The cost of new housing for
San Quentin State Prison's growing number of Death Row inmates will
exceed estimates by nearly $40 million, and the compound could run out
of space soon after it is completed, according to a state auditor's
report released Tuesday.The auditor's new $395.5 million price tag for the project, which is
expected to be completed by 2011, is new bad news for a state facing
billions of dollars in budget shortfalls. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
and the Democrat-controlled Legislature are still trying to hammer out
a spending plan for the fiscal year that began nearly a month ago.California's prison system is already a big-ticket item,
representing about 10 percent of roughly $100 billion general fund
spending. And with severe inmate overcrowding and claims of inadequate
health care for prisoners, a federal receiver appointed by a judge in
2006 has asked the Legislature for an additional $7 billion to get the
prison system to run adequately."This is a giant black hole," said Sen. Gloria Romero, D-Los
Angeles, chairwoman of the Senate public safety committee. "It's a
never-ending gravitational force that'll continue to suck away money
that should be spent on local government, education, health and human
services and higher education."Seth Unger, a spokesman for the California Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation, said the latest figures for the San
Quentin project are estimates at best. He added that the report "does
validate that California needs a newly constructed, modern facility to
house our condemned inmate population." SOURCE: SFGATE.COM