Some DOC inmates will likely also be people from Howard County attempting to assimilate back into the community, said Wyman.
And if the county receives additional grant money next year, a female work release program could be up and running by late 2018 to early 2019, Wyman previously noted.
“I don’t know if anyone can predict the exact numbers of what work release is going to do, but we are certainly hopeful that that’s another option to get people back into the community, keep them at work, rather than keep them locked up in jail,” added Rogers.
Rogers later noted that he’s hoping work release “will take some of that stress off the jail.
“We’re hoping there is a significant number of people that come out of our anticipated jail population,” he said. “And the other thing is, if work release is effective at breaking that cycle of recidivism, that will be some long-range problem- solving.”
STATE LEGISLATION
Another focus for local officials is the continued impact of Indiana House Enrolled Act 1006, which many law enforcement officials believe is a primary reason for ballooning jail population figures.
The bill, passed in 2014, was meant to ease the burden for the Indiana Department of Correction by shifting low-level and nonviolent offenders to county jails. But it has ultimately created a significant burden on jails like Howard County’s.
Rogers – who has been public in his criticism of the legislation and said that DOC inmates in the Howard County Criminal Justice Center number about 55 to 65 per day – said he will in coming months keep up his communication with DOC and state officials about the additional stress placed on county jails.
“We are really hopeful that work release is going to take a chunk of those folks, and I’m still going to go back to the DOC and state legislators and say, ‘Hey, it would certainly help local jails if you can take Level 6 felons back,’” he said, noting that the issue will be on the agenda of a November meeting of the Indiana Sheriff’s Association.
A report to Indiana lawmakers provided last month showed that the state hasn’t seen significant savings from the criminal sentencing overhaul.
The report presented to a legislative committee shows the average monthly number of new state prison inmates declined from nearly 650 in 2014 to more than 120 last year. That decline allowed the state to close the Henryville Correctional Facility in southeastern Indiana, reducing spending by nearly $2.5 million.
But Chris Johnston of KSM Consulting told lawmakers that most of those offenders are ending up in county jails, rather than community corrections and probation programs.
“[HEA] 1006 in my opinion didn’t work,” said Sen. Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis. “We just transferred the liability.”
The KSM study found the state’s $11 million estimated annual prison savings are largely consumed by the nearly $9.5 million it pays to counties holding low-level felons in jail.