Jpi Report Jailing Communities Aug 2004
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Jailing Communities The Impact of Jail Expansion and Effective Public Safety Strategies A Justice Policy Institute Report April 2008 By Amanda Petteruti and Nastassia Walsh About the Authors Amanda Petteruti is a researcher and policy analyst with approximately seven years of combined experience in education and criminal justice policy. Early in her career, she organized a writing program for youth at the National Campaign to Stop Violence and provided general support to the National Juvenile Defender Center. Prior to joining the staff of the Justice Policy Institute, she conducted research on issues pertaining to urban education at the Council of the Great City Schools. Petteruti earned a Master of Arts in education policy and leadership from the University of Maryland College Park and a Bachelor of Arts in sociology from Bates College. Petteruti has contributed to several reports related to education policy and co-authored The Vortex: The Concentrated Racial Impact of Drug Imprisonment and the Characteristics of Punitive Counties and JPI’s Public Safety Policy Brief series. Nastassia Walsh is JPI’s research assistant. She joined JPI shortly after earning her Master’s Degree in forensic psychology from Marymount University, where she studied psychological principles in the law and injustices in the criminal justice system. She started her education by earning a Bachelor of Science degree in psychology and justice studies from Arizona State University. Walsh has co-authored several reports while at JPI, including Maryland’s Mandatory Minimum Drug Sentencing Laws, The Consequences Aren’t Minor, and JPI’s Public Safety Policy Brief series. Walsh is an active volunteer at Opportunities, Alternatives and Resources (OAR) of Fairfax County, Virginia, an organization that aids both incarcerated adults and people recently released from jail in their re-entry process to help break the cycle of incarceration. Acknowledgments This report would not have been possible without the generous support of the Drug Policy Alliance, Open Society Institute, and the Public Welfare Foundation. The authors would like to thank Lucas Radzinschi, Sara Bastomski, Adriana Vecchio, Kristen Driggers, Whitney Viets, and Alex Melonas for their invaluable research assistance. Special thanks to Tim Murray and David Levin at the Pretrial Justice Institute, David Fathi, Jody Kent, Alan Henry, Art Wallenstein, Philip Fornaci, and the staff of the National Association of Counties for their critical insight. Finally, we are indebted to Ali Riker, Craig Gilmore, Ari Wohlfeiler, Jane Browning, and Dana Kaplan for their review of this report. The report was edited by Sarah Baker and designed by Lynn Riley. JPI staff includes Sheila Bedi, Debra Glapion, LaWanda Johnson, Laura Jones, Amanda Petteruti, Emily Sydnor, Nastassia Walsh, and Jason Ziedenberg. 2 Jailing Communities: The Impact of Jail Expansion and Effective Public Safety Strategies Contents 2 Introduction: Jails Are Part of the Country’s Mass Incarceration Challenge Why are America’s jail populations on the rise? Why are growing jail populations a concern for communities? 5 Background: What Are Jails and How Are They Used? 6 Why Are Jail Populations Growing? Prison overcrowding Changes in policing practices Jails have become institutions for people with mental illness People detained for immigration violations are increasingly held in jails More people are being held pretrial More people are denied pretrial release and of those who are granted bail, fewer can afford to post it Outcomes of people released pretrial Fewer people are serving sentences in the community 15 What Are the Consequences of Over-Using Jails? Jails have a harmful effect on people who are held in them Jails are costly and negatively impact communities Jails are harmful to the environment 23 Building More Jail Beds and Holding More People in Jail Has Not Been Shown to Make Communities Safer People incarcerated for nonviolent offenses make up the majority of people in jail Community supervision can be a more effective public safety strategy than incarceration 26 The Impact of the Increased Use of Jails in the U.S. Is Not Borne Equally 27 Recommendations: Communities Can Take Action to Reduce Jail Populations 29 Appendix: Types of Bonds 30 Endnotes Introduction: Jails Are Part of the Country’s Mass Incarceration Challenge Jails have historically been overlooked as a contributing factor to the United States’ addiction to incarceration. While the prison population continues to grow steadily, albeit at a slower pace than 10 years ago, the jail population has increased dramatically. Although the United States still has the highest incarceration rate in the world,1 prison population growth has slowed since the 1990s. In 2006, prison population growth was half what it was in 1996, but in recent years, jail population growth has exceeded that of prisons. Public attention has been focused on prisons, with increased support for reducing prison spending, sentencing reform, and treatment rather than incarceration for drug addiction.2 However, the same attention has not been leveled at jails and the impact that they have on the people held in them, the communities surrounding them, and the counties that must bear the financial burden.3 *AIL