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Calif. city planing to charge inmates for jail stay

Prisoners with no assets will not have to pay, but the county has the ability to garnish wages and place liens on homes

New York Times News Service via Chattanooga Times Free Press

RIVERSIDE, Calif. — A one-night stay in this city’s finest hotel costs $190, complete with sumptuous sheets and a gourmet restaurant. Soon, a twin metal bunk at the county jail, with meals served on plastic trays, will run $142.42.

With already-crowded jails filling quickly and an $80 million shortfall in the county’s budget, Riverside County officials are increasingly desperate to find every source of revenue they can. So last month, the county board of supervisors voted unanimously to approve a plan to charge inmates for their stay, reimbursing the county for food, clothing and health care.

Prisoners with no assets will not have to pay, but the county has the ability to garnish wages and place liens on homes, according to the ordinance that goes into effect next week.

As the supervisor who pressed for the ordinance, Jeff Stone, likes to put it: “You do the crime, you will serve the time and now you will also pay the dime.”

While a few other local governments have tried similar ideas, Riverside is by far the largest to enact what many call a “pay-to-stay” plan. Stone estimates that roughly 25 percent of the county’s prisoners would be able to pay something and that the county could collect as much as $6 million a year. Still, the county’s attorney cautioned that the measure was unlikely to bring in significant revenue, because so many inmates were destitute and convicted criminals would first be expected to pay for victim’s restitution and other fines.

Like all counties in California, Riverside is in the midst of accepting a new influx of inmates who would have normally gone to state prison. Faced with an order from the Supreme Court to shed 30,000 prisoners from state prisons over the next two years, the Legislature approved a plan to shift thousands of prisoners to local jails.

Many local leaders and law enforcement officials are skeptical of the plan and say the state is unlikely to cover the counties’ costs for the new inmates. In many counties, including Riverside, the jails are already near capacity, and officials worry about being forced to release some inmates before their sentence is complete.

Under California state law, counties are allowed to collect money as a condition of probation, but only after a judge determines that the inmate can afford to pay. And the county is last in line to get money from the defendant.

A road worth going down?
Similar plans have been floated in Kern County, north of Los Angeles. But the sheriff there, Donny Youngblood, has opposed the idea, saying it could cost more than it will bring in.

“I’m not against it, believe me. I think in a perfect world, if all of them could pay, I would be in favor of it,” Youngblood said. “It’s not so much that I am concerned about the fairness, although there is an aspect of that. It’s simply not a road I think is worth going down right now.”

But, he added, “If it’s successful there will certainly be others who follow, because we are all looking for more money.”

With five jails spread throughout the county, Riverside, which is east of Los Angeles, has already reached 93 percent of its capacity, up from 85 percent before the state’s plan to reduce its inmate population began in October. The new inmates also have much longer sentences -- they will stay in county jail an average of two years, more than double the length of stay for typical county inmates.

“Overcrowding is one of my top concerns,” said Correctional Chief Deputy Jerry Gutierrez, who oversees the county’s jails. “You have an overcrowded facility, and it just builds up the tensions. It becomes a longer wait for the showers, not everybody is going to get in there, there’s less time outside of cells and it demands more resources we may not have.”

The effects of the state’s plans are not limited to the jails. For years, the state has relied on inmates convicted of nonviolent crimes to join crews that fight wildfires across the state. But because of the shift of so many prisoners to county jails, the firefighting force will begin to shrink this year. (Counties can send prisoners to the fire camps, but the state will charge counties that do about $46 per prisoner per day, reducing the counties’ incentive.)

Stone, a Republican who has been so critical of the Democratic-controlled Legislature that he has advocated the secession of the eastern part of the state, said that the state’s plan amounts to a “partially unfunded” mandate. Riverside officials have said that they are getting enough money from the state now, but they worry about next year, when the guarantee for a funding source expires and voters will be asked to approve tax increases to ensure that services are not eroded.

“We need to be looking for revenue wherever we can for ourselves,” Stone said. “There are people who have the means and who get into trouble with the law; why should the citizens of this county with other struggles be forced to pay for that? The Lindsay Lohans of the world can certainly pay for it themselves.”

Copyright 2011 Chattanooga Publishing Company