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News (Media Awareness Project) - US IA: Column: Surge In Prison Population Shows All Is Not Well In Iowa
Title:US IA: Column: Surge In Prison Population Shows All Is Not Well In Iowa
Published On:2007-02-18
Source:Des Moines Register (IA)
Fetched On:2008-08-17 10:31:46
SURGE IN PRISON POPULATION SHOWS ALL IS NOT WELL IN IOWA

Something in Iowa has gone dreadfully awry.

At the least, something is dreadfully different than it used to be,
and Iowa is a lesser place because of it.

The change isn't immediately apparent. It has occurred so gradually
that nothing out of the ordinary seemed to be happening.

Perhaps that's the way it is with profound change. Everything seems
normal until you look back over the decades and realize how different
things are.

So it is with the way we keep putting more and more of our fellow
Iowans behind bars for major portions of their lives. A look back
reveals how out of character that is for Iowa.

Consider that Iowa's total population has remained basically
unchanged for 100 years. It has grown slightly, but has remained
under 3 million through all the decades.

Through most of the last century, the number of Iowans in prison
stayed about the same, too. The number spiked a little during the
Great Depression, but generally around 2,000 or fewer Iowans were in
prison at any given time.

It makes sense that if your total population isn't growing, the
number of people in prison shouldn't grow much, either.

But the number did grow, beginning in the 1980s. Iowa's population
actually declined in that decade, but the number of Iowans
incarcerated began to shoot up. By the mid-1990s, more than 6,000
Iowans were behind bars - triple the historical number.

The number keeps growing. Now, nearly 9,000 Iowans are in prison. In
another 10 years, it's estimated the prison population will top
11,000, at a time when the total population of the state will grow
only slightly.

Think of 11,000 Iowans in prison. That would be more than five times
greater than the historic rate of incarceration in Iowa.

It is hard to believe that Iowa children are growing up to be
criminals at five times the rate they were a few generations ago, but
that seems to be the case.

That surely is evidence of a fundamental deterioration in the social
fabric of the state.

It is little consolation that Iowa imprisons a smaller proportion of
its population than most other states.

That doesn't change the fact that a fivefold increase in the number
of Iowans behind bars is a symptom of something deeply wrong.

Through most of the 20th century, Iowa got along fine with just three
prisons - Fort Madison and Anamosa for men and Rockwell City for
women. Now there are new prisons at Mount Pleasant, Clarinda, Fort
Dodge and Newton. Rockwell City was turned into a men's prison, with
women moved to Mitchellville. A major prison medical and screening
facility operates at Oakdale.

A state with a population of 2.8 million that needed three prisons in
1970 shouldn't have needed eight prisons to protect a population of
2.9 million by 2000.

Moreover, Iowa's population is aging, which, if anything, should mean
less crime. It doesn't compute.

It is revealing that two of the new prisons are at sites of
mental-health institutes. Until the 1960s, each of the state's four
mental-health institutes - at Mount Pleasant, Clarinda, Cherokee and
Independence - housed from 1,500 to 2,000 patients. Now they're down
to fewer than 100 each.

It's no coincidence that the prison population went up as commitments
to mental institutions went down. The unintended consequence of
deinstitutionalization of mentally ill people turned prisons into
warehouses for criminals with mental problems. It is a national scandal.

Then there are the drug-related crimes that scarcely existed 50 years
ago. Society decided to define drug using and selling as criminal
behavior, and lawmakers decided to conduct dual wars on drugs and on
crime by toughening the criminal codes, making sentences longer,
often mandatory.

Those are the usual reasons cited for the prison population
explosion. There might be societal reasons as well, including the
possibility that greater numbers of Iowa kids simply are growing up
troubled and alienated - essentially being inadvertently reared to
become drug users or criminals.

That possibility is almost too disturbing to contemplate, but it
needs to be examined. Rather than testing kids in reading and math,
perhaps we should be evaluating children in the context of their
whole lives, in and out of school, to point everyone away from a
future in prison.

Any child who ends up an adult in prison has really been left behind.

And any state that must imprison more and more of its people every
year has something deeply amiss.
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