As if school funding and mental health care didn’t generate enough concerns for next year’s Legislature, now there are dire reports about Washington’s prison system. According to the Justice Reinvestment Task Force, providing adequate prison space over the next 10 years could cost between $387 million and $481 million, which just might be the legislative equivalent of squeezing blood from a turnip.
Let’s start with what has been well-documented. In the wake of the state Supreme Court’s 2012 ruling in McCleary v. Washington, lawmakers are tasked with adding roughly $3 billion in state funding for K-12 education by 2018. They spent the past two legislative sessions making a down payment on that total, but justices indicated last week that they were less than impressed with the effort thus far.
Then there is mental health care. Last month, the state Supreme Court ruled against the practice of “boarding” mental patients in non-psychiatric hospital beds. In other words, patients with mental issues no longer can be placed in regular hospital wards — often strapped in place — that don’t offer appropriate care and treatment. Last week, justices granted a 120-day stay on that ruling, allowing the state time to find alternatives rather than release patients who might be a danger to the public or to themselves. But the gist is that officials must add 145 new psychiatric beds across the state by the end of the year, and Gov. Jay Inslee already has freed up $30 million for the effort.
With those two large tasks facing the Legislature when it convenes in January, it will be understandable if the state’s prison system does not jump to the top of the priority list. And yet that system does present an issue that is likely to grow and must be addressed. The problem: As of the end of June, Washington’s Department of Corrections was housing 16,779 inmates — or 102 percent of capacity. As department secretary Bernard Warner noted, “We’ve had people sleeping on the floor in the past year,” and the department has recently been renting space in other facilities for 686 prisoners.