Archive

Archive for the ‘Hawaii’ Category

Census of Facilities

October 10th, 2008
Comments Off

The Bureau of Justice Statistics has just released the 2005 Census of Federal and State Correctional Facilities.  The document has a wealth of data across all States, including the numbers of privately-operated facilities.

The document can be accessed from the Basic Stats list at the top right sidebar.

vericatrajkova Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Federal Systems, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Private Prisons, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming

Staff Shortage Cancels Vists

July 29th, 2008
Comments Off

In Hawaii, staff shortages are causing visit days to be cancelled.

On average, one in five visiting days at the medium security section of Halawa Correctional Facility has been canceled so far this year because there are too few corrections officers to oversee the visiting areas and process arriving visitors, prison officials said … Department of Public Safety Director Clayton Frank said the system’s first obligation is to make sure all critical security posts in the prison are staffed on visiting days. It takes about five extra officers to run visits, and “if we do not have additional staff to go around, then visits will be canceled,” he said. “This is important and we’re going to try our best to do it, but not to compromise the security of the facility.”

… Visitation at Halawa is generally allowed on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays. As of mid-July, 13 of approximately 64 allowable visitation days this year had been canceled.

More on this story at the Honolulu Examiner.

vericatrajkova Hawaii, Visits

Hawai’i Corrections At Crossroads

April 15th, 2008
Comments Off

State Senator Will Espero has taken the recent Pew Report on inmate populations and used it as the starting point for an examination of the corrections system in Hawai’i.

Public officials not wanting to look “soft on crime” find that casting wide nets translates into cutting or limiting other vital programs to foot the tab for housing, feeding, providing medical care, and supervising prisoners. The high cost of operating 24/7 prisons crowds out other government priorities. As University of Hawaii Professor Meda Chesney-Lind noted, the data shows that as more money is needed to imprison people, less money is available for the university system …

The Senator suggests a two part strategy:   reduce admissions by focusing on diversion programs; reducing length of stay through rehabilitation programming.  An interesting article.

vericatrajkova Hawaii, Re-Entry

Daily Sweep 080406

April 6th, 2008
Comments Off

Inmate farms

vericatrajkova Arizona, CCA, GEO, Hawaii, LA Orleans Parish, Oregon, UT Utah County, Utah

The State of the States

January 25th, 2008
Comments Off

State governments, facing leaner budgets this year as the national economy struggles, are exploring strategies to contain surging prison populations without building costly new correctional facilities, according to a report released this Wednesday (Jan. 23).

At least 18 states took steps last year to free up space at overcrowded prisons, prevent recidivism and otherwise stem the rising costs of corrections, according to “The State of Sentencing 2007,” a review of last year’s major criminal justice trends in the states. Actions included amending or agreeing to study sentencing or parole policies, expanding inmate rehabilitation programs and tweaking other criminal justice practices. The study was conducted by The Sentencing Project, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy organization that pushes for the elimination of mandatory minimum sentences and other changes to state and federal criminal justice policies.

According to the report, four states (Arkansas, California, Nevada and Wisconsin) in 2007 approved the early release of some low-risk prisoners. In Nevada, for example, lawmakers expanded “good-time credits” to let some inmates return to society. California legislators granted local jail administrators the power to release some offenders convicted of misdemeanors. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger this month announced a much broader plan to release as many as 22,000 low-risk offenders from CDCR’s crowded prison system to rein in spending by the state Department of Corrections. California is facing an overall budget shortfall of more than $14 billion over the next year and a half.

The study identified four states (California, Hawaii, Louisiana and Washington) that last year expanded “re-entry services” to help inmates transition to life outside prison and ensure they don’t return. As many as half of those behind bars return to prison within three years of their release, the report said. Meanwhile, three states (Colorado, Maine and Nevada) set up panels to study the effectiveness of current sentencing practices, while two other states (New Mexico and Pennsylvania) directed existing commissions to study specific aspects of their sentencing schemes, such as use of mandatory minimums.

Taken together, last year’s state laws represent a shift in thinking among lawmakers, according to the report. “Although legislative sessions seldom close without some penalty enhancements being added to the criminal code, the tone and focus of many state legislative bodies has demonstrably shifted and, as a result, there is increasing opportunity for reform,” the report said. In an interview, the study’s author, Ryan King, said state lawmakers are more willing to change criminal justice policies because of the financial pressures states are under. Corrections trails only health care, education and transportation in taking state dollars. “There’s simply not enough money in state budgets,” King said. “That has brought a lot of legislators to the table with a willingness to look at alternatives (to building prisons).”

There are signs states will continue to seek alternatives to prison construction this year. In his State of the State address Jan. 7, for example, Idaho Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter proposed converting a warehouse to a 304-bed rehabilitation center to help inmates with drug and alcohol problems to ensure they don’t break the law again.

The Report is stored in the Library under “Basic Resources”.

vericatrajkova Arkansas, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, Sentencing, Washington, Wisconsin