The nation’s prison population grew for the second consecutive year in 2023, reversing more than a decade of steady decline, reported The Pennsylvania Capital Star.
A new
prison population report from the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics,
released before the federal shutdown, shows that 1,254,224 people were
incarcerated in state and federal prisons on the last day of 2023 — an increase
of 24,081 people from the year before, or about 2%.
It follows
a rise in 2022, which marked the first uptick since 2010, when prison
populations began a gradual decline after peaking in the mid 2000s.
Even with
recent increases, the prison population in 2023 was still about 20% below the
2013 level.
The
Pennsylvania prison population increased 2.5% from 2022 to 2023, going from
37,910 prisoners to 38,860.
The latest
figures show that women remain a small share of the prison population, but
their numbers are growing faster than men’s.
Between
2022 and 2023, the female prison population rose nearly 4%, from 87,800 to
91,100. The male population increased by nearly 2% during the same period.
Thirty-eight states saw growth in their male prison populations, while 41
states reported increases among women.
New
Mexico, Maine and South Dakota recorded the highest growth rates in their
prison populations.
Seven more
populous states — Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, Texas and
Wisconsin — added more than 1,000 people to their prison rolls during the same
period. New Jersey, Alaska and Hawaii had the largest decreases in rates.
The growth
comes as prisons are grappling with another demographic shift: a rapidly aging
population. In 2023, nearly 1 in 4 prisoners were 50 or older. That trend is
expected to continue, some experts say, with projections that by 2030 as much as one-third of the
U.S. prison population will be over 50.
Correctional
systems, many of which already face staffing shortages and overcrowding, are
under growing pressure as prison populations rise. In recent years, some
prisoner advocates and state legislators have pushed for measures such as “second look” laws or expanded parole eligibility that
would release people deemed low risk for reoffending. Those could include older
adults, people with serious medical needs and those convicted of nonviolent
offenses.
The idea
has gained traction as a way to lower prison operation costs and ease strain on
correctional staff, but it remains controversial. Supporters say targeted
decarceration can improve safety inside prisons and save taxpayer dollars,
while opponents argue it could jeopardize public safety and that such
releases may not significantly lower taxpayer costs.
Stateline
reporter Amanda Hernández can be reached at ahernandez@stateline.org.
The
nation’s prison population grew for the second consecutive year in 2023,
reversing more than a decade of steady decline.
A new
prison population report from the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics,
released before the federal shutdown, shows that 1,254,224 people were
incarcerated in state and federal prisons on the last day of 2023 — an increase
of 24,081 people from the year before, or about 2%.
It follows
a rise in 2022, which marked the first uptick since 2010, when prison
populations began a gradual decline after peaking in the mid 2000s.
Even with
recent increases, the prison population in 2023 was still about 20% below the
2013 level.
The Pennsylvania prison population increased 2.5% from 2022 to 2023, going from 37,910 prisoners to 38,860.
The latest
figures show that women remain a small share of the prison population, but
their numbers are growing faster than men’s.
Between
2022 and 2023, the female prison population rose nearly 4%, from 87,800 to
91,100. The male population increased by nearly 2% during the same period.
Thirty-eight states saw growth in their male prison populations, while 41
states reported increases among women.
New
Mexico, Maine and South Dakota recorded the highest growth rates in their
prison populations.
Seven more
populous states — Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, Texas and
Wisconsin — added more than 1,000 people to their prison rolls during the same
period. New Jersey, Alaska and Hawaii had the largest decreases in rates.
The growth
comes as prisons are grappling with another demographic shift: a rapidly aging
population. In 2023, nearly 1 in 4 prisoners were 50 or older. That trend is
expected to continue, some experts say, with projections that by 2030 as much as one-third of the
U.S. prison population will be over 50.
Correctional
systems, many of which already face staffing shortages and overcrowding, are
under growing pressure as prison populations rise. In recent years, some
prisoner advocates and state legislators have pushed for measures such as “second look” laws or expanded parole eligibility that
would release people deemed low risk for reoffending. Those could include older
adults, people with serious medical needs and those convicted of nonviolent
offenses.
The idea
has gained traction as a way to lower prison operation costs and ease strain on
correctional staff, but it remains controversial. Supporters say targeted
decarceration can improve safety inside prisons and save taxpayer dollars,
while opponents argue it could jeopardize public safety and that such
releases may not significantly lower taxpayer costs.
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