tate prisons face overpopulation THE BATTALION Page 9 WEDNESDAY, APR, 21, 1976 •••••••••••••••••••••< dHried about his safety, jflrhe reason he worries, says Harri- terling was (I Associated Press I and hisliJlLLIS PRISON FARM, Tex. — , RonaldRt When William Harrison came back Connally, to the “old neighborhood,” he found or, who k lots of changes and now he’s scared day 1 Texa to death. ucial to Rb®jThe “old neighborhood” is the Ellis Unit of the Texas prison sys- lowthisfetem Harrison, a convicted mur- vas hejohi derer and three-time loser, is now lager?” Fori) partner," H, is that the Ellis unit, like most >w that,anc|rison units in Texavs, is bursting at Ford rep the seams with inmates. More are ion was ir arriving every day. ;e of a numhM The more prisioners are jammed mts.” into this red-brick penal village ■nt said henorth of Huntsville, the more trou- “the paper fie erupts. It follows a maxim of with proba|mf|ial life that when prisons are dal appoint®frcrowded, it’s the prisoners who ny initialsi suffer. There are more cases of fighting says Harrison, an Odessa man Bo served here in 1967-69 and two years in the Ramsey Unit before I- that ■ jQPfl “There are also more incidents in- wfWPII volving weapons. I’m in more fear of — my personal security now than the CDNESD.i) way it was before.” 5:30 p.m, ■He paused a moment, then added: Bldg. Yhu try not to think about things SENATE like that in a place like this, though. 4. Hfclowever, Texas Department of b, 7:30 p.i Corrections officials think about it India, Pe and they’re worried, too. ia. Brhey’re worried about bow they 'lub, Dr. i will handle an inmate population lancer Wi ithat is growing faster than even the most gloomy forecasts had pre- vr ., , dieted. They’re worried about how 'Miil tv^ ^ V W '^ ^ ee ^’ house and protect a prison that is exploding at the rate of more than 2,000 inmates a year, in- L'RSDAY Ending spurts of up to 500 new in- ^Rites a month. The inmate popula- * _ V™' e! tion here has increased 42 per cent in to oriOpn ] as ( s j x y ears . lelr wor * MAlready, at several units, one-man Hlls are now two-man cells and nlDAi three-man cells hold four inmates. UR Univei Day rooms designed for 75 men to5:30p must somehow accommodate 110. HICAL Si 1 Laundries must operate round the mith, Que clock. The food service is straining to rsityofloi keep up. eography liHLand needed to grow the crops, Reapprais livestock and fiber to feed and clothe 206X, 2 p.i the inmates will soon not be produc- ing enough. More acreage is fURDAY needed. RY MEDItBpAVe have a rated bed capacity in 0 u S e9a.ra our 15 units of 19,504,” said James GW s , )on Estelle, Texas Department of Cor- ,.. rections TDC director. “If the trend Pntinues, by the end of the year have more than 21,000. And there’s no let up in sight.” In many respects, the Texas prison system is lucky. In the “sun belt” — the fastest growing part of the country — some prisons are at the saturation level. In Florida, more than 200 inmates are housed in tents. In Louisiana, prison officials plan to turn a ship into a floating prison. Alabama is under court order not to confine any more inmates in its prisons. The TDC says it is run more eco nomically than any other prison sys tem in the country. Its average daily cost per inmate for food — 73 cents — is the envy of scores of states where the cost is $3 a day or more. The rate of those who return to prison in Texas is lower than other states. Recidivism is about 33 per cent, compared to many states where the rate of prison returnees is 60 per cent or greater. However, overcrowding could change the picture for the state’s prison system. Estelle says nobody is sure why prison populations in the south have exploded. How can the trend be re versed if its cause is unknown, he said. Among the possible causes: V The general population increase. But Texas population is growing only 25 per cent as fast as its prison population. V The mood of the “free world community.” “Juries set the punishment in this state and people may have reached their tolerance level for crimes. They’re giving longer and tougher sentences,” Estelle said. V Court pressure on county jails. Both Dallas and Harris counties are under federal court orders to im prove jail conditions and reduce in mate population. “The word has gotten around,” said one prison official, and county sheriffs are dumping inmates on the TDC. After one recent court action against the Dallas jail, an official said, a neighboring county leased a bus and started hauling county pris oners to Huntsville. “It’s cheaper to buy or rent a bus than to build a new county jail,” a state official said. VThe post-war baby boom. Nation ally, about 76.4 per cent of all arrests are of persons less than 24 years of age. Currently, more than 50 per cent of the Texas inmates are under 30. VLimited use of parole and proba tion. Some prison officials say an in adequate budget cuts down on the OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30; PATIO OPEN SUN. 12 to 5 ibacco >rted titer Br! Beige Only MEN’S SUEDE CASUAL BOOTS Our Reg. 9.97 — 4 Days Only $6 Pr A bold look that provides total comfort. Pick suede leather boots with imita tion crepe sole that cush ions, grips for traction. 2700 South Texas Ave. Taste has come to light. % aunt One third fewer calories than our regular beer, but all the taste you’d expect from Schlitz. It took Schlitz to bring the taste to light. number of prisoners who can be paroled. “The TDC could be stabilized at 19,000 to 20,000 inmates,” Estelle said. “It would mean the parole board would have to grant more paroles. And I’m not talking about a wholesale release of violent in mates.” A vigorous parole system in New York, which has a population roughly one-third larger than Texas, has helped keep the prison popula tion there to 15,000, about 5,000 fewer than in Texas. Illinois, with about the same population as Texas, has 7,000 prison inmates. For inmate Harrison and for hun dreds of other prisons, the most dramatic effect of prison crowding is in the cells, their homes in the penal neighborhood. Most cells are smaller than a walk-in closet. One-man cells mea sure four feet wide, 10 feet long and nine feet high. For a bed, a metal shelf hangs on one wall, about 18 inches off the floor. It’s covered with a thin mattress. A commode, with no lid, a small sink, a mirror and a book shelf complete the appointments. For a second prisoner in such a cell, another bed shelf above the first is bolted to the wall. Texas’ prison population has ex panded so swiftly that in some units there are not enough bed shelves. “We’ve had to put mattresses on the floor in some cells,” said Bobby Morgan, warden of the Ferguson Unit, a prison farm north of Huntsville. The Ferguson unit has caught the brunt of the inmate population boom. The prison farm handles ages 17 to 22, age of most first offenders. The unit was designed for 1,050 in mates. Currently it holds 1,756. The result is “the inmates don’t get as much individual attention as they once did,” Morgan said. For their own protection, the in mates are evaluated and separated. The weak and homosexual are placed in cell blocks away from the strong. With crowded conditions, the separations cannot be as precise, Morgan added. The result: more fights, more homosexual abuse. Strength is the law among the lawless. Once Morgan had a “spillway.” When his inmates reached age 22 or became too mature for Ferguson, they were transferred to other units. “We don’t have that spillway anymore,” he said. “The other units are filled up, too.” Morgan says what is needed is more liberal parole policy. “If kids get a dose of this prison, it doesn’t take long for them to wake up, ” Morgan said. “If a kid’s going to wake up, he’ll do it in a year as well as in two years.” Morgan, Ellis Warden R. M. Cousins and other prison officials also notice a difference nowadays in the inmates’ attitudes. “To put it into prison language, they’re sorrier,” Morgan said. “They’re weaker, but more militant. They have less respect for authority. They’re not as scared, or at least they put up a bolder front. ” Cousins, whose prison includes death row and a population of no thing but high security risks, said the inmates now are “bolder. They’re resenting authority a little more.” Stories in the media about other prisons, where more lenient treat ment is afforded, cause many at Ellis “to get all swolled up, ” Cousins said. Flarrison and another inmate, Robert Farmer, 41, a two-time in mate from Dallas, said they both notice that Ellis prisoners seem “rowdier, louder and more boister ous” than inmates several years ago. “Court rulings have taken away the ability of prison officials to punish the inmates now, and the prisoners know it,” said Farmer, serving 45 years for armed robbery. “We could use a few more guards.” Despite the increase in inmate population, the number of guards has increased only slightly. There isn’t enough money to hire more, an official said. “It makes it more dangerous for everyone,” he said. 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