04/09/2022
"While it all sounds helpful, there are still many questions over how, or if, these programs will make a real difference on jail overcrowding issues, especially as plans for a new jail remain unresolved.
The Whatcom County jail was originally built in 1983, with capacity for 148 inmates. With remodels, its current capacity is now 212, according to Deb Slater, Community Programs Coordinator for the Whatcom County Sheriff’s Office. The nearby Jail Work Center has 150 beds, creating a total capacity of 362 inmates.
Currently, the average daily jail population — which includes both the main jail and work center — has risen to the low 280s, said Wendy Jones, Chief Corrections Deputy for the sheriff’s department.
Increases in the average jail stay and the number of mentally ill inmates held on felony charges are among several reasons for the increase, Jones said. ... While Jones hopes ART will have a positive impact, the significant increases of in-custody offenders with serious mental health issues leaves her feeling unsure.
“Given the limited capacity of services in the area, the high acuity we are seeing in those offenders who are coming into custody, and the nature of the charges that resulted in being booked, it may not have a significant impact on the jail population,” she said."
Amid calls to reform policing and criminal justice — and an aging, crowded jail — Whatcom officials, residents and law officers are looking to diversion programs for detainees with serious mental health or substance abuse issues.