Albuquerque Journal

The staggering costs of imprisonme­nt in the U.S.

- Diane Dimond www.DianeDimon­d.com; e-mail to Diane@DianeDimon­d.com.

Guess how much our nation’s system of mass incarcerat­ion costs each year? I’m talking about the taxpayer-funded budgets of prisons, jails, probation department­s and the public employees who staff them. Add in the cost of running the criminal justice system; the amount spent on health care, food and incidental­s for inmates and the financial burden on families with a person in the system. Put all that together and guess how much we, collective­ly, spend on our system of imprisonme­nt in the United States?

It’s $182 billion a year. Let that sink in for a moment, at least $182 billion — each year, according to the criminal justice think tank PrisonPoli­cy.org. At a time when the nation’s crime rate is declining, except in a few major cities, the cost of incarcerat­ion is ever-increasing. Why is that?

Well, for one thing the criminal justice system does little to return improved citizens back into society. As a result, within five years of release the inmate recidivism rate is nearly 77%. We keep recycling many of the same defendants through the system. The taxpayer cost of providing public

defense lawyers, for example, totals about $4.5 billion a year.

Prisoner job training programs have increased in some facilities, but meaningful rehabilita­tion or mental health programs to help convicts cope with re-entry into society are still lacking. If more than two-thirds of ex-cons return to incarcerat­ion, then it is pretty clear we are simply warehousin­g human beings, hoping they will voluntaril­y embrace a non-criminal life upon release. Not very realistic, is it?

Another reason the system costs so much? The past practice of doling out long prison sentences resulted in today’s aging prison population that needs more costly and specialize­d geriatric medical attention. Research from the Vera Institute of Justice shows the cost of incarcerat­ing older convicts — more than $12 billion a year — is double that of housing younger inmates.

There are other reasons for the growingcos­ts. More than $5 billion is spent annually on constructi­on of new facilities and interest payments on that constructi­on.

Almost half the money spent on correction­s goes to pay the government employees who staff the jails, prisons, parole and probation system. They have a strong lobbying force that, according to the PrisonPoli­cy.org, “sometimes prevents reform and whose influence is often protected even when prison population­s drop.” Private prisons, by the way, house only about 8.5% of the U.S. inmate population.

Bail bond companies collect fees close to $1.4 billion annually from suspects and their families, money that is not nonrefunda­ble. When reforms to state’s cash-bail systems are proposed to protect the poor from being jailed while awaiting trial — a move N.M. voters approved in 2016 — the bail bond industry actively, and usually successful­ly, fights against any changes.

You may be surprised at the latest Department of Justice statistics from 2016 that show there are some 450,000 inmates sitting in county and city jails at any given time who have not been convicted of anything. Exact figures don’t exist, but experts agree the majority of those awaiting trial are behind bars because they were too poor to pay their bail. Might they also be a danger to the public? Maybe in some cases, but no one is keeping track of judge’s bail decisions, so an answer is elusive.

Families with a person in the system collective­ly pay out nearly $3 billion each year. For what? Well, if they want to stay in touch with a prisoner they pay specialize­d phone companies exorbitant fees — up to $25 dollars for a 15-minute phone call. These fees total about $1.3 billion each year. And because prisoners who work and earn money make, on average, less than a dollar a day, families kick in to help their loved ones buy necessitie­s like toothpaste, underwear, stamps or food products to supplement what they get from prison mess halls.

None of this is to say we should be soft on criminals, especially career criminals. But a quick review shows the long overdue need to change course. Offering inmates real life education opportunit­ies and coping programs could help ensure they don’t re-offend. Suggestion­s to “de-incarcerat­e” the infirm elderly and send them back to their families would substantia­lly decrease prison health care costs. Creating a more uniform and fair cash bail system and rewriting the rules for monopolist­ic prison vendors would go a long way toward a family’s ability to financiall­y help their incarcerat­ed loved one upon release.

The current system is bloated, largely ineffectiv­e and destined to cost more and more every year. With the prison population in decline there is no excuse to stick with the dysfunctio­nal status quo. Remember, it is your money that’s paying for it. To the tune of $182 billion a year.

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