Georgia holds 12,958 people aged 50 and older—more than one in four of its entire incarcerated population—at a cost of $60,000-$70,000 per year per elderly inmate, despite overwhelming evidence that people over 60 have rearrest rates below 13.4% and those over 65 below 4%. The state's parole rate has collapsed from 69.9% in 1993 to 37.5% today, creating an aging prison population that consumes a vastly disproportionate share of the $417.3 million health budget while younger prisoners—who will eventually return to communities—are denied rehabilitation programming and safe conditions.
Source Article
Let Them Go Home: Georgia Spends Its Most Expensive Dollars on the People Least Likely to ReoffendPress Contact
Georgia Prisoners' Speak
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