Showing posts with label Voting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Voting. Show all posts

Sunday, April 29, 2018

Stop the Train! An Epic Indigent Defense Fail in Travis County, execution scheduled without hearing on snitch recantation, new music from Just Liberty's decarceration campaign, and other stories

Here's the latest episode of the Reasonably Suspicious podcast for April 2018. You can subscribe on iTunes, Google Play, or SoundCloud, or listen to it here:


In this episode, we discussed:

Top Stories
Death and Texas
Fill in the Blank
  • Litigation in Galveston County made national press after a judge refused to pay for defense-attorney investigation in misdemeanor case. 
  • Two Tarrant County cases show how politicized elections-based criminal prosecutions can be. 
  • Former Congressman Sylvestre Reyes authored a clueless column on Texas and the opiod crisis.
The Last Hurrah
Find a transcript of this episode below the jump.

Monday, September 01, 2014

Reflecting on Rick Perry's criminal-justice vetoes

Grits has suggested in the past that Texas Gov. Rick Perry has signed more criminal justice reform legislation, arguably, than any sitting U.S. governor. And it's true.

It's also true, though, that some of his vetoes have been particularly damaging to the reform cause. The Austin Statesman performed an an analysis of Perry's vetoes and found that 38 of his 301 vetoes have been in the criminal justice realm. Some I agreed with; many IMO were misguided. Several, regrettably, were bills I've worked on. C'est la vie. Anyway, here are what I consider Perry's worst criminal-justice related vetoes:

Maximizing police arrest powers
Photo via The Economist
SB 730 (2001): After the US Supreme Court ruled in Atwater v. City of Lago Vista that Texas police officers could arrest a Central Texas soccer mom for a Class C misdemeanor traffic offense (in this case, a seat belt violation), the Lege passed bipartisan legislation (Chris Harris in the Senate, Senfronia Thompson and Robert Talton in the House) to forbid arrests (with four limited exceptions) for offenses where the ultimate potential penalty would not include incarceration. Perry vetoed that bill and the extra authority he granted peace officers that day in 2001 has been a source of significant mischief, not to mention additional jail overcrowding pressure, in the intervening years.

There was a second veto related to the Supreme Court's Atwater ruling in 2003, though regrettably the Statesman's database misidentified the bill. SB 1597 by Hinojosa was a watered down version that would have required police departments to enact written policies regarding when their officers may effect arrests for Class C misdemeanor violations. Perry vetoed that, too. And his threat of vetoing related bills essentially closed the issue for a decade after the 2003 compromise bill went down.

If the grassroots wing of the GOP had been in ascendance back in '01 and '03 the way they are today, I seriously doubt Perry would have vetoed these bills. But back then the former Democrat was more beholden to the police unions than to small "l" libertarians in his party base. 2005 represented the last session when the governor appeared to openly carry water for them and these "Soccer Mom Bills," as they were dubbed in the media (after the defendant in the Lago Vista case), were high on the unions' hit list in the years following the turn of the century.

Nixing restraints on police search power at traffic stops
Another unfortunate Perry veto in 2005 nixed a requirement that law enforcement obtain written or recorded oral consent before searching a vehicle at a traffic stop unless they had probable cause, in which case they didn't need it. SB 1195 by Hinojosa was good public policy, both informing drivers of their rights and generating more and better data about the murky world roadside searches. When the Austin PD began requiring written or recorded consent, the number of so-called consent searches at traffic stops declined dramatically. This was an excellent bill and Perry's veto was one of my personal biggest political disappointments during his reign.

No to Blue Warrant relief for county jails
I know there are still Sheriffs frustrated with the governor's 2007 veto of HB 541 by Trey Martinez Fischer that would have allowed parole violators arrested on "blue warrants" (an alleged parole violation) to be released on bond awaiting revocation hearings. This is a perennial complaint from counties - that housing the parolees is an unfunded mandate from the state, which is essentially true - and the governor dashed the hopes of many a local official when he throttled this modest assistance to counties to address jail overcrowding.

Don't tell ex-prisoners about voting rights
It still sticks in my craw that Gov. Perry vetoed a bill in 2007 to provide eligible inmates with voter registration information upon release. That seemed like a small thing and his veto motives appeared transparently partisan, especially after the bill was sent to his desk by a Republican-controlled Lege.

Other Veto Errata
Perry famously line-item vetoed the budget for Tony Fabelo's old Criminal Justice Policy Council, ostensibly because Fabelo issued prison population projections that necessitated either spending on prison construction or passing bills to promote de-incarceration. I've never understood why he vetoed Todd Smith's bill exempting Romeo and Juliet relationships (four years difference or less) from sex offender registration statutes - it passed 131-12 in the House, unanimously in the Senate. Perry has also been hostile to good-time credits applied to inmates seeking parole (vetoed bills in '05 and  '07), and in 2005 he insensibly vetoed Jerry Madden and John Whitmire's comprehensive probation reform package, though he signed an essentially similar bill the following session and now takes credit for it on the campaign stump.

* * *

Grits has occasionally dared to hope that the Lege might revisit some of these topics now that we'll have a new governor in 2015.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Did surcharge cause Voter ID repeal? A question to ponder as Texas House considers its elimination

The Dallas News last week (March 24) published a feature behind the paywall by reporter Terrence Stutz titled "Texas lawmakers want brakes put on driver surcharges for road violations," as well as an editorial on the public part of their site calling for the repeal of this "messy mistake of a law." Their timing was good because state Rep. Larry Gonzales' HB 104 has been scheduled for a public hearing on Wednesday, April 3 upon adjournment in the House Homeland Security and Public Safety Committee. I wholeheartedly agree it's time to eliminate the surcharge and find better, more reliable ways to fund regional trauma centers. However, vanity compels me to highlight a sidebar to the story which ponders a question Grits first considered last year in this post: "Was the Texas voter ID law undone by the troubled Texas Driver Responsibility Program?" Noted Stutz:
Although no study has ever been done on the link between the two, experts have speculated that the driving surcharge program — which has caused 1.3 million drivers to lose their licenses — made it much more difficult for Texas to defend its 2011 law requiring voters to show a photo ID at the polls.
In August, a federal appeals court refused to uphold the voter ID law in part because so many Texans lacked a driver’s license or state photo ID. Minorities made up a large percentage of them.

An analysis by the Texas secretary of state last year could not find matching driver’s licenses or state photo IDs for as many as 2.4 million Texas voters. That included 1.6 million who had licenses or IDs when they registered to vote.

Among those who see a link is Austin political consultant and criminal justice blogger Scott Henson. Based on the numbers, he sees a “definite correlation” between the DRP and the large number of voters who don’t have the photo ID most Texans rely on — a driver’s license.

“I’d love to see the state run another matching program to find out how many voters without a current ID have defaulted on one or more of the Driver Responsibility Program surcharges,” Henson wrote on his blog, Grits for Breakfast.

Henson, who has testified in favor of the program’s repeal, also added: “How many negative consequences must the state suffer from this ill-conceived revenue-generation scheme before the Legislature finally repeals it?”
Grits continues to believe that the surcharge was a major contributor to Texas' voter ID law being rejected - not the sole reason, perhaps, but neither at all an insignificant one. I also believe it has significantly harmed the economy.

The sticking point to repealing the surcharge this year has been hospitals' fear that, if Texas won't accept Medicaid funding, they'll be stuck with uncompensated care bills and lower disproportionate share funds from the federal government. So they don't want to let go of any revenue source while so much uncertainty hovers around them. I get that. But because the Lege has failed to distribute hundreds of millions of surcharge funds as part of its convoluted smoke and mirrors scheme to balance the budget, there's enough money in the account right now, says the Texas Criminal Justice Coalition and Rep. Gonzales, to keep paying hospitals at current rates for the next six years. That would give the Legislature three biennia to nail down its health finance decisions and figure out a more equitable way to fund indigent healthcare with fewer unintended consequences.

Necessity is the Mother of Invention: IMO the Lege should eliminate the surcharge now and worry over the next couple of sessions about how to pay for indigent healthcare in a future inevitably altered, for good and ill, by Obamacare. The solution must come as part of a broader fix to a protean health finance system which will be a big legislative priority over the next several years as Obamacare rolls out and the states adjust and react. (E.g., I've thought the surcharge money might be replaced with some sort of transaction fee on health insurance policies.) There's time to address those larger indigent care questions, even if the surcharge is eliminated this session.

In the meantime, if you want to tell the Texas House Homeland Security and Public Safety Committee why this program should be stricken from the books, show up at the capitol on Wednesday. You can simply register against the bill (at the kiosks in the hallway behind the hearing room) or leave written testimony with the clerk if you don't have time to wait around all day.

See prior, related Grits posts:

Friday, March 16, 2012

Did the Driver Responsibility Surcharge cause Texas' voter ID law to be rejected?

Aside from redistricting, the big electoral news recently was the Justice Department's decision to oppose implementation of Texas' new "voter ID" statute, leading the state to launch its own counter-challenge to the Voting Rights Act. I don't care to debate the merits of the DOJ decision - which was based on alleged discriminatory outcomes - but instead am interested in WHY so many Texans lack a state-issued photo ID? Pondering that subject leads to a corollary question: Did the Driver Responsibility Surcharge cause Texas' voter ID law to be rejected? As Lise Olsen reported in the Houston Chronicle:
as many as 18 percent of all registered voters across Texas apparently [lack] state government-issued photo IDs to match their voter registration cards, according to records obtained by the Houston Chronicle.

Texas secretary of state officials did not find matching 2012 driver's licenses or state-issued photo IDs for 2.4 million of the state's 12.8 million registered voters, though all but about 800,000 of those voters supplied a valid identification number when they first registered to vote. The findings come from documents submitted by the state to the U.S. Department of Justice as part of an ongoing review of the new voter ID law.

The "matching" exercises conducted by the state showed up to 22 percent of Bexar County voters apparently lacked the IDs, as well as 20 percent in Dallas County and 19 percent in Harris County, based on the Chronicle's review of the state data.
Here's the Chronicle's summary of the rate of voters with no state ID in selected larger counties:


Why do so many adult Texans lack ID? In part because 2 million drivers have had their drivers licenses revoked because of nonpayment of the Driver Responsibility Surcharge, which readers will recall is a stiff civil penalty tacked on top of any fines, punishments or court costs stemming from certain traffic offenses, including  driving without a license, driving without insurance, "point" accumulation, and DWI. Of those, around 1.2 million have not had their licenses reinstated, which would explain why so many voters may have had a DL number when they registered to vote but don't now. If 2.4 million Texas voters lack state ID, and all but 800,000 had IDs when they registered, then the Driver Responsibility Surcharge could account for as much as three-quarters (1.2 out of 1.6 million) of those who had ID when they registered to vote but do not today.

I'd love to see the state run another matching program to find out how many voters without a current ID have defaulted on one or more Driver Responsibility Surcharges. This redundant civil penalty has inflicted untold misery on drivers who owe it, and judges blame the surcharge for Texas' declining DWI conviction rate. Now it appears the surcharge is a major contributor to Texas' Voter ID law being challenged. Meanwhile the Lege is using most of the "dedicated" funds from the surcharge to balance the budget instead of dispensing it to trauma center hospitals as they promised.

At this point, the surcharge has not only failed at all its goals - both in the enforcement realm and providing revenue for trauma hospitals - it is now interfering with other state goals like DWI enforcement and the Voter ID law. How many negative consequences must the state suffer from this ill-conceived revenue-generation scheme before the Legislature finally repeals it?

Via Kuff.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Houston loses state rep over prisoner census count

If prisoners were counted in their home counties instead of the counties where they're incarcerated, Houston would have 25 instead of 24 state represenatives, it was revealed during yesterday's House redistricting debate. Reported the Houston Chronicle:
More than 60,000 Houstonians are living in state prisons and were not counted as part of Houston's population, Rep. Harold Dutton, D-Houston, complained to House Redistricting Chair Burt Solomons, R-Carrollton.

Had they been counted, Houston would definitely get 25 state representatives - instead of the 24 as proposed under the current redistricting map.
The problem is, they're not getting representation in those other counties, either. A report (pdf) from the House Research Organization last fall revealed that:
Some Texas counties exclude inmates when establishing county commissioner precincts. Anderson, Bee, Brazos, Coryell, Childress, Concho, Dawson, Grimes, Karnes, Madison, Mitchell, Pecos, Walker, and Wood counties all have excluded inmate populations when establishing county commissioner, justice of the peace, and constable precincts, according to studies in March and June by Prisoners of the Census. In Anderson and Concho counties, excluding inmate populations prevented the creation of precincts that would have consisted entirely of inmates.
IMO counties shouldn't get to have it both ways. Counties that exclude inmates from their  commissioner precincts should not benefit from those same inmates for representation at the statehouse. Either they're your constituents or they're not.

Monday, August 02, 2010

SCOTUS, felons and the Voting Rights Act

Texas has one of the more progressive stances among states regarding disenfranchisement of felons at the ballot box: Felons may vote again once their sentence is complete and they're "off paper," including any stint on probation or parole. But the incomparable (and sorely missed as NY Times SCOTUS reporter) Linda Greenhouse has a blog post titled "Voting Behind Bars" that raises the possibility that SCOTUS may soon rule on whether incarcerated felons may vote, and as I look at this particular crop of SCOTUS justices, I scratch my head and wonder if there's a chance they might do so. Greenhouse writes:
It has been nearly three months since the court “invited” — that is to say, ordered — Solicitor General Elena Kagan to “express the views of the United States” on whether laws that take away the right to vote from people in prison or on parole can be challenged under the Voting Rights Act as racially discriminatory.

The order came in a case from Massachusetts, Simmons v. Galvin, an appeal by prison inmates challenging a 10-year-old state constitutional amendment that stripped them of the right to vote while incarcerated. They seek Supreme Court review of a ruling, issued a year ago by the federal appeals court in Boston, that Congress never intended the Voting Rights Act to apply in prison. The federal government was not involved in the case. Now the administration — presumably under the direction of whomever President Obama names to succeed Ms. Kagan as solicitor general — has to come up with a position.
It would throw a major political wild card into the electoral political mix if it turns out disproportionate sentencing by race creates de facto violations of the Voting Rights Act. Citing the Sentencing Project, Greenhouse says felony:
convictions have deprived 20 percent of African-Americans in Virginia of the right to vote, compared with a 6.8 percent disenfranchisement rate for Virginia residents as a whole. In Texas, a similar ratio applies: 9.3 percent for blacks compared with 3.3 percent for Texans as a whole. In New York, 80 percent of those who have lost the right to vote are black or Hispanic. Nationally, an estimated one in seven black men has lost the right to vote.
I'm not a lawyer, but this piques my interest mainly because it piqued the Court's; I don't think they'd ask for arguments unless a chance existed that they'd do something, if only to settle disagreements among the circuits. And if a majority decides mass incarceration is discriminatory, then what? Probably nothing, as milquetoast as the Court has been on related topics in recent decades. But they're all just sitting up there with life tenure, and once they take the case, you never know.

How many extra voters would be added to the rolls in Texas if incarcerated people were allowed to vote? Basically you increase the eligible voting population by 3.3%. At the end of FY 2009 there were 155,076 inmates in Texas prisons, state jails and SAFP facilities, according to the TDCJ annual statistical report (pdf). Another 249,082 were on felony probation, and 105,820 were supervised on parole. On July 1, according to the Commission on Jail Standards, another 71,382 were locked up in Texas counties jails. That brings the total number of potential Texas voters who are incarcerated or "on paper" at any given time to 581,360, mas o menos.

Importantly, though, for the ones in prison or jail, voter turnout could be quite high if it were allowed because the voters are literally a captive audience, easy for campaigns to target, and likely to fill out a ballot if it's given to them. OTOH, I suspect voter turnout might be lower than average among those on probation or parole. You might add 300,00 voters or so overall, skewing Democratic but perhaps less than a lot of folks think - Red Texas sends a lot of its own to prison.

How would such a change impact Texas elections? McCain beat Obama in Texas by 950,695 votes in 2008, according to Wikipedia, with the major candidates getting 4.5 million and 3.5 million votes respectively, so in the biggest statewide races it still wouldn't be a game changer. But there would be big impacts in certain, individual legislative districts - either in rural areas, where prisons are housed, or in inner cities if prison voters were registered in their county of conviction. Presently prisoners are counted in the census in the county in which they're incarcerated for purposes of defining legislative districts, but if they actually got to vote that would mean places like Huntsville and Palestine would all of a sudden be electing prisoner advocates to the state Legislature, and even local city and county campaigns would be obliged to craft and deliver messages to woo eligible prison voters, whereas today they can get away with pitching only tuff on crime messages. That part would definitely change how campaigns are run in those locales. Or, if such a major change occurred, the Lege could change the law to allow prisoners to vote in their home counties. Quien sabe?

Perhaps the idea is fanciful, but it's certainly provocative, and Greenhouse's reportage makes it clear that those who would apply the Voting Rights Act to mass incarceration are engaging in a plain reading of the statute. Meanwhile, declaring it doesn't apply requires judges to take an "activist" stance, claiming it wasn't "Congressional intent" for the statute to apply to prisoners. It's hard to buy that argument, though, since the rise of mass incarceration began after passage of the Voting Rights Act; it wouldn't have been an issue at the time because so few people, relatively speaking, were incarcerated. Today, though, when one in 22 adult Texans are under supervision by the criminal justice system, arguably the discriminatory results do affect many elections at the margins, which is where close races are won or lost.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Half million Texans disenfranchised from voting in primary elections: Harms democracy and public safety

The extraordinary turnout at Tuesday's elections and the spectacle of 1.1 million Democrats participating in their precinct conventions left the state abuzz, but over at Talk Left, Jeralyn rightly reminds us to remember those who weren't allowed to cast a ballot. She points to a new public awareness project on felon disenfranchisement, i.e., taking away felons' right to vote, and reminds us how many disenfranchised felons were disallowed from participating in Texas' primary elections:
Over half a million Texan citizens will be unable to vote due to a felony conviction. Over 165,000 of those disfranchised Texans are black,” said Laleh Ispahani, Senior Policy Counsel with the ACLU Racial Justice Program. “Disfranchisement runs contrary to fundamental precepts of democracy, human rights, and of giving people a second chance, a chance at true rehabilitation.”
Half a million people stripped of the vote is a lot of folks! However, I felt compelled to defend our beloved state, somewhat, on this point, replying in the comments that:
Texas has a good re-enfranchisement law compared to many states. Felons can vote again as soon as they're off paper, i.e., when they've completed either their sentence, parole, or their probation term. Quite a few other states ban for years afterward or even for life.

The reason we have half a million ineligible is we have ten year probation terms, so that's basically how many probationers and parolees are out there. But one in 11 Texans has a felony record, and the vast majority of them are eligible to vote.
However, that doesn't mean we couldn't do better. Governor Perry vetoed legislation that would have given ex-offenders notification and a voter registration card when they became eligible to vote. (Offenders already get a packet of information from TDCJ when they get "off paper," and the bill would have included notice of voting eligibility and a voter registration card in the packet.)

That insensible decision, IMO, was made purely out of political calculation, hoping to reduce the number of (supposed) new Democratic voters at the margins. However, from a public safety standpoint it makes little sense to discourage voting at all. If it's intended as punishment, it's a poor one; half of Americans don't vote even when they're allowed to, so it's not like you're taking anything from them that affects their daily lives.

Felons should be allowed to vote IMO even when they're on probation and parole, and it wouldn't bother me if mail ballots were cast from prison. (That happens right now only in Maine and Vermont. Probationers and parolees can vote in 13 additional states.) I don't see the logic of implementing a punishment that requires offenders to behave anti-socially.

I don't support re-enfranchisement because I think prisoners would vote for one or the other party, but because the act of voting requires public engagement. You must a) care about the activities of government and b) educate yourself about the candidates and issues in order to cast a ballot, and that process itself I believe has rehabilitative effects. Simply caring about something other than yourself - even if it's an election - might be a learning experience for many whose narcissism, bad decisions and immature behavior have already dug them into deep legal holes.

We're talking about a lot of people here: Roughly one in 20 Texas adults are incarcerated, on probation or parole. And they all have to live with the government we elect just like everybody else.

(See a state by state guide on disenfranchisement laws.)

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Unseemly Perry veto shows how GOP fear of felon voters creates self fulfilling prophecy

With the 80th Texas Legislature behind us, now we can look forward to seeing how much of what was passed survives Governor Perry's veto pen. Already Governor 39% has vetoed a bipartisan bill that drew no organized opposition at the Lege: HB 770 notifying ex-offenders when they become eligible to vote and sending them a voter registration card (see Grits' discussion here, and testimony from TCJC).

Perry's veto message on this bill is a bit of mealy mouthed flotsam masking base political fears that more ex-offenders might vote. It reads like one of Terry Keel's parliamentary rulings, avoiding the central questions and dressing up an unreasonable, politicized stance whose only real justification is political gain.

The Governor's main, stated reason for a veto is that registering ex-offenders isn't part of TDCJ's "mission," but the state took away the voting right when offenders went to TDCJ, and it doesn't seem like a stretch to notify them when that restriction is removed. When offenders get "off paper" they already receive a packet of information from TDCJ, and this would just add the notice that they're eligible to vote and a registration card.

Besides, the Department of Public Safety's "mission" is not voter registration, but that doesn't stop Texas from operating its "motor voter" program to let people register to vote when they obtain or renew their driver's license. If there's a difference, I don't see it.

Indeed, Perry's veto message is full of such red herrings and misreprsentations. Perhaps the biggest one: "the state does not currently provide this service to law-abiding citizens, such as high school graduates who are new to voting. I find it unseemly that the state would make a greater effort to register former inmates to vote than we would any other group of citizens in this state."

Well, Mr. Perry, we do notify kids they can vote. I was handed my first voter registration application in a high school government class, and most kids get a driver license so the motor voter program gets them a registration card.

For ex-offenders, though, if they're not "off paper" when they re-apply for a driver's license, they won't be eligible to register then like others would be. The main reason for the bill is that many ex-offenders don't know what are the laws surrounding when they become eligible to vote again - a voter registration drive last year among ex-offenders found many people eligible to vote who believed they weren't allowed to do so. The 18-year old voters the Governor describes don't suffer similar misunderstandings.

Plus, the 18-year old voting age is uniform nationwide, while every state has different laws on when ex-felons can vote. The situations simply aren't analogous. We're not talking about just a few people. Nearly one in 20 adult Texans today are in prison, on probation or on parole.

In reality, it's Governor Perry's position on this that's "unseemly." The real reason for his opposition: Many GOP political consultants believe ex-offenders will be more likely to vote Democratic. OTOH, that could just be a self-fulfilling prophecy - perhaps it's policy stances like this one that make these voters less likely to support the GOP. Two thirds of Republicans in the Texas House and 75% of GOP senators voted for HB 770, but thanks to Governor Perry's veto, it will be hard for Republicans to avoid appearing as though this is their party's stance.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Voting and the Elderly in House Corrections

Two subjects most people don't associate with the prison system - voting and the elderly - will be hot topics on Monday in the Texas House Corrections Committee. A pair of good bills I'm excited about by Rep. Harold Dutton are on Monday's agenda, in addition to Chairman Madden's HB 530 expanding use of drug courts that I blogged about yesterday. Here are the highlights:

Voter Reinfranchisement:
HB 770 provides notice to offenders that they are eligible to vote when they are "off paper," meaning they no longer supervised by the Texas Department of Corrections or a local probation department. Right now former inmates are eligible to vote when they're off paper, but because rules are different in each state, many ex-offenders don't realize they're eligible to re-register. The relevant part of the bill states:
NOTICE TO FORMER INMATE.

(a) The Texas Department of Criminal Justice shall provide written notice to a person who is released from the custody or supervision of the department that the person may be eligible to vote if the person is no longer subject to the disability referred to in Section 11.002(4).

(b)The department shall provide to the person an official voter registration application form prescribed by the secretary of state together with the notice required by Subsection (a).
Exercising the right vote helps ex-offenders reintegrate into society by giving them a sense of civic pride, belonging, and even patriotism that comes from participating in the decisions made by government that affect them. It's perhaps no coincidence that the decline in voter participation in Texas in the last three decades has coincided with a massive prison buildup that far outstripped Texas' growth in population.

I like the idea of sending them a formal notice and a voter registration card. It's like society's way of telling someone: "Welcome back. We know you screwed up, but we forgive you, and as long as you act like an adult, we'll treat you like one." In fact, it wouldn't bother me if that was the exact message in the note from TDCJ. ;)

Caring for Elderly Inmates
Another Dutton bill, HB 763, would require TDCJ to establish additional "in-prison geriatric communities" for inmates 60 and over, starting with an 800-person unit and reassessing every two years to determine any additional need for geriatric beds. With new penalty enhancements every legislative session, 99 year sentences being handed out by juries for non-violent crimes, and grandstanding pols pushing counteractively punitive legislation like "Jessica's Law," the need for more facilities for senior can be expected to grow immensely in the coming years.

In Sunset Commission hearings last fall, legislators learned that TDCJ pays five times as much in inmate health costs for prisoners over 50 years old compared to those under 50. It doesn't make sense to have those inmates scattered across 100 units. Why not have them all in one place where intensive medical needs could be handled more efficiently and hopefully less expensively? And finally,

No Room at the Inn
Also up on Monday in Corrections is Chairman Madden's HB 198, which I've written about before. It would expand TDCJ's authorization to contract for beds by 1,000 beds in anticipation of Madden and Whitmire's larger community supervision package.