There's been a major shift in Texas over the past half decade or so regarding county jail overcrowding and how county commissioners should respond. For many years, when jails filled up there was really only one option ever considered, no matter what the jurisdiction: Expand the jail; build more cells. Today, it's more common for counties to seek to lower the jail population by other means, particularly reducing pretrial detention for low-level offenses. That same debate is playing out right now in McLennan County, reported the Waco Tribune Herald this week ("
County pretrial release program could cut costs, expedite release of nonviolent offenders," July 5). Here's how their story opened:
McLennan County commissioners are examining a plan to accelerate the process of releasing nonviolent offenders awaiting trial in the county jail, thus cutting the costs of housing them.
The commissioners discussed last week the option of forming a pretrial release program and agreed to continue researching similar programs throughout the state.
A pretrial release program would combine the county’s PR bond coordinator, indigent defense coordinator and a full-time magistrate into one office with the goal of processing and releasing nonviolent offenders from the McLennan County Jail on State Highway 6 as they await the resolution of their cases.
The county now employs only one part-time magistrate. And the indigent defense and PR bond coordinators work separately.
“To have the three of those working separately from one another can cause great inefficiencies and cause unnecessary costs,” Precinct 4 County Commissioner Ben Perry said.
Merging the three entities would cut costs immediately and allow the county to dissolve the position of bail bond coordinator, officials said.
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