>Users:   login   |  register       > email     > people    


A prescription for city jails
By STLtoday.com
Published: 06/08/2009

We have some prescriptive points to make in the wake of the arrests Thursday of three city corrections officers on federal charges of attempting to supply heroin to an inmate at the City Justice Center.

But first, a little background:

— The city's two corrections facilities — the new Justice Center downtown and the old Medium Security Institution (i.e., the Workhouse) on Hall Street — are no longer overcrowded hellholes, as they were in the 1950s and '60s, before federal courts intervened. But, as the arrests — and a recent report by the American Civil Liberties Union of Eastern Missouri — suggest, neither are they examples of enlightened penology.

— The city has no shortage of crime and an aggressive police force, so the two jail facilities usually hold somewhere between 1,600 and 1,800 inmates at a time. Those being held for trial (as opposed to those serving jail time for misdemeanors) tend to be accused of serious crimes.

— They often stay there a long time. Many turn down plea agreements, preferring to wait up to two years to take their chances in front of notoriously lenient city juries.

Prosecutors and public defenders are overworked and underpaid, meaning court dates often get missed.

— Guarding inmates is a 24-hour-a-day job, of course, and involves some 500 corrections officers. The starting salary is $33,306 a year. Some of them are excellent. Some of them are not. Getting rid of bad ones is extremely difficult under Civil Service rules.

— Because of this high overhead, it costs city taxpayers $53 a day to house these prisoners, most of them held on state charges.

The state of Missouri reimburses counties (and the city is treated as a separate county) only $21.25 for holding accused criminals, and then only if they're convicted. Twenty-one bucks might cover costs at the Knox County (pop. 4,361) Jail, but in urban areas, not so much.

— There's not much money, and probably very little political will, to change things. "People don't want us to cut the size of the police department to take care of the prisoners in the jail," said Jeff Rainford, chief of staff to Mayor Francis Slay. "They don't want us to cut the Parks Department or the Health Department. The place is not going to be Shangri-la. That being said, we try to make it better every day."

Read more.


If link has expired, check the website of the article's original news source.


Comments:

No comments have been posted for this article.


Login to let us know what you think

User Name:   

Password:       


Forgot password?





correctsource logo




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of The Corrections Connection User Agreement
The Corrections Connection ©. Copyright 1996 - 2025 © . All Rights Reserved | 15 Mill Wharf Plaza Scituate Mass. 02066 (617) 471 4445 Fax: (617) 608 9015