H A R L A N R I C H A R D S
Wisconsin's Corrections Policies Are Both Costly and Ineffective
December 18, 2015
The Wisconsin Budget Project sponsored a study called "Prison Price Tag: The High Cost of Wisconsin's Correctional Policies," which compares Wisconsin's cost and effectiveness of its policies with those of neighboring states. In every area, Wisconsin comes up short. Here are some details from that report.
In 2013, Wisconsin's state and local government spent $1.5 billion on corrections - 12% more than the national average. Only 11 states spent a greater amount per state resident on corrections. Wisconsin outspent every neighboring state in per resident spending on corrections.
State Per capita Per capita
Spending incarceration
____________________________________________________________________________________
Wisconsin $259 780
Michigan 252 790
Minnesota 163 380
Illinois 157 700
Iowa 152 530
(the per capita incarceration is based on 2013 figures and represents how many citizens per 100,000 are imprisoned)
Much of the extra cost can be attributed to the fact that Wisconsin incarcerates a higher percentage of its population than all but one of the neighboring states (see above).
Wisconsin had to make sacrifices to grow its prison spending this much. When comparing expenditures from the 2003-05 and 2015-17 budgets (adjusted for inflation) Wisconsin has increased its spending on corrections by 7% while decreasing state support for K-12 schools by 14% and the state university system by 21%. This means lower quality public education which in turn leads to a greater likelihood of engaging in criminal activity which in turn leads to increased incarceration rates.
Harlan Richards/page two/December 18, 2015
One of the shocking facts contained in the study contained is that Wisconsin incarcerates a greater share of its black citizens than any other state - 12.8% (the next highest state is Oklahoma at 9.7% and the lowest state is Hawaii at 1.8%) (based on the 2010 census).
The report goes on to recommend 3 ways to reduce prison costs: 1) greater use of the Treatment Alternative and Diversion program (TAD), which will prevent people with mental health and addiction issues from being sent to prison; 2) stop revoking people on supervision for non serious rule violations; and, 3) remove barriers which prevent felons from getting a job.
You can find the report on the Wisconsin's Budget Project's website.
One discussion missing from the report and of great personal interest to me, is the mindless warehousing of all the old men and women who have been imprisoned for decades and no longer pose a threat to anyone. There are over 2,500 citizens still in prison under the old discretionary parole system, many which could be safely released immediately at a cost savings of millions of dollars.
I am one of those people I refer to. I have been in prison over 31 years for stabbing a man in self defense. I did not get a fair trial and although the Wisconsin court of appeals held I was denied a fair trial by use of erroneous jury instructions, I had to serve life in prison because I procedurally defaulted on my appeal.
I have been parole eligible for 20 years. I worked my way down to community custody status and worked in a factory in the community for 19 months. In 2010, I drove a state van unescorted over 30,000 miles throughout northwestern Wisconsin as I took men to and from their work release jobs.
In 2010, when Scott Walker become governor, I was returned to medium security based on my current offence and prior criminal record - where I remain to this day.
Wisconsin's correctional policies are an intentional ideologically-driven policy choice based on Scott Walker's conservative Republican agenda. In his world-view, it is better that a dozen innocent men languish in prison than one guilty one go free (or get out early).
H A R L A N R I C H A R D S
M E R R Y C H R I S T M A S
December 20, 2015
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