Corrections Budget Cuts
the Denver Post The cuts that took effect Tuesday call for the release of 3,500 of the 23,000 inmates over two years, saving the state about $45 million, Department of Corrections spokeswoman Katherine Sanguinetti said. An additional 2,600 parolees, or 21 percent of those currently on parole, will be released from intense supervision. Prisoners eligible for early release are those within six months of their mandatory release date. Those eligible for early parole release must have served at least half of their supervised term. Sex offenders do not qualify. Other offenders, including those who committed violent crimes, will undergo more rigorous reviews. No staff members are being cut. Money will be saved by reducing the number of inmates sent to private prisons, Sanguinetti said. In addition to early release, the state is implementing several recommendations by the Colorado Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice aimed at helping inmates find housing and jobs and get substance abuse treatment. "Predominantly, it's nonviolent offenders," Adams County Attorney Don Quick, a member of the commission, said about the types of inmates considered for early release. "When it comes to public safety, warehousing is only good for as long as they are in custody. We need to start trying to decrease the risk factors," he said. Colorado Attorney John Suthers, another member of the commission, disagreed with the plan. "An undetermined number of Coloradans will be victimized as a result of these early releases," he said. The governor's office says more than 50 percent of released prisoners return to prison within three years. Reform groups say most return for technical parole violations as they struggle to find housing and jobs with a felony conviction on their record. "It's very expensive to be on parole," said Christie Donner, executive director of prison reform group Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition. "You have to pay for the drug classes at up to $50 a class, a drug screen that costs up to $15, an additional phone line if you're on an ankle bracelet." That's in addition to restitution, fines and fees, she said. Across the country, 23 states have slashed their prison budgets this year, with some releasing prisoners early, according to research by the Vera Institute of Justice. While cutting overall corrections budgets, some states are spending money on reforms aimed at preventing repeat offenders.
DENVER—Colorado officials plan the early release of 15 percent of inmates in state prisons to help slash $320 million from the state budget.
3 comments:
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Very well said, Ahma Daeus! Will do! Thank you!
Wake up and smell the coffee.....our entire judicial system is "for profit". If you think otherwise, you have your head buried in the sand, and I have some beachfront property in Arizona I'd like to talk to you about.
My question is if we need to release inmates early and i think we should, why does it have to take two years??? Why not call the inmates relatives and have them pick them up at the prison. There is no public safety issue when releasing non violent offenders early. The relative will give the inmate housing and help them find a job.djw
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