Tuesday, 22 April 2008 03:27
California’s Overcrowded Prisons
California,
home to 1 in 10 American state prison inmates, is getting a nudge from the
federal government to move faster to revamp its overcrowded prison system.
Operating at almost double
capacity, with almost 172,000 inmates in 33 facilities, California's problems reflect a national
pattern, say experts. Inmates at the Mule Creek State Prison, for
example, fill a gymnasium that was
modified to house prisoners last year. Already
engaged in an extensive $7.7 billion plan to dramatically expand prison
capacity, the state now faces federal pressure to oversee another $7 billion in
upgraded healthcare facilities for prison inmates. The legislature this week will examine a request to
approve the new spending, which would require new borrowing. The plan
comes at a crucial time for California's
prison system – and the state's finances. The combined tab of nearly $15
billion for prison reform has dismayed lawmakers already faced with a $16
billion budget deficit that has prompted huge proposed cuts in spending on
education and health care. "This
couldn't have come at a worse time," said Steven Maviglio, spokesman for
Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez. "It makes a disastrous budget scenario even
worse."