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Proposed Bill Aims To Ease Pressure On Overcrowded County Jails

Rep. Randy Frye's (R-Greensburg) bill aims to help solve Indiana’s jail overcrowding problem by moving some inmates to Department of Correction facilities.
Brandon Smith/IPB News
Rep. Randy Frye's (R-Greensburg) bill aims to help solve Indiana’s jail overcrowding problem by moving some inmates to Department of Correction facilities.

State lawmakers want to help solve Indiana’s jail overcrowding problem by moving some inmates to Department of Correction facilities.

Roughly half of Indiana county jails are over capacity.

Level 6 felons in county jails are low-level, non-violent offenders. Rep. Randy Frye’s (R-Greensburg) bill would allow overcapacity jails to move some of those felons to state Department of Correction facilities – if the DOC has space. Frye says his bill also ensures that those county jail prisoners are kept separate from DOC inmates.

“Just so that they don’t become hardened criminals,” Frye says.

The measure has bipartisan support. But Rep. Matt Pierce (D-Bloomington) says he worries the bill doesn’t get to the real problem: most of the county jail population isn’t Level 6 felons.

“It’s been people awaiting trial," Pierce says. "So that brings up the issue of bail reform and other things along those lines.”

The bill is currently in the House’s fiscal committee, Ways and Means, though legislative analysts haven’t identified any significant cost to the measure. And the Department of Correction says it shouldn’t need to build any new facilities if the bill passes.

Brandon Smith has covered the Statehouse for Indiana Public Broadcasting for more than a decade, spanning three governors and a dozen legislative sessions. He's also the host of Indiana Week in Review, a weekly political and policy discussion program seen and heard across the state.
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