Giving Compass' Take:

• A recent report documents the trend in smaller, rural cities where more people are being incarcerated leading to jail overcrowding and the use of state funding for jail expansion.

• How can smaller cities work at the root problem of incarceration? 

•  Learn more about the U.S. criminal justice system and reform. 


In 2015, after nearly a decade of jail overcrowding, rural Coffee County, Tennessee, completed a brand new 400-bed jail—a facility more than twice the size of its predecessor. The jail population then skyrocketed, increasing more than 60 percent between April 2015 and April 2018 and even briefly surpassing the new jail’s capacity. While the number of people jailed had dipped slightly by September 2019, the Coffee County story is still one of increased incarceration.

The project cost a whopping $21 million to complete, a figure that does not include the cost of maintaining or staffing the new facility. And, more than half of the people in the new jail haven’t been convicted: They are being held before trial and most only face misdemeanor charges, but are likely simply too poor to afford bail in a community where 14 percent of residents live below the poverty line.

Local news also reported that the county probation department had resumed jailing people who hadn’t necessarily committed new crimes, but had violated the terms of their probation, a practice they’d put on pause when the old jail was full.

Read the full article about why smaller cities are expanding their prisons by Chris Mai and Jasmine Heiss at CityLab.