College for Prisoners Costs How Much?
New Yorkers pay about $60,000 per inmate per year.
The New York Times reports.
A College Education for Prisoners
States are finally backing away from the draconian sentencing policies that swept the country at the end of the last century, driving up prison costs and sending too many people to jail for too long, often for nonviolent offenses. Many are now trying to turn around the prison juggernaut by steering drug addicts into treatment instead of jail and retooling parole systems that once sent people back to prison for technical violations.
But the most effective way to keep people out of prison once they leave is to give them jobs skills that make them marketable employees. That, in turn, means restarting prison education programs that were shuttered beginning in the 1990s, when federal and state legislators cut funding to show how tough they were on crime.
Comments
[…] New Yorkers pay about $60,000 per inmate per year. […]
I think what they’re saying is the cost of imprisonment in New York is $60,000 per year per inmate — whether they take college classes or not. But recidivism is lowered with prisoners who attend college classes while they’re inside.