Porterville Recorder

California’s giant water tunnels win first crucial approval

- By DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO — The cost of imprisonin­g each of California’s 130,000 inmates is expected to reach a record $75,560 in the next year, enough to cover the annual cost of attending Harvard University and still have plenty left over for pizza and beer.

The price for each inmate has doubled since 2005, even as court orders related to overcrowdi­ng have reduced the population by about one- quarter. Salaries and benefits for prison guards and medical providers drove much of the increase.

The result is a per-inmate cost that is the nation’s highest and $2,000 above tuition, fees, room and board, and other expenses to attend Harvard.

Gov. Jerry Brown’s spending plan for the fiscal year that starts July 1 includes a record $11.4 billion for the correction­s department while also predicting that there will be 11,500 fewer inmates in four years because voters in November approved earlier releases for many inmates.

Since 2015, California’s per-inmate costs have surged nearly $10,000, or about 13 percent. New York is a distant second in overall costs at about $69,000.

Critics say with fewer inmates, the costs should be falling.

“Now that we’re incarcerat­ing less, we haven’t ramped the system back down,” said Chris Hoene, executive director of the left-leaning California Budget & Policy Center.

For example, the correction­s department has one employee for every two inmates, compared with one employee for roughly every four inmates in 1994.

California was sued for overcrowdi­ng, and to comply with a federal court-imposed population cap, the Brown administra­tion now keeps most lower-level offenders in county jails instead of state prisons. Additional­ly, voters in 2014 reduced penalties for drug and property crimes and last fall approved the earlier releases.

Republican state Sen. Jim Nielsen said reformers falsely promised a “prison dividend” from savings related to the changes. Instead, there’s now an uptick in many crimes and he’s worried it will lead to an influx of new inmates that will cost more to house.

Joan Petersilia, co-director of the Stanford Criminal Justice Center, said it was “highly predictabl­e” that per-inmate costs would increase even as the population decreased.

“We released all the low-risk, kind of lowneed and we kept in the high-risk, high-need,” she said.

California is not alone. The Vera Institute of Justice, a New York Citybased reform group, said California is one of 10 states that reduced its inmate population only to see prison spending rise.

California Department of Finance spokesman H.D. Palmer said the state faces unique pressures, including federal oversight of prison health care that has driven up costs and remote prisons that are more expensive to operate.

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