1121-0102_ Supp Statement

1121-0102_ Supp Statement.doc

National Prisoner Statistics-Prison Population Reports: NPS-1A, Midyear Population Counts; NPS-1B, Endyear Population Counts

OMB: 1121-0102

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SUPPORTING STATEMENT


A. Justification

1. Necessity of Information


In the twelve months ending June 30, 2006, t he nation’s prison population rose 2.8%. There were 1,556,518 prisoners under the jurisdiction of federal or state correctional authorities at midyear 2006. The incarceration rate reached 497 per 100,000 U.S. residents, up from 481 on June 30, 2000. The three largest jurisdictions (the Federal system, California, and Texas) accounted for more than a third of all prisoners under State or Federal jurisdiction. At midyear 2006, private prisons held 7.2% of inmates under jurisdiction, up from 6.5% in 2000. The number of persons under age 18 held in State prisons increased for the first time since 1995 (up 156 persons to 2,364). Between midyear 2005 and midyear 2006, the female prison population grew 4.6%, compared to a 2.7% increase in the male prison population. Women made up 7.2% of the prison population on June 30, 2006, up from 6.1% at yearend 1995.


The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) collects the National Prisoner Statistics, Prisoner Population Midyear counts (NPS-1A) for June 30, the Advance Year-end Counts (NPS-1B) for December 31, and the Summary of Sentenced Population Movement (NPS-1) for January 1 to December 31 movement each year. These data have been collected and published annually since 1926. The NPS-1A provides information on the number of State and Federal prisoners in correctional facilities (including private facilities and local jails), as well as racial composition of inmates, number of inmates under the age of 18, and the number of non-citizen inmates. The NPS-1B collection provides an advance count of the number of persons in correctional facilities and data on prison capacity. Finally, the NPS-1 collects information on the number and movements of persons under the jurisdiction of the nation's correctional institutions; the number and type of admissions and releases; the system-level number of inmate deaths and causes of death by gender; prisoners with sentences of 1 year or less, and of more than 1 year; racial composition; prison crowding; prisoners held in private facilities; HIV testing policies; and the prevalence of HIV/AIDS among State and Federal prisoners.


Currently, these three collections are under two OMB numbers. The NPS-1A and NPS-1B are under OMB number 1121-0102 and the NPS-1 is under OMB number 1121-0078 (see Attachment 1 for 2006 forms). BJS would like to accomplish two things in this clearance. First, we would like all National Prisoner Statistics to be under one OMB number, 1121-0102. Second, we would like to simplify the collection for our respondents by combining the items from the NPS-1B and NPS-1 into one form, to be called the NPS-1B (see Attachment 2 for proposed new 1B form; NPS-1A will remain the same).


The information gathered in the National Prisoner Statistics series is not obtainable from any other data source. The NPS-1A is the source of data for tracking the Nation’s prisoner population at midyear. The Midyear counts, along with the yearend counts in current NPS-1B and NPS-1, offer a consistent benchmark to assess policies that impact the incarcerated population, and, in conjunction with other BJS surveys, to provide two “point-in-time” estimates of the prevalence of incarceration in the United States. The NPS-1 is the only Federal collection of information on admissions by type, including new court commitments, parole violators, transfers from other jurisdictions, and escapees returned to incarceration. Also, it is the only Federal data base on detailed release information on expirations of sentence, commutations, supervised mandatory releases, paroles, and transfers to other jurisdictions.


These data form the basis for historical trend analysis and are currently used by the U.S. Department of Justice, Congress, journalists, researchers, students, and the individual states as a source of national and comparative data on prison population and prison crowding. The NPS series as a whole is a source of valuable information for criminal justice planning and policy development.


The Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 3732) authorizes the Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) to compile data on the movement of State and Federal prisoners. Through an interagency agreement, the U.S. Bureau of the Census collects these data for BJS.


2. Needs and Uses


The detailed summaries of the sentenced prison population in the NPS series, combined with data from other sources, provide information with which decision makers can measure the effects of sentencing and release policies on the sources of growth and change in the inmate population. By gathering annual admission, release, and standing population figures, the NPS series establishes the baseline data on which agencies and communities are developing approaches to effectively respond to the changing composition of the prison population, and the needs of offenders returning to the community following incarceration.


BJS makes the NPS data available to correctional administrators and staff, Congress, researchers, and the public through detailed tables published on the Internet at the BJS web site, and in reports on the status of the corrections population at the end of each year, including Probation and Parole in the United States, 2006 (NCJ 220218), Prisoners in 2006 (NCJ 219416,) and Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear 2006 (NCJ 217675). In addition to these annual reports, BJS publishes a snapshot of the HIV prisoner population from this data, HIV in Prisons, 2005 (NCJ 218915). The NPS series further provides information on policy concerns including juvenile prisoners, non-citizens, racial composition, and reentry issues. In addition, the release information provides the reentry initiative partnership - which includes law enforcement, corrections, labor and human health services, and the community - with valuable information to develop programs and allocate resources for the nearly 80 percent of State inmates who will return to the community under conditional release supervision.


If these data were no longer collected, the data users would be faced with performing their individual functions without the benefit of adequate historical and current facts on the subject. Legislative, judicial, and executive government decision-makers would lose a source of valuable information for criminal justice planning and policy formulation if this data series was discontinued.


The data are used by Department of Justice officials and officials of other Federal agencies, State and local officials in conjunction with jail administrators, researchers, and planners to analyze the current trend and growth patterns, and the public seeking information. Users of this data include the following:


Congress – to evaluate the adequacy of correctional facilities to meet growing inmate populations and to assess the needs of States and Federal Bureau of Prisons for more housing space relative to crime and incarceration rates;


National Institute of Corrections – to evaluate State and Federal prison conditions, establish standards, and assess the needs for technical assistance and training for prison staff and administrators;


National Institute of Justice – to provide a comparative analysis of prison and jail conditions;


Federal Bureau of Prisons – to evaluate prison crowding in Federal facilities and to assess the budgetary and material requirements to meet growing inmate populations;


State corrections officials – to assess conditions within their own jurisdictions relative to others and to determine needs and budget requirements;


Researchers – to estimate the impact of incarceration on crime, as well as evaluate correctional and criminal justice policies;


The public – to make informative decisions about crime and punishment within their own jurisdictions.


3. Use of Technology


The NPS-1A and NPS-1B are mail questionnaires with an on-line form reporting option that simulates the paper form. The web option is very popular; 43 of 51 respondents (84%) submitted their 2006 NPS-1B on the web. We continue to receive positive feedback from the respondents regarding the web collection.


4. Efforts to Identify Duplication


This research does not duplicate any other questionnaire design work being done by any other Federal agencies. BJS is the only Federal government agency that collects comparable data on inmates in State and Federal prisons. In an effort to reduce burden of the collection, this submission seeks to combine the data items in the NPS-1B and the NPS-1 into a single form, to be called the NPS-1B. In addition, the items on death and causes of death are eliminated because we get this information in the Deaths in Custody collection (OMB 1121-0249).


5. Impact on Small Businesses


This research does not involve small businesses or other small entities. The respondents are State Department of Correction and the Federal Bureau of Prisons.


6. Consequences of Less Frequent Collection


BJS believes that reducing the collection from three forms (NPS-1A, NPS-1B, NPS-1) to two (NPS-1A and NPS-1B, will positively impact the ability to report prisoner counts and demographic information in a timely manner.


7. Special Circumstances Influencing Collection


There are no special circumstance in conducting this information collection. Collection is consistent with the guidelines as listed in 5 CFR 1320.6. These data will be collected in a manner consistent with the guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.6.


8. Federal Register Publication and Outside Consultation


The research under this clearance is consistent with the guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.6. The 60 and 30-day notices for public commentary has been published in the Federal Register.


BJS has consulted with the U.S. Census Bureau, State Departments of Correction staff, and criminal justice experts in order to improve survey methodology, data collection, reporting procedures, data analysis, and presentation. The following individuals have been consulted on the current modifications to the NPS-1A and NPS-1B:


Harold Clarke

Commissioner

Department of Correction

50 Maple Street, Suite 3

Milford, MA 01757-3698


David Ensley

Director, Research and Data Analysis

Department of Corrections

2601 Blairstone Road

Tallahassee, FL 32399-2500






James A. Gondles, Jr.

Executive Director

American Correctional Association

206 North Washington Street, Suite 200

Alexandria, VA 22314


Christopher Innes

Chief, Research and Evaluation

National Institute of Corrections

320 First Street, NW

Washington, DC 20534

Paul Korotkin

Assistant Director, MIS/Research

Department of Correctional Services

1220 Washington Avenue, Building 2

Albany, NY 12226-2050


William Saylor

Chief, Research and Evaluation Branch

U.S. Bureau of Prisons

320 First Street N.W.

Washington DC 20534


Dora Schriro

Director

Department of Corrections

1601 West Jefferson, MC 445

Phoenix, AZ 85007


Richard Stalder

Secretary

Department of Public Safety and Corrections

P.O. Box 94304, Capitol Station

Baton Rouge, LA 70804-9304


Steven Van Dine

Bureau Chief

Department of Rehabilitation and Correction

1050 Freeway Drive North

Columbus, OH 43229


Joan Weiss, Executive Director

Justice Research and Statistics Association

777 N. Capital Street, NE Suite 801

Washington, DC 20002


9. Payment or Gift to Respondents


No gifts or incentives will be given.


10. Assurance of Confidentiality

According to 42 U.S.C. 3735 Section 304, the information gathered in this data collection shall be used only for statistical or research purposes, and shall be gathered in a manner that precludes their use for law enforcement or any purpose relating to a particular individual other than statistical or research purposes. Moreover, confidentiality is assured as only summary counts are collected. No individually identifiable information is provided. Respondents are informed in the cover letter that participation in this data collection effort is voluntary.


11. Justification for Sensitive Questions


Not applicable. There are no questions of a sensitive nature included in the NPS series.


12. Estimate of Hour Burden


There are 51 respondents; the 50 states and the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Under this revised collection that combines the NPS collections into one OMB number and reduces the burden by one form by combining the NPS-1B and NPS-1 questions, it is estimated that each of the 51 respondents will use 1.5 hours to complete the NPS-1A form and 6.5 hours to complete the revised NPS-1B form (see Attachment 2). Collectively, it is anticipated that respondents will devote 408 person hours per year to complete the NPS-1A and NPS-1B. By reducing the collection by one form, we are relieving each respondent of an estimated 1.5 hours per year, for a total savings of

76.5 burden hours across the 51 jurisdictions.


This new estimate will appear to be higher than the burden previously published under OMB number 1121-0102. This is because we are requesting that the burden from OMB number 1121-0078 be added under 1121-0102. At the same time, we are deducting 76.5 hours (with the elimination of one form at 1.5 hours x 51 respondents) for a net savings of 76.5 hours per year to collect NPS data.


13. Estimate of Respondent Cost Burden


Respondents will incur costs associated with their time to respond. The information requested is normally maintained electronically as administrative records in state departments of correction. At an estimate of $30 per hour, both the NPS-1A and NPS-1B are estimated to take 8 hours per year for a total cost of $240 per jurisdiction. The estimated cost burden for all 51 respondents is $12,240. By reducing the collection by one form, we are relieving each respondent of an estimated 1.5 hours per year, or $45, for a total savings of $2,295.


14. Estimated Cost to Federal Government


The cost to the Federal Government for the NPS-1A and revised NPS-1B is estimated to be $165,523 for fiscal year 2007.


Census Bureau data collection costs – $130,000

Salary: $49,200

Benefits: $28,100

Overhead: $50,000

Other Administrative Costs: $2,700


Bureau of Justice Statistics costs - $28,373

10% GS-12, Statistician ($5,930)

5%, GS-15, Supervisory Statistician ($5,720)

5% GS-14, Chief Editor, ($5,000)

Benefits (@ 20% - $4,995)

Other administrative costs ($6,728)


Publication production and dissemination costs - $7,150

Printing ($2,623)

Postage and handling ($4,527)

15. Reasons for Change in Burden


The total burden for the NPS collection under 1121-0102 appears to increase by 252 hours because we are requesting that the burden from OMB number 1121-0078 be added to 1121-0102. At the same time we are eliminating the hours requested under 1121-0078 and reducing the burden from three forms to two for a net savings of 76.5 hours per year to collect NPS data.


16. Plans for Publication


BJS will analyze these data and prepare a detailed report on prison population and characteristics twice a year. BJS publishes the NPS data a few months after collection in a Midyear Report and a Year-end Report. The data will be made available to the public through the Internet on the BJS website less than a year after they are collected.


17. Expiration Date Approval


The OMB Control Number and the expiration date will be published on the NPS-1A and NPS-1B forms.


18. Exceptions to the Certification Statement


There are no exceptions to the Certification Statement. The Collection is consistent with the guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.9.


B. Collection of Information Employing Statistical Methods


Not applicable. This data collection is a complete enumeration and does not employ statistical sampling methods.

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