Column: NC’s parole merry-go-round

Column: NC’s parole merry-go-round
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Feb 15, 2020 at 11:35 PM

State-run parole and probation programs are designed to keep persons convicted of crimes — including a very large number of nonviolent crimes — out of prison. But in North Carolina, according to a recent Council of State Governments study, “Confined and Costly: How Supervision Violations are Filling Prisons,” “On any given day 10,602 people (or 28% of the 2018 North Carolina prison population) are behind bars as a result of a probation or parole violation, at an annual cost to the state of $320 million.”

Parole and probation are court-ordered, non-prison sentences that give offenders a chance to rebuild their lives in a community setting. They are not a get-out-of-jail-free-card. Each offender agrees to follow a strictly supervised list of conditions usually including mandatory drug testing, keeping regular parole officer visits, paying fines and restitution, holding a job, and taking drug rehab and anger management classes.

More restrictive conditions may include searches, prior approval to open a checking account, travel restrictions, electronic monitoring, curfews and off-limit establishments.

Federal statistics show that each year about one-quarter of all people under community supervision in the United States successfully complete the terms of their parole and probation and are released. What about the others, many of whom struggle with a mental illness or addiction, low education attainment, poor employment skills and an inability to pay for drug testing or administrative and electronic monitoring fees? (Yes, many parolees are required to pay these fees themselves.)

For them, repeated violations of even minor rules can lead to a disciplinary hearing, additional restrictions or a ride on the probation and parole-to-prison merry-go-round.

In fact, the Council of State Governments’ report found that 62% of all people admitted to North Carolina prisons in 2017 were placed behind bars for either a supervised parole or probation violation or because, as repeat offenders, they were convicted of a new criminal offense.

But sooner or later these back-to-prison inmates will return on parole once again with a new set of supervised restrictions to deal with.

The size of North Carolina’s merry-go-round is staggering. For the years 2014-2017, according to the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics, prison admissions totaled 66,586. It is likely that 11%, or around 7,000 people, in North Carolina were returned to prison not for breaking any law but for violating their parole and probation rules.

If North Carolina’s parole and probation programs had worked as intended during 2014-2017, thousands of offenders would not have been locked behind bars but would have remained under community supervision — where they could have worked on putting their lives back together. That would have dramatically lowered the state’s prison population and saved North Carolina taxpayers about $30,000 a year for each inmate remaining out of prison. How might this happen?

A 2018 report from the Pew Charitable Trusts titled “Probation and Parole Systems Marked by High Stakes, Missed Opportunities,” found that one in 55 adults nationally — and one of every 82 North Carolina adults — is on probation or parole. The report also found that many states are already working to strengthen the effectiveness of their probation and parole programs.

“Policymakers across the nation,” the authors write, “are adopting reforms, such as shorter supervision terms and earned compliance credits, and to prioritize supervision and treatment resources for higher-risk individuals while removing lower-risk people from supervision caseloads.”

In practice this requires that states “fundamentally change the purpose of supervision from punishing failure to promoting success. The goal should be to help people repair the harm they have caused and become self-sufficient, law-abiding citizens, rather than simply enforcing rules set by courts and parole boards, catching violators and imposing penalties, including incarceration.”

As these reforms are put into practice, prison populations will go down, state taxes will go down and, best of all, thousands of North Carolinians will stand a better chance of putting prison life behind them for good.

Ronald Fraser writes on public policy issues for the DKT Liberty Project, a Washington-based civil liberties organization. Write him at: fraserr@erols.com


Column: NC’s parole merry-go-round

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