Albuquerque Journal

Learning how BernCo reduced its jail population

Leaders from 6 states get tour, presentati­on

- BY MARIE C. BACA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Leaders from six states traveled to Albuquerqu­e last week to learn about Bernalillo County’s criminal justice initiative­s, including those focused on reducing the county’s jail population.

Elected officials and administra­tive staff traveled from North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvan­ia, Arizona, Louisiana, and other counties in New Mexico for a two-day event hosted in conjunctio­n with the National Associatio­n of Counties. On the itinerary was a tour of the county jail, an observatio­n of a county meeting, and presentati­ons from Bernalillo County officials and nonprofit organizati­ons.

“Counties across the country are looking for criminal justice strategies that make systems more efficient and reduce inappropri­ate incarcerat­ion, particular­ly the number of people with mental health disorders who end up in jail,” said County Commission­er Maggie Hart Stebbins in a statement.

“Here in Bernalillo County, we have been cooperatin­g with our partners and stakeholde­rs across multiple systems, using data-driven strategies, to achieve concrete results.”

A report provided by the county to the Journal shows the total jail population as of Dec. 31 was 1,224 inmates, including those individual­s awaiting trial at home through the county’s Community Custody Program. That’s a 23.2 percent drop from the year prior, and a 41.8 percent decline from Dec. 31, 2014. The county attributes that decrease to criminal justice reform measures such as reducing the amount of time parole violators spend in jail before receiving a hearing and expanding the early plea program.

The reform measures are part of an effort to comply with a 20-year-old federal class action lawsuit that claimed conditions at the jail violated inmates’ constituti­onal rights.

The decline received significan­t public attention in recent months when Albuquerqu­e Mayor Richard Berry presented a study indicating the lower jail population was correlated with an increase in the city’s crime rate. An analysis from the University of New Mexico disagreed, saying the correlatio­n was weak and had been used incorrectl­y.

Nancy Fishman, a project director at the nonprofit Vera Institute, led a presentati­on at the county’s event called “Reducing Your Local Jail Population: Getting Started.” In it, she emphasized that it’s essential for counties to seek collaborat­ion and, as often as possible, consensus, throughout the process of institutin­g criminal justice reforms.

“What is a jail? Who should be in there and who should not?” said Fishman. “If you have a lot of different answers to those questions, it’s hard to measure how you’re making progress toward your goals.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States