Pubdate: Sun, 23 Apr 2000 Source: Ogdensburg Journal/Advance News (NY) Copyright: 2000 St. Lawrence County Newspapers Corp. Address: P.O. Box 409, Ogdensburg, New York 13669 Website: http://www.ogd.com/ Author: Robert Merkin NOTE: Accepts LTEs by mail only! Must be signed w/phone# PRISONS When I read your editorial "Racism and Prisons" (3 April) with its strident defense of building prisons in Ogdensburg, it wasn't difficult to get you message: "This is no one's business but ours, keep out and shut up." That's just the editorial writer's opinion. I have utterly no reason to believe it mirrors the whole community's feelings about building new prisons in Ogdensburg. What the editorial clearly reflects is an implied threat to those, in or out of Ogdensburg, who have different opinions. The eitorial's notion that these new prisons are needed to imprison "drug dealers" is a deception and a corruption of language. Under the Rockefeller mandatory sentencing laws, non-violent addicts, those who just possessed personal amounts of prohibited substances, and domestic partners who were "traded" to prosecutors for reduced sentences now make up a huge percentage of New York's prisoners. It's common courthouse knowledge that murderers and rapists will be walking our streets sooner than those sentenced under the Rockefeller laws. What do you lose sleep over more, a neighborhood rapist or a neighborhood pot smoker? Of the racism issue, all any Ogdensburg resident needs to do is surf the web or consult the library or an almanac to find out how the Rockefeller drug laws fill the state's prisons with dramatically disproportionate numbers of African-Americans and Hispanic Americans. If you say, "Well, they're the ones breaking the law!" I say, "Police enforce the laws for more aggressively and with far less accountability in non-white neighborhoods than they do in white suburbs and rural areas. And minorities have far less access to good(expensive)defense lawyers." But your editorial's ironclad promise that new prisons will do great things for Ogdensburg has been addressed carefully in a recent Newsday article, "The Town that Loved Prisons Pays a Very Stiff Price" (10 April) about rural Malone, New York. Anyone can read it by clicking to Newsday's Internet site: http://www.newsday.com/coverage/current/columns/monday/nd2571.htm Here's the assessment of Malone's three state prisons from Boyce Sherwin, director of Malone's Office of Community Development: "Did we get seven hundred fifty jobs? We didn't get a hundred." (The prison guard seniority system gave the vast majority of jobs to out-of-towners.) A hoped-for food processing plant to serve the prisons hasn't materialized, and a $4.5 million expansion of the sewage-treatment plant, paid for by the state to accommodate the new prison, has increased the amount of nitrates that are dumped on daily basis into the Salmon River. Because the loans to build the sewage plant and a new water system for the prison were based on the village's borrowing capacity, not the state's, taxes have gone up and the payments will be more than $1 milion this year, Sherwin said. I wish the same good things and the same prosperity for Ogdensburg that I wish for my own community. So do a growing number of New York State residents, who are sincerely convinced more and more prisons won't get them for Ogdensburg. No one needs to agree. But every citizen of Ogdensburg Journal-Advance News should contribute to the debate, not try to silence it. Robert Merkin - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea