HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html 13 State Inmates Removed From Calhoun County Jail
Pubdate: Wed, 08 May 2002
Source: Anniston Star (AL)
Copyright: 2002 Consolidated Publishing
Contact:  http://www.annistonstar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/923
Author: Jason Landers
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)

13 STATE INMATES REMOVED FROM CALHOUN COUNTY JAIL

The Alabama Department of Corrections removed 13 state inmates Monday from 
the Calhoun County Jail, lowering the total number of state inmates in the 
jail from 75 to 62.

Based on the most current data available, the jail still holds the dubious 
distinction of housing more state inmates than any other county facility in 
the state. Much of its crammed inmate population still sleep four to a cell 
on mats tossed upon the concrete floor.

Tasked with overseeing a state prison system that also is bloated beyond 
capacity, the corrections department typically moves fewer than half the 
number of prisoners that it pulled from the county jail Monday. "I was 
pleasantly surprised that we had that many go unexpectedly," said Sheriff 
Larry Amerson, whose jail was built in 1986 to hold 260 inmates, but was 
holding 298 on Tuesday.

Corrections officials have conceded that space and infrastructure 
restraints are keeping the state from removing more.

The state could parole 11,000 of its current 26,000-inmate population and 
still remain at full prison capacity, acknowledged John Hamm, a corrections 
department spokesman.

Taxpayers in Calhoun County pay almost all the $24 per day associated with 
jailing a state prisoner here. That could change based on the outcome of a 
lawsuit counties have filed against the state. In that lawsuit, a retired 
judge has recommended the state pay counties $26 per day for each state 
prisoner and $2.16 million backpay for prisoners held beyond 30 days 
between Sept. 3, 2001, and April 16, 2002.

"If we got paid (the cost of housing the state inmates) we could hire more 
staff," Amerson said, referring to an inmate-to-jailer ratio that sometimes 
reaches 90:1. "We could obtain the resources and buy the supplies we need 
to take care of them (the inmates)."

Right now, the sheriff doesn't have enough money in his stretched budget to 
fix faulty electric locks that automatically seal connecting passageways. 
Jailers padlock doors overnight, which Amerson said could prove disastrous 
should a fire sweep through the facility's attic.

According to Amerson, there are a number of county jails across the state 
with additional space that would jump at the chance to hold state inmates 
if they were compensated for it.

Some progress has been made in the last nine days to relieve the strain of 
overcrowding on the Calhoun County Jail.

Hamm said 21 of the 210 state inmates uprooted from county jails since 
April 29 came from Calhoun County.

Bed space opens as prisoners are paroled.

Meetings between the Board of Pardons and Paroles, the corrections 
department and a representative of Gov. Don Siegelman occur weekly. The 
topic, says Pardons and Paroles Board Director Bill Segrest, "has always 
been the number of state inmates in county jails."

Since last summer, the state Board of Pardons and Paroles has held four 
days of hearings a week instead of the customary three to help reduce the 
overcrowding problem.

The extra day is set aside exclusively for parole hearings of non-violent 
offenders who exhibit good behavior, said Bill Segrest, director of the board.

A vast majority of these early parolees are drug offenders arrested for 
simple possession, said Segrest, who added that between 60-70 percent of 
these offenders are granted early parole.

He said the extra day has helped the board to parole a total of 774 
prisoners since Jan. 1. But it's uncertain how long the extra hearings will 
last. They are scheduled to end June 6.

Many officials blame past and current sentencing policies for the 
overcrowding in state and county prisons.

Those policies "have led to a mushrooming prison population, increasing 
from about 4,000 inmates in 1970 to over 27,000 in 2001," says the Alabama 
Sentencing Commission in the synopsis of its Jan. 7 initial report to the 
Legislature.

The state in the same time period grew from 3.4 million population to 4.4 
million, just a 29 percent growth in population compared with a 575 percent 
growth in prison population.

"This growth," the commission's report went on to say, "took place as 
Alabama adopted greater and greater punitive measures that 'sounded good' 
or appeared 'tough on crime' or appeared to correct inequities in existing 
practices. These measures have been passed without projecting their impact 
on either crime, the criminal justice system or Alabama's communities.

"Alabama was, therefore, unable to evaluate the effectiveness of the new 
laws or to adequately plan for the increases in prison bed space and other 
associated costs.

"Without changes in the way sentencing policies are adopted, the future 
offers no long-term relief."

The commission is tasked with developing a comprehensive discretionary 
sentencing plan, which could be available for legislators to mull over by 
the 2003 Legislative session.
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