Dozens packed the basement meeting area of the Vigo County Public
Library on Wednesday evening as the Vera Institute for Justice hosted a
public forum about the ongoing Vigo County jail project and a host of
other criminal justice topics.
The Vera Institute of Justice is a
nationally-recognized organization whose mission is to build and improve
justice systems that ensure fairness, promote safety and strengthen
communities. Vera works in partnership with local, state and national
government officials to create change from within.
Vera's director
of outreach and public affairs strategist, Jasmine Heiss, was invited
to speak by the Taxpayer's Association of Vigo County as part of its
effort to better understand what Vigo needs in a new jail.
The county is considering a 140,000 square foot jail with an average population of 307 inmates and a peak of 504 inmates.
The
county's consultants estimate a $60 million construction cost requiring
an annual debt service of more than $5.62 million. Annual operating and
utility costs for a new Vigo jail are estimated to cost more than $6.89
million, an increase of more than $2.56 million over the current jail's
costs.
Heiss said Vigo County is at critical point in its jail
project and in deciding whether the county wants to continue the trend
of mass incarceration or find alternatives that best serve the public's
interest.
From the outset, Heiss painted a bleak picture of mass
incarceration in the state, saying between 2016 and 2018, Indiana saw a
4.3 percent growth in incarceration rates, the highest in the Midwest
during that span.
And while it would be easy for Vigo officials to
look at growing jail and prison populations as a state problem, Heiss
said Vigo has been a key contributor to those statistics.
On April 20, the Vigo County jail had a population of 291, Heiss
said, a roughly 278 percent increase in jail population from just 30
years ago. The rate of incarceration has also increased by approximately
275 percent in that same span, or about 426 people in jail per 100,000
working-age people in the county.
"The Vigo County jail isn't that
big, it doesn't look like a prison," Heiss said. "But the rate of
incarceration here is actually higher than it is in both New York City
and Chicago. And what that means is that your county is more saturated
with the experience of being jailed than some big cities."
But
the past is not a prologue, Heiss said, adding that Vigo leaders now
have the opportunity to build a jail that factors in the failures of
systems past, and includes progressive policies that reduce the county's
growing rate of incarceration.
But what do those programs and policies look like, Heiss asked the audience.
"Vigo
County is a space of tremendous opportunity," Heiss said. "You all have
the opportunity to dig deeper into who's in your jail, about why and
what might be done to change that.
"And you also have the
opportunity to be deeply engaged in this forthcoming policy
implementation and in trying to ensure that detention is a carefully
limited exception."