Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is considering the early release
of more than 20,000 low-risk prison inmates from the nation’s largest prison
system as a way to save money amid a worsening budget crisis, according to a
local newspaper on Thursday.
Only prisoners who have less than 20 months left on their
terms and considered nonviolent numbers among the ones who will benefit from
the governor’s decision, The Sacramento Bee reported on its Web site. Sex offenders
will not be eligible for release under the proposal.
The governor’s office told the Associated Press that Schwarzenegger
had taken this measure as the state seeks to cope with a budget deficit
estimated at $10 billion to $14 billion over the next two fiscal years.
Schwarzenegger has not decided what budget proposals he will
deliver to the Legislature next month, said Adam Mendelsohn, Schwarzenegger
spokersperson. Schwarzenegger had ordered state agencies to make 10 percent
cuts “but has not made final decisions on what those 10 perent cuts will be,”
he said, according to the AP.
The state confronts also with federal court pressure to
relieve severe overcrowding, which has been blamed for serious problems in the
prison system’s health care delivery and mental health services.
The governor’s proposal would cut the prison population by
22,159 inmates and save the state $256 million in the fiscal year that begins
July 1. Savings are estimated at $780 million by 2010. Moreover, the proposal cuts
more than 4,000 prison jobs, most of them belonging to guards.
This decision comes
after in July, Schwarzenegger stated that he would not release any prisoners
early despite severe overcrowding and the threat that federal judges would put
limit the inmate population.
Ryan Sherman, a representative for the state prison guards
union, said the union had not seen the proposal and would not comment on the
report.
David Runnels, undersecretary for operations for the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation refused commenting on the budget proposal.