs - now at $2.4 billion annually - are tunneling an ever-widening hole through Florida's budget. About the only group that hasn't explored sentencing reform is the one the Legislature and governor created in 2008 to do just that. But in fairness, that's only because the Correctional Policy Advisory Council has never met. Not once. For starters, the lapse willfully flouts state law. But for a commission that was expected to help steer the cash-strapped state toward solutions, ignoring that critical imperative is unpardonable. Just last year, the Coalition for Smart Justice, a statewide public-private partnership, warned state pols and Gov. Charlie Crist, "Without reform - [DOC's] 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." One road to change, it noted, would require Mr. Crist to "immediately implement" the Correctional Policy Advisory Council. It's now clear that "immediately" means something else in Tallahassee. The 2008 statute mandated the council hold quarterly meetings and issue annual reports of findings and recommendations. Yet, the News Service of Florida last week reported that the council hasn't convened a single time, hasn't offered a single suggestion, and hasn't issued a single report. In other words, it hasn't done anything. Apologists say the law failed to fund a research staff for the council. What myopic penny-pinching. Florida's prison population has nearly doubled from 53,000 in 1993 to 101,175 today. Annual costs since 1995 have soared nearly $1billion. Florida's perched near the national summit in prison spending while wallowing in the gutter on education spending. Over the next five years, the DOC is planning six new major facilities at about $100 million a pop. Critics say bulging prisons owe less to raging crime than tough-on-crime parole and sentencing that prohibits judicial discretion. Under "three-strikes" laws, for instance, nonviolent offenders face life sentences for carrying a few joints or filching a slice of pizza. Had the council convened, it might have encouraged state legislators to emulate Kansas and Texas, which have banked hundreds of millions in savings - without crime sharply increasing - by embracing a blend of community service and community supervision for nonviolent offenders. It might have offered proven interventions to reduce Florida's rate of nearly one in three felons returning to prison, such as trimming sentences of inmates who complete substance-abuse and other programs. And it might have proposed escalating sanctions for parole violators and other flexible sentencing options. As it stands, the Legislature may compel the council to meet. Excuse us if a move to enforce an already ignored mandate doesn't inspire our confidence. But the state can no longer wait for lawmakers to join the chorus seeking alternatives that keep Florida tough on crime and easier on taxpayers. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake