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Author Topic: AP Exclusive: Lawmakers Seek Prison Crowding Fix  (Read 771 times)
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« on: January 20, 2012, 05:11:51 PM »


AP Exclusive: Lawmakers seek prison crowding fix

Published January 20, 2012 | Associated Press

Lawmakers from both parties are seeking ways to reduce Illinois' growing prison population, and one has introduced legislation to restart a contentious program that let well-behaved prisoners out early.

Gov. Pat Quinn shut down the 30-year-old early release program after The Associated Press reported in 2009 that prison officials had implemented an unpublicized, accelerated version that was springing criminals in as little as eight days.

He has shown no interest in reviving it, but least one legislator is looking at it again as the prison population has grown by 3,000 inmates in two years. Meanwhile, a group of lawmakers is meeting with Quinn to find solutions more palatable to the governor and the public.

Conditions inside state prisons are "wretched," according to John Maki, executive director of the prison watchdog group John Howard Association. Monitoring visits to Illinois lockups in the past year have revealed inmates housed in gymnasiums, standing water in living quarters and rodent problems.

Illinois is not alone in trying to address prison crowding. An August report by the American Civil Liberties Union identified six states that have adopted laws in the past five years to decrease prison populations, with four more working on the issues. One of the more popular tacks among reform states is to expand good-conduct credit, including in Kentucky and Ohio just last year.

Prison advocates nationwide generally support early release as one solution to overcrowding, and Rep. Art Turner, D-Chicago, has introduced legislation that would restore Illinois' accelerated early-release program. But the governor previously has said he won't go along with that, even with new controls imposed by lawmakers, after problems with the program nearly cost him reelection in 2010.

Instead, Quinn's staff has been working with a group of legislators who plan to pick up the pace when the General Assembly resumes its work later this month. Some told the AP they hope to have a solution by the end of the spring session.

The group includes Rep. Dennis Reboletti, a law-and-order advocate who speaks of being "smart on crime" and advocates alternative sentencing, such as treatment for first- or second-time substance abusers.

"Put them into community-based programs with ankle bracelets, into treatment centers or halfway houses where they can get job counseling or programming to put them back into a productive life," the Elmhurst Republican said.

As of November, there were 48,620 people incarcerated in Illinois, 144 percent more than the 33,700 for which space was designed, according to the Corrections Department. But department officials now play down those numbers, saying "operational capacity" is about 51,200. That's after the agency began counting how many people a facility can actually hold, along with what it was designed to house.

For decades in Illinois, the director of the Corrections Department had the discretion to cut sentences with "meritorious good time," or MGT, by up to six months for an inmate who displayed good behavior behind bars.

But Quinn abandoned the practice in December 2009 after the AP reported that the agency secretly dropped an informal requirement that all incoming inmates serve 60 days behind bars before getting good-time credit in a plan dubbed "MGT Push." More than 1,700 inmates were released under that program, and some went on to commit more crimes.

Derrick King, for example, was sentenced to three years in prison for a brutal attack on a woman in 2008. He served about a year in county jail and 14 days in state prison before he was released in October 2009 under MGT Push and then arrested the next day on suspicion of assault and sent back to prison.

Lawmakers later put the 60-day minimum sentence requirement into law. An independent review of the accelerated early-release program determined the Quinn administration had failed to consider dangers to public safety in trying to save money and recommended it be reinstated with reforms.

Quinn has not said why his administration will not reinstate the program, although he said in October 2010 he was focusing on "alternative sentencing approaches." Spokeswoman Brooke Anderson confirmed he's working with the legislative group to "manage population numbers while continuing to incarcerate — for safety, rehabilitation, and punishment."

Along with Reboletti, the panel meeting with Quinn's staff about a solution includes Sen. Kirk Dillard, R-Hinsdale; Sen. Michael Noland, D-Elgin; and Rep. Michael Zalewski, D-Chicago. Each says he's open to options that keep the public safe but reduce the inmate population to make prisons safer and spare the state budget.

Dillard, a candidate for governor in 2010 and potentially again in 2014, said early release is not popular, given the shock of MGT Push.

"My constituents want people locked up," he said. "They're tired of people who still should be locked up in the penitentiary (out) committing crimes."

Nonetheless, he's open to ideas such as Reboletti's.

Turner's bill would reverse the new 60-day minimum prison sentence requirement and give the Corrections director discretion to release anyone who has served 60 days behind any bars, including in county jails. Turner did not return repeated calls and an email seeking comment.

Regardless of the method, something has to happen soon, Maki said.

At Vandalia prison in June, John Howard visitors found dirty, stagnant water pooling on the floor of inmates' living areas. One dormitory, Building 19, at Vienna prison in September had rodent droppings and inmates complained of mice and cockroaches. Windows on two floors were broken and birds had built nests inside.

"When you put nonviolent offenders in deplorable conditions you're not going to make this person better," said Maki, whose report blames Quinn and lawmakers who have cut corrections budgets. "Prisons are not typically uplifting places, but Building 19 was one of the most depressing things I've ever seen."

___

Online:

Turner's bill is HB3899: http://www.ilga.gov

Illinois Department of Corrections: http://tinyurl.com/7f2wv4p

John Howard Association: http://www.thejha.org/

ACLU prison reform report: http://tinyurl.com/3nuat86



Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/01/20/ap-exclusive-lawmakers-seek-prison-crowding-fix/print#ixzz1k2TuzLqu
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« Reply #1 on: January 20, 2012, 08:42:43 PM »

I suppose these deplorable living conditions are reserved for violent offenders.  It's common knowledge that a third of all (nonviolent prison) inmates return to prison for new or recurring offenses and/or parole violations.  There are so many that would walk on the right path if given the chance.  It's sad that a certain classification affects so many.  The system isn't working and it's not on Quinn's priority list. 
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« Reply #2 on: January 20, 2012, 10:28:59 PM »

Please, write to your State Representatives and ask them to support this bill. I just did.......
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« Reply #3 on: January 20, 2012, 10:29:49 PM »

If you don't know who your Representative is, go here and look it up by your address:

http://www.elections.il.gov/DistrictLocator/DistrictOfficialSearchByAddress.aspx
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« Reply #4 on: January 20, 2012, 10:42:25 PM »

It's refreshing to see that both sides of the party lines are working together to solve this issue! I really hope that Gov. Quinn takes a long hard look at this, if not, maybe he should be locked up to change his mind ?????? LOL
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« Reply #5 on: January 20, 2012, 11:57:32 PM »

This has been 18 months of eye-opening information for me! It has been my first experience with prison having never known anyone before who had been incarcerated.  Wow.  The most incredible thing to me is that non-violent offenders are housed with very violent ones!  I just read about an Aurora man who received another life sentence for killing his cellmate in his sleep!  The cellmate was a petty thief who was very close to being released!  The prison moved him into that cell knowing full well that the violent inmate was one of the worst in the prison!  How do people sleep at night knowing this is going on?
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« Reply #6 on: January 21, 2012, 12:06:26 AM »

at least this article gave me a "glimmer" of hope... Not holding my breath but it is a step in the right direction
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« Reply #7 on: January 21, 2012, 12:16:40 AM »

That's the way I feel. I keep in mind We still got a 1yr and 7 months but I keep the hope there ,but neither of us is counting on it at all.
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« Reply #8 on: January 21, 2012, 11:16:26 AM »

Here is a picture inside Vandalia showing the guys in one of the dorms.  This picture is part of the article posted above.


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« Reply #9 on: January 21, 2012, 01:42:37 PM »

2004? Long before any overcrowding....that looks like a chow hall...not a dorm room...
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« Reply #10 on: January 21, 2012, 02:11:37 PM »

Aren't those bunks on the left and right side in the background?
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« Reply #11 on: January 21, 2012, 03:40:56 PM »

since I am using this site through my phone I dont get to see the pics :( And my man is in Vandalia
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« Reply #12 on: January 21, 2012, 05:11:25 PM »

Vandalia photo really old.... There is an inmate smoking a cigarette!
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« Reply #13 on: January 21, 2012, 06:20:05 PM »

Yes, I caught the cigarette before I even read how old the Picture was.
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« Reply #14 on: January 22, 2012, 03:30:30 PM »

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) - Illinois prisons have 15,000 more inmates than they were designed to hold, but the Department of Corrections says the population is within the prisons' "operational capacity," even as some inmates are held in non-traditional areas, such as gymnasiums. The chart below shows the population for each correctional center, excluding adult transition centers.
   Correctional Center    CurrentPopulation    Operational Capacity    Design Capacity    Pct over Design
Big Muddy River (Ina)    1,922    1,938    952    202%
Centralia    1,534    1,571    950    161%
Danville    1,827    1,866    896    204%
Decatur (female)    692    719    500    138%
Dixon    2,335    2,552    1,430    163%
Dwight (female)    1,008    1,212    684    147%
East Moline    1,219    1,268    688    177%
Graham    1,896    2,010    1,174    161%
Hill (Galesburg)    1,840    1,867    896    205%
Illinois River (Canton)    2,041    2,096    1,011    202%
Jacksonville    1,571    1,625    1,100    143%
Lawrence (Sumner)    2,303    2,445    2,257    102%
Lincoln (female)    1,007    1,018    500    201%
Logan (Lincoln)    1,973    2,033    1,074    184%
Menard (Chester)    3,619    3,739    3,098    117%
Pinckneyville    2,464    2,515    2,434    101%
Pontiac    1,710    2,152    1,800    95%
Robinson    1,196    1,225    600    199%
Shawnee (Vienna)    2,018    2,067    1,046    193%
Sheridan    1,606    1,710    1,304    123%
Southwestern (East St. Louis)    700    708    600    117%
Stateville (Joliet)    3,625    3,868    3,162    115%
Tamms    397    753    700    57%
Taylorville    1,197    1,221    600    200%
Vandalia    1,720    1,784    1,100    156%
Vienna    1,899    1,887    925    205%
Western Illinois (Mount Sterling)    2,041    2,123    1,102    185%
   Total    47,360    49,972    32,583    145%
-Design capacity reflects the number of inmates the facility was originally built to house.
Source: Illinois Department of Corrections:
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« Reply #15 on: January 22, 2012, 05:04:53 PM »

Centralia, Big Muddy, Vandalia Prisons Among Overcrowded in State
1/22/12 @ 1:55:27 pm


All three State Correctional facilities in the area are housing well over the number of prisoners they were designed to handle.  The Centralia Correctional Center currently has 1,534 inmates, 161 percent over the design capacity of 950.  The Big Muddy Correctional Center at Ina has 1,922 inmates, 202-percent of the design capacity population of 952.  The Vandalia Correctional Center has 1,720 inmates, 156-percent of the design capacity of 1,100.  Statewide, Illinois prisons have 15,000 more inmates than they were designed to hold.  The Department of Corrections say even though all the prisons are well over their design capacity, they are within the prisons' "operational capacity" even as some inmates are held in non-traditional areas such as gymnasiums.

Meanwhile, some Illinois lawmakers have been meeting with the Governor's staff in hopes of coming up with a way to address prison overcrowding by the end of the spring session.  They include alternatives to incarceration, such as treatment instead of prison for low-level drug offenders.  A spokesperson for Governor Pat Quinn says he is working with lawmakers for'safe, sustainable prisons'.  The prison population has grown by seven percent in two years, since Democratic Governor Pat Quinn shut down an early release program for good conduct after the AP reported a secret plan that pushed inmates out even faster.  Some of those released under the program committed more crimes.   48,620 are currently incarcerated in the state's prison system.

http://www.wjbdradio.com/?f=news_single&id=31241
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« Reply #16 on: January 22, 2012, 05:51:21 PM »

They may come up with something but in all reality I really dont think the good time will come back as long as quinn is in office. It may surprise me and I hope that it does.
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« Reply #17 on: January 22, 2012, 07:37:01 PM »

lovinhim11... I feel the very same but there is always that hope! They have to do something before we get like California... I just cant believe they have let it get so bad already! Could you imagine Quinn not doing anything til 2014??? I really hope our next Gov has a lot more comman sense... Its time for drastic change in Illinois
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