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06.08.11
Pay-to-Stay Jail Scheme Wastes Resources, Punishes Those
Who Cannot Afford to Pay
ACLU Begins Investigation Into Monroe County Jail Policy
WOODSFIELD, OH - The American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio sent a records request
to Monroe County Sheriff Charles R. Black asking for information on the county’s
pay-to-stay jail policy. The policy charges people housed in the county jail a fee
based on the number of days they are incarcerated and the individual’s income
level. Sheriff Black enacted the policy in March 2011.
“Pay-to-stay jail schemes often create more problems than they solve,”
said ACLU of Ohio Legal Director James Hardiman. “Fines make it harder for
those released from jail to provide for family, and obtain necessities like housing
and transportation. If people cannot successfully reintegrate back into society,
they are more likely to commit crimes in the future, costing taxpayers even more.”
In its records request, the ACLU asked for documents detailing the cost of the
program, how the county determines the amount inmates must pay, policies for inmates
who cannot afford to pay, procedures for how the fees are collected, and the number
of Monroe County inmates who were housed in other counties and charged pay-to-stay fees.
“While I sympathize with counties that are attempting to offset deep budget cuts,
these programs are simply a bad deal for the government and taxpayers,” added
Hardiman. “The cost of billing, collecting, and enforcing payment of these
fees far outweighs any possible profits they might achieve. In addition, the program
may increase taxpayer costs by forcing those who were not indigent when they entered
jail to utilize taxpayer-funded social services.”
Other counties in Ohio have ended pay-to-stay programs after they proved to be too
costly to implement. In October 2010, the ACLU released a report titled In For
a Penny: The Rise of America’s Debtors’ Prisons. The report quoted
Clermont County Sheriff A.J. Rodenberg, who said the program cost the county more than
it hoped to recoup. In addition, officials in Medina County indicated they ended their
pay-to-stay program over similar cost concerns.
Pay-to-stay programs have come under fire in Ohio in the past. In 2000, a lawsuit was
filed against Hamilton County after it began collecting booking fees. The U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of Ohio found that the county unconstitutionally fined
those who had not been convicted of a crime, nor were given due process. The judge
ruled the county must refund $1 million in prisoner fees and create a prisoner education
program.
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Read
the letter to the Monroe County Sheriff.
View the ACLU of Ohio Criminal
Justice page.
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