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Salt Lake County wants more cash for convicts
This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2010, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Felons could get a shorter stay in Salt Lake County's jail if the Utah Legislature doesn't pay more for state inmates.

The County Council has signed a resolution -- and ordered an ordinance drafted -- that could release state convicts early from jail if the Legislature doesn't provide enough funding to house them.

The less money, officials say, the less bed space for felons who are sentenced to the county lockup.

"There does come a time," Councilman Randy Horiuchi said, "when you have to say, 'Enough is enough.'"

The Utah Association of Counties has lobbied for similar measures in Davis, Utah and Weber counties, hoping to persuade lawmakers to put more cash into jail reimbursements.

While the state is supposed to split the cost of incarcerating felons in county jails, UAC Executive Director Brent Gardner said, actual funding has fallen far below that. The state set aside $6.5 million for jail reimbursements in this year's budget, he says, but should be spending closer to $15 million.

UAC's initiative now has the support of Utah's most-populous county, where council members unanimously supported a resolution saying they will not continue to subsidize the state's financial shortfalls.

"It is outrageous that the state, on a yearly basis, provides this unfunded mandate to county governments," Mayor Peter Corroon said. That mandate affects public safety, "not only for the unincorporated county but for the cities we serve."

The resolution comes as yet another development in the long-running debate about how much the state should pay for inmates serving out their sentences in county jails.

The recession has only deepened the rift. Jails in Utah and Weber counties have reduced bed space because of budget woes.

Salt Lake County Councilman Joe Hatch characterized it as a "very difficult thing to do" to consider turning away felons because of inadequate state funding. But, he said, "we need the money."

The question now is whether the state, also in a financial bind, will cough up the cash at a time when it is considering closing a prison pod of its own.

jstettler@sltrib.com

DU resolution on hold

Before the Salt Lake County Council speaks out about stopping depleted-uranium shipments, it wants to make sure its facts are straight.

The council delayed its decision Tuesday on a resolution opposing the transportation and storage of thousands of tons of depleted uranium in Utah. Officials want to spend two extra weeks reviewing a list of supposed errors in the resolution, as presented by EnergySolutions.

"I would hope that before a resolution like this is adopted that could have such a tremendous impact on an important Utah company and on jobs and the economy," said EnergySolutions President Val Christensen, "that the council would take the time to study the underlying science."

The council obliged.

What the resolution says

"The operational capacity of the jail approved by the council shall be adjusted to reflect the jail's reduced capacity for housing and supervising such prisoners as determined by the reduced funding."

Jail fight » Council urges state to pay more or some inmates will be set free.
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