Jail and Prison Populations Decreased Since 2019

The Vera Institutes report on Jails and Prisons is accurate. I am basing this comment on what I know about them in the past. Obviously, things have changed over time. It is good to see a decrease. Perhaps they have found better ways to handle minor issues other than the county jail or state prisons. A different world inside of them.

Jail and Prison Populations Decreased Since 2019 – but Continued Progress Isn’t Promised

by Elizabeth Allen

Vera Institute

New Vera research raises the alarm about stalling progress and warns that recent gains can’t be taken for granted.

Its findings yield some reasons for optimism—there are indeed fewer people behind bars than in 2019—but also raise the alarm about stalling progress and the lasting impact of “tough-on-crime”-era criminal legal policies.

The state of local jails and state and federal prisons

Researchers generally consider 2009 to be the zenith of mass incarceration; at that time, 1.6 million people were held in state and federal prisons nationwide. Incarceration has steadily fallen since then, diminishing 22 percent from the peak. This drop was aided by a dramatic decline in 2020 as federal and state governments adopted emergency policies to prevent the spread of COVID-19 through their corrections systems.

Yet findings show that the number of people in jails and prisons is creeping back up to pre-pandemic levels, rising by two percent between the autumn of 2022 and the spring of 2024.

The rate of change varied across regions and states. The number of people incarcerated in state prisons has increased in a handful of states, including Arkansas (by 7.9 percent), Montana (5.7 percent), South Dakota (10.4 percent), and Wisconsin (9.6 percent).

By region, state prisons in the South had the most significant increase during that time, with an uptick of five percent, but the Midwest’s growth was close behind at 3.6 percent.

As of spring 2024, approximately 660,000 people were held in jails nationwide, a 10 percent decrease from mid-2019 but an increase of more than 100,000 people since 2020, a year that registered a significant population low due to pandemic emergency policies. Rural counties have seen the closest return to 2019 population tallies, while urban county jails have done the best job of maintaining declines.

Older people’s incarceration rates rise

Even if prison populations have declined since mass incarceration’s peak, report findings show how policies from decades ago still have damaging effects. Case in point: older people represent an accelerating segment of the United States incarcerated population.

In 2022, 254,900 people ages 55 or older were incarcerated in U.S. prisons and jails. For the subgroup of Americans 65 years or older, the incarceration rate exceeds that of people of all ages in countries like Canada, France, and Italy.

And concerningly, although more incarcerated older people are in prison than in jail, between 2020 and 2022—a period beset by a pandemic and housing crises—they were local jails’ fastest-growing age group.

States are building more prisons and jails, outpacing capacity demands

Several states—even those where the number of people in prison has fallen—are plowing ahead with new prison construction projects. These decisions threaten to stall decarceration efforts further.

There has also been a boom in jail construction, to the tune of more than $62 billion nationwide since 2002. This spending has increased the nation’s jail capacity by almost 40 percent.

However, this increase does not reflect national trends in jail incarceration, which has fallen in the past 15 years. Despite this, some states are doubling down on investments in incarceration.

Immigration detention, criminalization pack local corrections facilities

In order to criminalize undocumented immigration, state policymakers have devised their own immigration enforcement policies, helping to fill local jails, justify new infrastructure, and sustain related operations.