page 8 daily nebraskan friday, September 25, 1981 Task force Continued from Page 1 Kreiziner said he has only reviewed a packet of materi als sent to him at this point, and until after the group's first meeting, he couldn't suggest any specific recommen dations. The task force is comprised of members with a wide range of backgrounds, McGee said. "They were chosen after it was agreed on the classifica tions that should be represented," he said. "We needed a well-rounded committee, with various 3reas of expertise on it," McGee said. The committee's recommendations will go to the city council first, and then to the planning commission, where they will be evaluated as part of the city's Comprehensive Plan, McGee said. Finally, a proposal will be translated into a formal reso lution, and if it is accepted, a planning consultant will be hired. The resolution forming the task force provides the members one year from Sept. 14, the day they were ap pointed, to come up with a plan, McGee said. Prison crowding will force reform criminologist By Susan Mac Donald A rapidly changing, heterogeneous society and shallow thinking on the part of some corrections officials have con tributed to the poor condition of the United States cor rectional system, a criminologist said Thursday. And, he added, unless changes are made, the future of corrections in America looks bleak. Harry E. Allen, a professor of criminal justice at San Jose State University and the president-elect of the Amer ican Society of Criminology, told a large audience in the Rostrum of the Nebraska Union that corrections authori ties have erred in predicting future crime rates. He said officials have failed to appreciate that people move selectively into urban areas. Allen said their children are paying the price in terms of delinquency. Officials also have failed to appreciate the closing of economic structures and opportunities for employment, he said. Too many 'have nots "People are coming to urban settings with minimal em ployment skills," Allen said. This has produced several gen erations of "have nots," he said. These errors were noticed in the early 1970s, Allen said. There are more than 320.000 people in the United States under correctional restraint of some sort, and Allen said this figure is increasing steadily. 'The basic causes of crime lie in the social fabric," Al len said. Overcrowding in prisons is so serious that 19 states are under court order to reduce their prison popu lations. Allen said. He said many lawsuits have been filed over prison conditions, and this is going to continue. Inmates are seeking relief, Allen said, by forming unions and other groups to pressure prison administrators into changing practices. Inmates have gone to court over poor conditions and won, he said. Prison administrators are be coming cautious because they think almost anything they do will be challenged in court, he said. It is also becoming increasingly expensive to maintain prisons, Allen said. It now costs 530,000 to S60.000 just Six neighborhoods to show, celebrate year-long project By Martin Neary History will come to life in the County-City Building on Nov. 15 when an oral history of six Lincoln neighbor hood groups will be presented to the public. The six neighborhoods - North Bottoms, South Salt Creek, College View, Near South, Yankee Hill and Uni versity Place - will celebrate the culmination of year long oral history projects. Each neighborhood has created and will display a slide and tape show illustrating how people were affected by their neighborhood and the impact people have had in their area. The presentation, which will include a video show, will identify long-time residents, display artifacts and highlight change in life styles. "We find these neighborhood histories all intertwined " said Barbara Hager, project director. Hager said one goal of the project is to assist the neighborhoods in discovering a sense of history within their areas. Another goal is to help neighborhood associations find people who may become active members, Hager said. The oral histories should be viewed as an on-going project to collect oral history through older residents, she said. In addition to the amount of time and energy neighbor hood committees have donated, Hager said UNLhas played an intricate role. Ten interns worked with the groups and two graduate students, Kathy Fimple and Sue Conley, are co-chairpersons. The internships and the entire oral history project are financed by a $19,000 grant from the Nebraska Commit tee for the Humanities. Mini-grants from the same source have pushed the funding to about $25,000, Hager said. After the celebration, which Hager termed only the be ginning, a tape and transcript of the project will be do nated to the Nebraska State Historical Society. The celebration will be from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the main lobby of the County-City Building, 555 S. 10th St. to open a prison cell, he said, and every person in America pays about SI 08 a year to keep up the criminal justice system. If trends continue Allen said, by the year 2000 it will cost $300 per person in the United States to maintain the system. He projected there will be 1.2 million people in carcerated by then, with a cost of $33,000 per inmate per year for prison maintenance. Resources are not expendable, Allen said. "Corrections will have to do better with less (in the future)," he said. Increase probation Allen said too many persons are being sent to prison and alternatives should be used. The use of probation should increase. He suggested the state pay subsidies to local communities for increased use of probation. He also said short-term incarceration and parole will be more fre quently used. As a long range alternative, Allen said corrections de partments should be combined into one agency and con trolled at the state level. He said this idea of relieving coun ties of correctional responsibility would be "wildly unpop ular," due to political differences between state and local governments. Allen also suggested giving convicted criminals the choice of treatment or punishment. This approach, which Allen said would meet much resistance, would require criminals to enter a treatment program, or serve a flat time sentence without parole that would be multiplied if the offender committed another crime. He said the idea is to make the person responsible for his own behavior. " ffniiMli in ' f ) f Mi Daily Nebraskan photo Harry E. 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