Snapshots of WNC jails: Not all jails are created equal
In a criminal justice system that is often operated under rigid regulations and protocols, people may be surprised to find the disparities within the walls of local jails.
All the jails have the same basics — sally port, booking area, magistrate office, holding cells, inmate pods and control rooms with security cameras — but each facility is set up a little differently.
To build or not to build: Sheriffs assess need for future jail expansion
When county jails are constantly at or over capacity, the easiest answer seems to be to build a bigger one.
High pressure, low pay: Detention officers pay price for crowded jails
Taxpayers aren’t the only ones paying the price for the growing number of incarcerations and overcrowded jails.
The cost of incarceration
As The Smoky Mountain News embarks on a yearlong investigative project to explore the rural jail crisis, we wanted to first take a look at how much incarceration is costing the taxpayers in Western North Carolina.
Financial data was collected from the four counties in our coverage area — Haywood, Jackson, Macon and Swain — to analyze how much each spends annually on local detention centers and how it impacts the overall county budget. What we’ve found is that costs are rising annually and budgeting can be difficult with so many fluctuating expenses to consider.
Covering the rural jail crisis
Many rural county jail populations are growing at a higher rate than urban county jails or even state prisons, according to research done by the Center on Sentencing and Corrections at the Vera Institute of Justice.