Frankly, I’m Not Seeing the Downside Here
From KMOX:
The Missouri House Budget Committee was told two Missouri prisons could close down if the House cuts funds by five percent.
The warning was delivered to the budget officials by Public Safety & Corrections Chairman Dwight Scharnhorst from St. Louis County.
A top official told Scharnhorst how losing nearly 20 million dollars would effect on the Department of Corrections.
“His statement at the time was, ‘I will definitely have to close one institution, possibly two.’ It would be minimum security, he designated that right away.” said Scharnhorst.
Adult Prison Director Tom Clements says non-violent prisoners and those eligible for parole could be released before the end of their sentences.
So, what’s the problem? The state would save money, and people who mostly should not have been in prison in the first place would be free. I suppose those who work in the closed prison(s) would be hurt in the short term, but this would be an improvement for the economy as a whole because the money formerly spent on incarceration would be available for more productive uses. The same applies to the former prisoners who just might be able to return to (or start) useful employment. I simply fail to see the danger in this “warning.”
Link via John Combest.





Too many bums would lose their jobs as guards and would have to do something productive with their lives. They wouldn’t like that.
Comment by Joe Nonnenkamp — February 24, 2010 @ 10:41 p.m.
Why don’t you get a list of the offenses for which the paroled/released prisoners are in for and their criminal history before suggesting they “shouldn’t be in prison in the first place.” In fact, do you have any data supporting that proposition? In my law enforcement/prosecution experience, the idea that state prisons are full of “non-violent offenders” is a myth – unless you count drug dealers (not users) and those with multiple convictions while on probation/parole. What about the economic impact of supporting those released and the economic impact of the crime we can statistically expect them to commit?
Comment by Tom — March 2, 2010 @ 7:04 a.m.