Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Support For New Jail Lukewarm
Title:US WA: Support For New Jail Lukewarm
Published On:2003-11-19
Source:Spokesman-Review (WA)
Fetched On:2008-01-19 05:37:28
SUPPORT FOR NEW JAIL LUKEWARM

COLVILLE -- Like Boy Scouts without a match, Stevens County officials tried
to build a fire of public support for a new jail Monday night.

At the end of a two-hour meeting, it wasn't clear whether they had a flame
or just a puff of smoke.

About 40 people turned out for the meeting, but most of them were public
officials or civic activists. Many had served on the committee that studied
seven options and recommended a new $12 million jail across the street from
the county courthouse.

Even so, there was skepticism and opposition.

Colville defense attorney Dee Hokom said officials should confine
themselves to the committee's goal of reducing incarceration by 25 percent
through sentencing alternatives such as electronic home monitoring and
work-release programs.

Building a new jail would just encourage judges to issue "more of the
ridiculous kind of sentences that we are seeing now," Hokom said.

Nora Callahan, executive director of the November Coalition, which opposes
stiff drug penalties, also called for alternative sentencing instead of a
new jail. She noted she has a brother who contracted tuberculosis while
serving time in a federal prison for a drug conviction.

"How much money are we going to spend on locking people up when maybe we
could consider some alternatives?" she asked.

Others weren't eager to improve conditions for inmates at taxpayer expense,
but expressed concerns that the overcrowded jail in the courthouse basement
is unsafe for corrections officers.

"They're just putting their lives at risk every day, going in there," said
Warren Graham, one of the jail's volunteer chaplains and a former Spokane
County corrections officer.

If an inmate attacks an officer, there often isn't enough room in the
narrow corridors for others to intervene, Graham said.

Superior Court Judge Al Nielson said the jail now houses many mentally
unstable inmates who state mental institutions no longer accept. They make
an inadequate jail more dangerous and raise questions about "humanitarian
treatment," Nielson said.

"They really don't belong in a jail, they belong in a hospital," but
disturbed inmates often have to wait two or three months for a bed at
Eastern State Hospital, Nielson said.

That's a problem that will only get worse because of state cutbacks, said
Kaydee Steele, director of the Stevens County Counseling Center. A better
jail is needed to keep the public safe, she said.

Steele also liked the idea of supporting corrections jobs in Stevens County
instead of Ferry County, where many of Stevens County's inmates now are housed.

Barry Lamont, executive director of the non-profit Rural Resources social
service agency, said there is far too little money available for social
intervention to prevent crime. A new jail is a necessity, he said.

Marcus Mayor Fran Bolt said it was "just silly" to suppose that the current
jail -- built when the county had 20,000 to 25,000 residents -- is adequate
now that the county has about 40,000 residents.

County Commissioner Malcolm Friedman called for those in the audience to
help generate public support for what he predicted will be an uphill struggle.

Unlike schools, jails are "all negative," Friedman said. "It's all our
failure in society, and we're building a monument to it. But I think what
we have downstairs is not upholding public safety, so I'll do what I can."

Chairman Tony Delgado said commissioners may call another public meeting in
a month or two.

"We just can't let the fire die out," he said.
Member Comments
No member comments available...