SOME POINTS ON COSTS
Your instructor claims that the philosophy, goals, and practice of prisons must
be re-examined. The bottom line is that they "don't work" in an efficient or
effect way. The following are a few of the MANY reasons on which he bases this
judgment:
PRISONS ARE EXPENSIVE
The average time-served in Illinois is about 19 months, and the prison stay
is about 15 months.
We currently spend over $187 BILLION on law enforcement in the united states).
(See: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/press/jeeus01pr.htm
Of this, about $200 for every person in the U.S. goes for state and local
corrections.
The average cost per prisoner in Illinois is estimated at about $22,627
annually. This is the TOTAL expenditures, not the the cost per institution.
ILLINOIS (2003) U.S. (2003 (est)
Annual cost: $1.05 Billion $56 Billion
Cost per month: $87 Million $4.7 Billion
Cost per day: $238,356 $12.9 million
Cost per hour: $9,931 $537,000
Cost per minute: $165 $8,950
Cost per second: $2.75 $26.4
ASK YOURSELF: If you could decrease correctional expenditures by just TEN
PERCENT, what could you do with the money to fight crime?
WE ARE BECOMING A CARCERAL SOCIETY
Your instructor argues that both the rate and numbers of imprisonment in our
society are cause for concern. The facts appear to support this view.
FROM THE DEPT OF JUSTICE:
The nation's combined federal, state and local adult correctional population
reached a new record of almost 6.9 million men and women in 2003, an increase
of 130,700 people since December 31, 2002, the Justice Department's Bureau of
Justice Statistics (BJS) announced today.
The correctional population of 6,889,800 includes people incarcerated in
prisons and jails as well as those on probation and parole. On June 30, 2003,
1,387,269 adults were incarcerated in federal and state prisons and 691,301
inmates in local jails. And as of December 31, 2003, 4,073,987 adults were on
probation - a period of supervision in the community following a conviction -
and 774,588 on parole - a period of conditional supervised release following a
prison term.
About 3.2 percent of the nation's adult population, or 1 in every 32 adult
residents, were incarcerated or on probation or parole in 2003. The adult
probation population grew by 49,920 men and women, slightly less than half the
average annual growth of 2.9 percent since 1995. The nation's parole population
grew by 23,654 men and women in 2003, or 3.1 percent, almost double the
average annual growth of 1.7 percent since 1995.
At the end of last year, the number of adults on probation or parole reached
a record high of more than 4.8 million, which was 70 percent of all persons
under federal, state or local correctional supervision. More than 1 million of
the nation's probationers and parolees were in Texas (534,260) and California
(485,039).
As of last December 31, more than half of the probationers were white, 30
percent were black, 12 percent were Hispanic and 2 percent were of other races.
Women comprised 23 percent of all adults on probation.
Illinois' prisoners have increased from about 17,100 in 1984 to about 43,100
in 2004 (note: Currently, the capacity level of Illinois' adult institutions
is under 35,000 according to IDOC).
The US leads the world in incarceration rates, with 455 (per 100,000 residents)
in prison or jail. About 25 percent of Black males between 27-30 are in prison
or have been in prison. A young black male is far more likely to go to prison
than to college.
THE QUESTION POSED: What can be done to reduce the prison population while
simultaneously keeping society safe and meeting punishment goals?