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harry
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Joined: 17 Jan 2006
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Location: Honolulu, Hawaii, USA

PostPosted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 2:56 pm    Post subject: Hawaii Correctional Statistics Reply with quote

to all:

Hawaii Correctional Statistics!

http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090302/BREAKING01/90302025

1 in 32 Hawaii adults in correctional system, study says
Read comments (8)

By HERBERT A. SAMPLE
Associated Press

One in 32 Hawaii adults are either behind bars, on probation or parole, according to a new study released today by the Pew Center on the States.

That ratio was the 19th highest in the nation, according to the report, "One in 31: The Long Reach of American Corrections,"

The study also found that nationally, one in 31 adults are in state or federal prisons, or under supervision by probation or parole systems.

(A story on the full report is posted under Breaking News/Updates on The Advertiser's homepage.)

"Most states are facing serious budget deficits," Susan Urahn, managing director of The Pew Center on the States, said in a statement. "Every single one of them should be making smart investments in community corrections that will help them cut costs and improve outcomes."

The report found that as of the end of 2007, one in 45 Hawaii adults, or more than 22,000, were on parole or probation. One in 108, or nearly 9,300, were in prison, including those prisoners transferred to public or private facilities located in other states.

The total number of persons in the correctional system totaled more than 31,600, the report found.

That is a significant increase from 25 years before, when one in 90 Hawaii adults were in prison or on probation or parole, the report said.

According to the study, spending on corrections accounted for 4.3 percent of Hawaii's general fund in the 2008 fiscal year. In that year, only four cents was spent on the parole and probation systems for every dollar the state expended on prisons, the study found.

"After an extraordinary, quarter-century expansion of American prisons, one unmistakable policy truth has emerged: We cannot build our way to public safety," the report's executive summary stated.

"Serious, chronic and violent offenders belong behind bars, for a long time, and the expense of locking them up is justified many times over," the report added. "But for hundreds of thousands of lower-level inmates, incarceration costs taxpayers far more than it saves in prevented crime."
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Some local newspaper readership commnets:

applemartini wrote:

In the future, more tourist will stop coming to Hawaii, because other than the sun and sea ... it has become one of the biggest drug states. Who wants to spend their vacation worrying about the homeless, the drug epidemic, the unemployment and the crowded streets of Honolulu
03/02/2009 8:40:02 a.m.
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StanManley wrote:

1 in 32? What I'm concerned about is these adults who are in corrections will have children who will likely follow in their footsteps. Like animals, we need to control the pet population by spaying and neutering many of these adults.
03/02/2009 8:39:54 a.m.
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westlaker062 wrote:

Three words can easily explain this: ice, ice, ice. It is about a drug problem that is epidemic in Hawai'i.


03/02/2009 7:59:42 a.m.
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redbones wrote:

Make the prison system so harsh that no one wants to come back. Screw those human right activists. They are put in there for a reason. The US prison system should take an advice or two from the Chinese one and make them work for the stay.

There is also the mindset that having a criminal record is like a badge of honor for some groups of people. Need to detroy that idea by making prison sentences as humiliating as humanly possible.
03/02/2009 8:00:53 a.m.
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Comment: When one considers that the state of Hawaii is inundated with drug abusers, it seems odd that so many of them have been incarcerated. Please recall that even the lard barrel Department of Education provides a sanctuary for drug abusers.

With Aloha,


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