Posted by BOE Member George Runner at 12:00 am on Mar 17, 2010 Comments Off on Hyperbole Aside, California prisons simply don’t house that many invalid inmates
First the good news: J. Clark
Kelso wants to reduce prison health care costs.
And now the bad news: He wants to release upwards of 1,000
supposed invalid prisoners – many of whom might have committed such
acts as rape, 2nd degree murder and other dangerous felonies. But
does California really have a high level of invalid prisoners to
warrant this legislation?
Probably not.
But painting the picture of a few comatose inmates makes for
good political theatre. Though it does not tell the real story,
which is: We have some incapacitated inmates AND California
already has a law that deals with this issue – on a case-by-case
basis.
Therefore, the Kelso-sponsored legislation (including Sen. Mark
Leno’s Senate Bill 1399) does nothing to address the problem of
sky-high health care costs for California prisoners, which is
currently $17,000 per prisoner per year!
(Other large states spend a fraction of that: New York spends
$5,800. Florida spends $4,300. The federal government spends
only $4,400. It may be the opinion of a liberal federal judge
that California’s prison… Read More