I guess this means that we are supposed to feel safer?
Prison numbers reach new high
July 26, 2004
By Fox Butterfield, New York Times
The number of Americans under the control of the criminal justice system grew by 130,700 last year to reach a new high of nearly 6.9 million, according to a Justice Department report that is being released today.
The total includes people in jail and prison as well as those on probation and parole. This is about 3.2 percent of the adult population in the United States, the report said.
The growth in what the report termed the "correctional population" comes at
a time when the crime rate nationwide has been relatively stable for several years. The report does not address why the number of men and women in jail and prison and on probation and parole has continued to increase. But experts say the most likely reason is the cumulative effect of the tougher sentencing laws passed in the 1990s.
The report found that there were 691,301 people in local and county jails and 1,387,269 in state and federal prisons last year, for a total of 2,078,570. That was an increase of 3.9 percent in the jail population and 2.3 percent in the prison population.
At the same time, there were 4,073,987 Americans on probation at the end of last year, an increase of 1.2 percent from the end of 2002, and 774,588 on parole, up 3.1 percent. The number of women on parole has steadily increased in recent years. Women totaled 13 percent of parolees at the end of 2003, up from 10 percent at the end of 1995.
This increase reflects a slow but steady growth in the number of women being arrested for and convicted of serious crimes.
The 3.1 percent increase in the number of people on parole, the biggest in at least a decade, troubles many police and prosecutors, because they believe that newly released inmates are likely to return to a life of crime and are a major source of violence in some cities, including Boston, Chicago and Los Angeles.
Texas led the nation with 534,260 people on probation or parole, followed by California, with 485,039.
Or perhaps we are supposed to feel safer if we have the infrastructure in place. Say, like 911 calls get routed safely in the midwest? What?
A dramatic increase in cell phone calls and too few dispatchers have 911 officials in Indianapolis' Marion County ready to declare their own emergency, says the Indianapolis Star. During the busiest times at the communications center, as many as one of every five callers to 911 is hanging up before a dispatcher can take the call. "That's outrageous," said Marion County Sheriff Maj. Richard Gates. Many missed calls are probably misdials and nonemergencies, but one unanswered emergency is one too many, he said.
Gates requested 25 additional dispatchers, at a cost of $963,000, but the City-County Council rejected that request along with Sheriff Frank Anderson's plea for more road deputies. Budgeted for 63 dispatchers, the call center can't keep the positions filled, Gates said. Communications officials say dispatcher wages are part of the problem. The starting salary is about $24,000, rising to $30,000 after five years.
No comments:
Post a Comment