My Turn: Shrinking budgets, drug epidemic created Alaska’s ‘perfect storm’

  • By JAHNA LINDEMUTH
  • Wednesday, November 23, 2016 1:02am
  • Opinion

Change is hard but it can also provide opportunities. Last spring, an opportunity presented itself when our Legislature and Gov. Bill Walker enacted Senate Bill 91, broadly reforming our criminal justice system.

Before this happened, the Legislature asked the Alaska Criminal Justice Commission to study our system and recommend changes. The commission did this and came up with recommendations based on evidence of what worked in other states. This became the foundation for SB 91.

The commission – including Department of Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan, Department of Corrections Commissioner Dean Williams, and me as head of the Department of Law, all agree that SB 91 is the right path for our state. But it will improve public safety in the long run only if the state sees the reform efforts through. Tweaks will be needed to the new law, and the commission will monitor implementation and recommend changes where needed.

SB 91 was needed because our prior laws were not working as we had hoped. Since 2005, when Alaska adopted “tough on crime” laws, our incarceration rates went through the roof. But increasing prison sentences did not reform criminals or make our communities safer in the long run. In fact, two-thirds of offenders released from jail were back behind bars within three years.

SB 91 offers an entirely new approach to criminal justice. Because substance abuse factors into most crimes and more than 40 percent of our inmates have mental health issues, a primary goal of SB 91 is to treat addiction and mental illness. SB 91 reduced prison sentences for all but the most serious crimes.

We still aggressively prosecute serious crimes like homicides and sexual assaults and we will continue to seek long prison terms for violent criminals. But the Legislature has told our prosecutors to think creatively when pursuing less serious crimes, especially where a substance abuse problem or mental health issue is a factor. Similar reforms in other states show these reforms can work.

We must all understand that these reform efforts won’t succeed if our criminal justice and public health systems are not adequately funded. But our State is facing a fiscal crisis as well as a drug epidemic. This is creating a perfect storm.

The state’s fiscal crisis has resulted in shrinking budgets throughout the criminal justice system. The Department of Law has lost 80 positions over the last four years and had its budget slashed over 26 percent. Our shrinking budget is largely used for three core priorities — prosecuting crime, protecting children who are in dangerous homes and protecting the state’s sovereignty including ensuring we collect dollars owed to the state and defending against federal overreach. While our budget has shrunk, the current drug epidemic has led to increased crime and more endangered children. For example, our child-in-need-of-aid (CINA) cases have gone up 55 percent in two years.

This perfect storm has pushed the Department of Law to its breaking point. Last year (before SB 91 was in effect), the number of criminal cases we had to decline to prosecute rose 6 percent because of budget cuts. The 6 percent of cases we did not prosecute let criminals go free who should have been held accountable — whether through fines, treatment, jail time, probation or other options. Because of our budget cuts and staff losses, we are forced to prioritize the crimes we prosecute and focus on the most serious offenses regardless of the direction given by SB 91.

Alaska also does not yet have enough treatment options available for those suffering from addiction or mental illness. The recent Medicaid expansion and additional money the legislature provided last year increased funding for treatment options, but more is needed. Within a year or two, we should see significant budget savings from reduced prison populations, and those savings should be reinvested.

More money is needed for our criminal justice system. Criminal justice reform will not work if there is no accountability or those who are diverted from jail are not given treatment. What other states have shown us is that up front funding results in long-term savings when we successfully rehabilitate low level offenders. Rehabilitating offenders increases public safety while saving the state money. That is the goal of SB 91.

• Jahna Lindemuth is the Attorney General for the State of Alaska.

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski addresses the Alaska State Legislature on Feb. 22, 2023. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Set ANWR aside and President Biden is pro-Alaska

In a recent interview with the media, Sen. Lisa Murkowski was asked… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Local Veterans for Peace chapter calls for ceasefire in Gaza

The members of Veterans For Peace Chapter 100 in Southeast Alaska have… Continue reading

Eric Cordingley looks at his records while searching for the graves of those who died at Morningside Hospital at Multnomah Park Cemetery on Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in Portland, Ore. Cordingley has volunteered at his neighborhood cemetery for about 15 years. He’s done everything from cleaning headstones to trying to decipher obscure burial records. He has documented Portland burial sites — Multnomah Park and Greenwood Hills cemeteries — have the most Lost Alaskans, and obtained about 1,200 death certificates. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)
My Turn: Decades of Psychiatric patient mistreatment deserves a state investigation and report

On March 29, Mark Thiessen’s story for the Associated Press was picked… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Alaska House makes the right decision on constitutionally guaranteed PFD

The Permanent Fund dividend is important to a lot of Alaska households,… Continue reading

Alaska Attorney General Treg Taylor in a profile picture at the Department of Law’s website. (Alaska Department of Law photo)
Dunleavy wants a state sponsored legal defense fund

On Friday, the Senate Judiciary Committee held its second hearing on a… Continue reading

Most Read