When a judge put Robert Sillen in charge of healthcare in California prisons, the medical staff was vastly underpaid. Software used to track inmates' medical histories could not transfer information between computers.Sounds like California can't afford the "war on drugs".
San Quentin State Prison had only one phone line for incoming calls and none to dial out, isolating doctors who needed to talk to specialists and other professionals.
"It's just shameful what the state has done," Sillen said in an interview.
He has been trying to fix things, but solutions come at a price: Healthcare spending in state prisons has doubled in the last two years.
Sillen's court-ordered intervention is just one reason California's prison spending has far outpaced the swelling number of inmates, contributing to the state's projected $14-billion budget gap, which would be the worst since Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's election in 2003.
The prison population has grown by 8% since 2003, to more than 173,000. But the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation's budget has exploded, increasing 79% to $8.5 billion, and is expected to top $10 billion next year.
Prison spending now is greater than that for any other major program except public schools and healthcare for the poor. The nonpartisan legislative analyst's office projects 6% annual increases in prison spending for the next five years as a new prison and dozens of building additions are constructed and opened.
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
California's prison budget soars 79% Since 2003
The L.A. Times reports: