Cost and Benefits?
by Dan Macallair, Khaled Taqi-Eddin and Vincent Schiraldi
|
"LET THE SYSTEM SETTLE
DOWN, . . . STOP THE GROWTH. GET BACK TO THE BASICS OF RUNNING THE
SYSTEM, NOT JUST ADDING THESE 3,000 BEDS, THOSE 5,000 BEDS, ANOTHER
7,000 BEDS." -former Corrections Director James Gomez testifying at the
Corcoran prison hearings.
"UNLESS WE GET OTHER
AREAS OF STATE GOVERNMENT UNDER CONTROL, AND STOP THROWING MONEY AT
PROBLEMS, WE ARE GOING TO SACRIFICE EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES." -Joni
Finney, associate director of the California Higher Education Policy
Center.
"(THEY) DESERVE THE
RAISE (CORRECTIONAL OFFICERS) . . . BECAUSE THEY HAVE THE TOUGHEST BEAT
IN CALIFORNIA." -Gov. spokesman Sean Walsh commenting on the 12 percent
pay raise offer to corrections officers. |
Introduction
In November, Californians
will elect a new governor who will guide the state into the next
millenium. Education has been a topic of interest during this year's
gubernatorial election. The 1998-1999 budget includes significant
funding increases for Higher Education. This increase represents a step
in the right direction, but this is an unusual year in that California
had a 4 billion-dollar surplus at the end of the 1997-1998 budget. Over
the past decade, Higher Education has steadily decreased as a portion
of the general fund from 15% in 1988-1989 to 13% in 1998-1999.(i) If
Higher Education still held a 15% share of the general fund as it was a
decade ago, its budget would be $1.2 billion higher. While the need for
a more specialized workforce is increasing, California has watched
enrollment in its universities decrease.
By contrast, the
state has seen corrections rise at a greater rate than any of the other
five major budget categories in the general fund. In 1980, California
had 12 prisons and prison guards made approximately $21,000 per year.
Presently, the state has 33 prisons and correctional officers' salaries
have more than doubled (to $46,200) from what they were less than
twenty years ago.
The tradeoff between
prisons and universities is not unique to California. The Justice
Policy Institute has conducted a series of analyses on the shift in
funding from higher education to corrections taking place nationally.
Some of our findings include:
-States around the
country spent more building prisons than colleges in 1995 for the first
time. That year, there was nearly a dollar-for-dollar tradeoff between
corrections and higher education, with university construction funds
decreasing by $954 million to (2.5 billion) while corrections funding
increased by $926 million to (2.6 billion). Around the country, from
1987 to 1995, general fund expenditures for prisons increased by 30%,
while general fund expenditures for universities decreased by 18%.(ii)
-During the 1990s,
the state of Maryland's prison budget increased by $147 million, while
its university budget decreased by $29 million. Nine out of ten new
inmates added to the prison system during this period were
African-Americans.(iii)
-The budget for
Florida's corrections department increased $450 million between 1992
and 1994. That is more of an increase than Florida's university system
received in the previous ten years.(iv)
-Washington, DC
literally has more inmates in its prisons than students in its
university system. DC's corrections system experienced a 312% increase
in funding from 1977 to 1993 compared to an 82% increase in its
university system during that period.(v)
The tradeoff between
prisons and universities is an important analytical subject for a
variety of reasons. Prisons and universities generally occupy the
portion of a state's budget that is neither mandated by federal
requirements nor driven by population - like Medicare or K-12
education. Because they dominate a state's discretionary funds, prisons
and universities must "fight it out" for the non-mandated portion of
the state's budget.
Perhaps more
importantly, however, prisons and universities have the same "target
audience" - young adults. As such, the fiscal tradeoffs between these
two departments can serve as a barometer of sorts, helping to gauge a
state's hope for its future.
Methodology and Purpose
The purpose of this study
is to first examine the state's spending patterns in Higher Education
and Corrections during Governor Wilson's Administration. JPI sought to
compare these changes using annual expenditure data from the California
Postsecondary Education Commission (CPEC). Data produced by CPEC will
also be used to examine student tuition fees over the same period of
time.
Finally, using
California Department of Corrections' (CDC) data on incarceration rates
and CPEC enrollment data for California's State (CSU) and University
(UC) systems, we will examine the changing racial composition in public
colleges and prisons. The focus of this section will examine the
declining male populations in public universities and the increase in
prisons.
We will show that at
a time of high anxiety in California's higher education system, more
people of color were entering the prison system than were entering
full-time undergraduate four-year colleges. While the gap between
college graduates and inmates has grown over the decades, the Wilson
administration has overseen prison growth and tuition increases greater
than increases that occurred even under Governors Reagan and
Deukmejian. Before voters decide to hand the keys of the gubernatorial
mansion to Gov. Wilson's heir apparent, Californians need to know what
path their youth are being lead down-and whether it is leading to ivory
towers, or limestone walls.
Corrections Rises: At What Expense?
Just one day after the
governor vetoed pay raises for other state workers, negotiators for
correctional officers agreed to a one-year, twelve-percent pay
raise.(vi) According to the Sacramento Bee, officers' top pay will go
from $46,200 to $50,820 a year. Conversely, instructor's at state
universities make on average between $32,000 and $37,000 per year.(vii)
When it was alleged that the prison guard union's 1.5 million dollars
in contributions to Gov. Wilson influenced this unique agreement, the
Governor's spokesman Sean Walsh called the allegations "outrageous."
The entire package will cost $80 to $100 million in the new budget
signed by Governor Wilson on August 21 of this year.
This should come as
no surprise to Californians. Over the past decade, Corrections has
grown as a portion of the General Fund at a greater rate than any of
the other four major budget categories. In the last ten years,
Corrections has increased 60% while Higher Education decreased by 3% in
actual appropriations.(viii) Corrections witnessed its greatest
increases between 1990 and the present. From 1993-1995, for example,
prison spending reached its height as a percent of General Fund
expenditures making up approximately 8.7% of the general fund. This is
more than twice Corrections' share of General Fund expenditures in
fiscal year 1984-1985 (4.1%) and more than three times Corrections'
share of fiscal year 1978-1979 general fund expenditures (2.7%).
Higher Education, on
the other hand, has seen decreases in general fund spending for the
past eight years. From 1993-1995, baccalaureate spending reached its
all time low at 12% of the general fund. Following the passage of Prop.
98, amended to include community colleges in 1990-which specifies
minimum spending levels for K-14 education-the share of General Fund
expenditures allocated to Higher Education increased modestly until the
fiscal year 1998-1999 budget was signed. Whether these increases will
continue is suspect since the trend has been to decrease Higher
Education in non-surplus years. The result has been increased
out-of-pocket expenses for students.
In the past
thirty-three years, tuition costs in UC and CSU systems have increased
dramatically. Between 1980 and the present, fees have risen 303 percent
in the UC system and 485 percent in the CSU system. In this same period
of time, 21 new prisons have been built and prison guard salaries have
more than doubled. On the other hand, only one CSU campus has been
built and students are forced to take out more in loans because of very
limited resources in government grants.
According to the
California Department of Corrections, it currently costs approximately
$22,000 to imprison one inmate for a year. With an annual average cost
of $4,022 in tuition fees, approximately 5 students could attend the
University of California for the cost of housing one inmate.
Additionally, at an average annual cost of $1868, approximately 12
students could attend the California State University system for the
cost of imprisoning one inmate.
The minimum period of
incarceration for inmates sentenced to 25 to life under California's
"Three-Strikes" law is 21.75 years (85% of the min. sentence). This
means that, in 1998 dollars, a defendant sentenced to life under
"Three-Strikes" will cost a minimum of $467,500. This translates into
approximately 116 students who could have attended a University of
California campus. Conversely, 250 students could have attended a
California State University for that amount.
The current
population of California inmates serving life under "Three-Strikes"
costs $95 million for one year. The state could send 23,893 students to
UC or 50,878 to CSU for that same amount.
Disproportionate Representation in Schools and Prisons for Minorities
The latest census
estimates reflect a continued shift in California from a predominantly
White population to one with Hispanics and Asian/Pacific Islanders
increasing in majority. The same shift is also reflected in enrollment
to the state's public universities and prisons. The impact of
California's policy decisions regarding the budget has adversely
affected the poor, working/middle class and minority groups (mainly
African-Americans). For example, the rise in university fees has
greatly increased the out-of-pocket expenses for students. Students are
becoming more reliant on loans rather than grants and scholarships,
which have become increasingly limited because of the lack of funding
in higher education.
Two years before Gov.
Wilson took office, the cost of attending the University of California
represented about 5 percent of the national median income for a white
family, 8.6 percent for an African-American family, and 7.4 percent of
the median income for a Hispanic family. For all families, of any race,
the cost of sending someone to the University of California has
increased. For a white family, the cost of sending a child to UC rose
to 8.7 percent of their median income-a significant rise.
But for
African-American families, today, sending a child to the UC system
would represent 14 percent of the black median family income-almost
double the percentage it was a decade ago. For Latinos, the cost of
sending a child to UC consumes twice the portion of median family
income (15%) as it did in 1989.
Total male enrollment
in the University of California and California State Universities has
decreased dramatically over the past decade. The numbers have decreased
8% from 200,021 to 183,626 full-time male students enrolled in the past
eight years.ix By contrast, male incarcerations have increased 59% from
90,807 to 144,392 in this same period of time.(x) The trends in racial
composition between prisons and higher education facilities reveal
startling disparities for minorities.
African-Americans
currently make up 7% of California's population.(xi) Between 1990 and
1997, African-American male enrollment in CSU and UC systems decreased
from 8974 to 8767 full-time students. During that same period of time,
the total number of incarcerated black males increased from 32,145 to
44,617. While African-American male enrollment numbers decreased by 217
students, 12,147 black male inmates were added to the CDC.
The difference
reveals that for every African-American male subtracted from a UC or
CSU, 57 were added to a state correctional facility. The ratio of
imprisoned African-American males to those in state universities is
currently 5 to 1. The numbers are shockingly up from just two years ago
when the ratio stood at a surprising 4 to 1. African-Americans make up
7% of the state population, yet blacks only account for 5.5% in the UC
and CSU systems (both graduate and under graduate programs) while
making up an astonishing 31% of CDC prisoners.
Hispanics currently
make up 28% of California's population.(xii) From 1990-1995, California
experienced a net gain of 1,414,000 Hispanics. The gain is also
illustrated in the enrollment numbers to California's public
Universities during the last seven years. Between 1990 and 1997, Latino
males increased from 22,552 to 30,454 full-time students enrolled in
the state's four-year public universities.
At the same time, the
Hispanic male inmate population grew from 29,679 to 53,881 inmates in
California correctional facilities. While Latino male enrollment
increased by 7,902 students in a UC and CSU, the number of Latino males
in the CDC increased by 24,202. Put another way, 3 Latino males were
added to the prison population for every one added to California's
four-year public universities.
As the Hispanic
population grew from 26% to 28% in the last eight years, the Hispanic
male population grew from 11% to 17% in public universities and from
31% to 35% in the CDC. Compared to their overall representation in
California, Hispanic males are underrepresented in our public
universities and over-represented in our prisons. During Governor
Wilson's term, Latino males have had a much greater likelihood of
entering a prison cell rather than a classroom.
The Governor of Corrections?
For the past eight years,
the policies and agenda of Republican Governor Pete Wilson have
dominated California. The result has been cuts in higher education and
increases in corrections spending as a percentage share of the budget.
The trend in California for the past twenty years reveals startling
increases in incarceration. Since 1990, university fees are soaring and
the inmate population has increased substantially in contrast to
declining crime rates. Where does Governor Wilson rank among his
predecessors in the last thirty-two years regarding corrections and
higher education funding, university fees and prison populations?
From 1967-1975,
former President Ronald Reagan served as California's governor. During
Reagan's gubernatorial term, there was an actual decrease in prison
population and a total university fee growth of $1,028 (1998 "constant
dollars"). The total prison population from 12/31/66 to 12/31/74
decreased by 2,726 from 27,467 to 24,741 inmates housed in the CDC.
Although university fees did increase during Reagan's eight-year term
as governor, higher education maintained its percentage share in the
budget at 16.8% of the general fund in the 1967-1968 budget to 16.7% in
the 1974-1975 budget. Conversely, Corrections witnessed a decline in
percentage share of the general fund dropping from a 4% share of the
general fund in the 1967-1968 budget to a 3.2% share in the 1974-1975
budget. Under Reagan's term as Governor of California, the state
maintained its focus on educating rather than incarcerating.
Under Edmond G.
(Jerry) Brown Jr., California witnessed an increase in total prison
population and a $437 increase in public university fees. The total
prison population grew from 24,471 inmates as of 12/31/74 to 34,640
incarcerated as of 12/31/82 (difference of 9,899 inmates). While
university fees had a nominal increase, Higher Education's percentage
share of the budget fell from 16.8% of the general fund in the
1975-1976 budget to 14.6% in the 1982-1983 budget. The difference
represented a 13.1% decrease in actual dollars not going towards higher
education.
It is important to
point out that Proposition 13 was enacted during Brown's term as
governor. The law cut back property taxes significantly straining the
state's ability to raise money. This caused a crisis mainly at the
local level, which required state intervention to shore up some of the
damage. Corrections reached its lowest level in general fund percentage
share at 2.7% in the 1978-1979 budget, but maintained its 3.2% share
throughout most of Brown's eight-year term.
Following Jerry Brown
as California's governor from 1983-1991 was George Deukmejian. Under
Deukmejian, the state witnessed an explosion in prison populations. As
of 12/31/82, the total population of the CDC stood at 34,640 inmates.
On 12/31/91, the prison population stood at 97,309 inmates or a
difference of 62,669 inmates. The CDC budget increased from a
percentage share of 3.7% in the 1983-1984 budget to 6.7% in the
1990-1991 budget. This represented an 81% increase in Corrections'
share of the General Fund. The total growth in University fees during
the Deukmejian era came to $44 (CSU=$212, UC= -$168). Under Governor
Deukmejian, California's trend towards incarceration rather than
education was set into motion and the stage was set for Pete Wilson.
California's current
governor, Pete Wilson, is coming to the end of his eight-year term. The
prison population under Wilson continued to grow at accelerated rates
and university fees experienced the largest increase in the last 32
years. On 12/31/90, the prison population in California stood at 97,309
inmates. On 12/31/98, the prison population is estimated to stand at
165,166 inmates or a 67,857 growth in prisoners.(xiii) Between Governor
Wilson's and former governor Deukmejian's terms in office, 1 CSU campus
and no UC campuses were built compared to 21 new prisons erected in the
same period of time. University fees experienced a total growth of
$2331 under Gov. Wilson, the single greatest growth in the last 32
years.
During the Wilson
era, Higher Education reached its lowest point as a percentage share of
the budget receiving 12% in the 1993-1994 budget. Conversely,
Corrections hit its highest level receiving 8.7% in that same year. The
trend over the last 16 years has been startling. Overall, under Gov.
Wilson, the prison population and fees paid by California college
students experienced their highest growth versus Governor Reagan, Brown
and Deukmejian. Comparatively speaking, Wilson has earned his spot in
California's history as the Governor of Corrections.
This research is funded in part by a grant from The California Wellness Foundation
(TCWF). Created in 1992 as a private and independent foundation, TCWF's
mission is to improve the health of the people of California through
proactive support of health promotion and disease prevention programs.
This research was
made possible through generous funding from the Rockefeller Foundation,
The Center on Crime, Communities and Culture, The Van Loben Sels
Foundation and the Pacific Center for Violence Prevention.
The Justice Policy
Institute is a policy development and research body that promotes
effective and sensible approaches to America's justice system. JPI is a
project of the non-profit Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice.
The authors would
like to thank the California Postsecondary Education Commission,
Offender Information Services Branch of the California Department of
corrections, Legislative Analyst's Office, Jill Herschman and Jason
Ziedenberg, all of whom graciously contributed to the creation of this
report.
Endnotes
i Woolfork, Kevin et all. Aug.20, 1998. Fiscal Profiles, 1998. Sacramento, CA: California Postsecondary Education Commission.
ii Ambrosio, Tara Jen
& Vincent Schiraldi. February 1997. From Classrooms to Cellblocks:
A National Perspective. Washington, DC: Justice Policy Institute.
iii Schiraldi,
Vincent. February 1998. Is Maryland's System of Higher Education
Suffering Because Prison Expenditures? Washington DC: Justice Policy
Institute.
iv Ambrosio, Tara Jen
& Vincent Schiraldi. February 1997. From Classrooms to Cellblocks:
A National Perspective. Washington, DC: Justice Policy Institute.
v Ambrosio, Tara Jen
& Vincent Schiraldi. February 1997. Trading Classrooms for
Cellblocks: Destructive Policies Eroding DC's Communities. Washington,
DC: Justice Policy Institute.
vi Furillo, Andy. Aug.25, 1998. State offers corrections officers 12 percent pay raise. Sacramento, CA: Sacramento Bee
vii According to the
CPEC, instructors are required to have a bachelors degree and teaching
credentials. Prison guards need only a high school diploma.
viii Woolfork, Kevin et all. Aug.20, 1998. Fiscal Profiles, 1998. Sacramento, CA: California Postsecondary Education Commission.
ix Woolfork, Kevin et all. Aug.20, 1998. Fiscal Profiles, 1998. Sacramento, CA: California Postsecondary Education Commission.
x California Department of Corrections Population Estimates. www.cdc.state.us.ca/
xi Malson, John. Race/Ethnic Report: Population Estimates. Sacramento, CA: Department of Finance.
xii Malson, John. Race/Ethnic Report: Population Estimates. Sacramento, CA: Department of Finance.
xiii Based on a three year trend data from the California Department of Corrections.
Suggested citation format for this study: Macallair, Dan, Vincent Schiraldi and Khaled Taqi-Eddin. (1998) Class Dismissed: Higher Education vs. Corrections During the Wilson Years. San Francisco, California: The Justice Policy Institute.