The Bureau of Prisons (BOP): Operations and Budget

March 4, 2014 (R42486)

Contents

Figures

Tables

Summary

The Bureau of Prisons (BOP) was established in 1930 to house federal inmates, professionalize the prison service, and ensure consistent and centralized administration of the federal prison system. The BOP is the largest correctional agency in the country, in terms of the number of prisoners under its jurisdiction. The BOP must confine any offender convicted and sentenced to a term of imprisonment in a federal court.

All BOP correctional facilities are classified according to one of five different security levels: minimum, low, medium, high, or administrative. An inmate's designation to a particular institution is based primarily on the level of security and supervision the inmate requires; the level of security and staff supervision the institution is able to provide; and the inmate's program needs. All inmates undergo a comprehensive intake screening when they are admitted to a BOP facility. The BOP provides health care for all inmates either through each prison's ambulatory care clinics or by contracting for services through local hospitals. The BOP also provides mental health treatment to inmates who demonstrate a need for it through staff psychologists. The BOP has an established inmate disciplinary system, whereby sanctions are imposed on inmates for committing prohibited acts. An inmate is allowed to request a review of his or her conditions of confinement through the BOP's Administrative Remedy Program. Inmates have access to a variety of rehabilitational programs including education programs, substance abuse treatment, vocational education, and work opportunities. In order to help aid an inmate's transition back into the community, inmates can be placed in a Residential Reentry Center (i.e., a halfway house) for a period of time before their sentence expires.

Changes in federal criminal justice policy since the early 1980s have resulted in a continued increase in the federal prison population. The number of inmates under the BOP's jurisdiction has increased nearly eight-fold (790%) from approximately 24,600 inmates in FY1980 to nearly 219,300 inmates in FY2013. Since FY1980, the federal prison population has increased, on average, by approximately 5,900 inmates each year.

The burgeoning federal prison population has led Congress to increase appropriations for the BOP's operations and infrastructure. In FY1980, Congress appropriated $330.0 million for the BOP. By FY2014, the total appropriation for the BOP reached $6.859 billion. The additional funding for the BOP was necessary to cover the costs of providing services to a growing prison population, expanding prison capacity, and hiring additional staff to manage the expanding federal prison system.

The annual growth in the federal prison population has outstripped the BOP's prison capacity, resulting in overcrowding in the federal prison system. Congress could choose to mitigate some of the issues related to federal prison population growth by appropriating more funding so the BOP could hire additional staff and expand prison capacity to alleviate overcrowding. On the other hand, Congress could also consider ways to reduce the number of inmates held in federal prison by considering alternatives to incarceration, such as increasing good time credit for inmates who participate in certain rehabilitative programs, placing more low-level offenders on community supervision in lieu of incarceration, or reducing mandatory minimum penalties for some offenses.


The Bureau of Prisons (BOP): Operations and Budget

Introduction

The Bureau of Prisons (BOP) is the largest correctional agency in the country, in terms of the number of prisoners under its jurisdiction.1 The BOP must confine any offender convicted and sentenced to a term of imprisonment in a federal court.

Changes in federal criminal justice policy since the early 1980s—enforcing a growing number of federal crimes, replacing indeterminate sentencing with a determinate sentencing structure through sentencing guidelines, and increasing the number of federal offenses subject to mandatory minimum sentences—have led to continued rapid growth in the federal prison population. The number of inmates under the BOP's jurisdiction has increased from approximately 24,600 inmates in FY1980 to nearly 219,300 inmates in FY2013. Since FY1980, the federal prison population has increased, on average, by approximately 5,900 inmates each year.

The burgeoning federal prison population has led Congress to increase appropriations for the BOP's operations and infrastructure. In FY1980, Congress appropriated $330.0 million for the BOP; by FY2014, the total appropriation for the BOP reached $6.859 billion (see Figure 1). Even after adjusting for inflation, the BOP's budget increased by nearly $173.2 million per year between FY1980 and FY2014.2

The annual growth in the federal prison population has outstripped the BOP's current capacity, resulting in overcrowding in the federal prison system. The BOP reports that at the end of FY2013, the federal prison system was operating at 36% over rated capacity.3 Congress could choose to mitigate some issues related to federal prison population growth by appropriating more funding so the BOP could hire additional staff and expand prison capacity to alleviate overcrowding. On the other hand, Congress could also consider ways to reduce the number of inmates held in federal prison by considering alternatives to incarceration, such as increasing good time credit for inmates who participate in certain rehabilitative programs, placing more low-level offenders on community supervision in lieu of incarceration, or reducing mandatory minimum penalties for some offenses.

This report provides an overview of how the BOP manages the growing federal prison population and examines the BOP's appropriations since FY1980.

Figure 1. Nominal and Inflation-Adjusted Appropriations for the Bureau of Prisons, FY1980-FY2014

Appropriations in billions of dollars

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons.

Notes: Nominal appropriations were adjusted for inflation using data from the Consumer Price Index for All
Urban Consumers (CPI-U). Inflation-adjusted amounts are presented in FY2014 dollars. The Consumer Price
Index for FY2014 was based on the Congressional Budget Office's projected increase in inflation (taken from
Table G-2 in The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2014 to 2024). The spike in the BOP's funding for
FY1990 was the result of Congress appropriating $1.512 billion for the B&F account (see Table 1). The FY2013
enacted amount includes the amount sequestered per the Budget Control Act of 2011(P.L. 112-25).

BOP Operations

The BOP was established in 1930 to house federal inmates, professionalize the prison service, and ensure consistent and centralized administration of the federal prison system.4 Congress has continued to modify the responsibilities of the BOP since its founding. Currently, the BOP has several congressionally mandated obligations, including

The sections below provide an overview of how the BOP operates the federal prison system in order to meet its responsibilities.

Managing Federal Correctional Facilities

All BOP correctional facilities are classified according to one of five different security levels: minimum, low, medium, high, or administrative. In general, high security facilities are referred to as U.S. Penitentiaries (USP),6 medium and low security facilities are called Federal Correctional Institutions (FCIs), and minimum security facilities are known as Federal Prison Camps (FPC).7 Federal Correctional Complexes (FCC) house more than one type of institution on the same grounds.8 Administrative facilities are facilities with specialized missions (i.e., pretrial detention centers, which hold inmates who are on or awaiting trial; and medical referral centers, which hold inmates who need specialized medical care) and are capable of confining inmates at all security levels.9 A facility's security level is based on the facility's features, which include the presence of external patrols, towers, security barriers, or detection devices; the type of housing within the institution; internal security features; and the staff-to-inmate ratio.10

After an offender is sentenced and remanded to the custody of the BOP by the U.S. courts to serve a period of incarceration, the BOP assigns the new inmate to one of its facilities. All assignments are conducted by the Designation and Sentence Computation Center (DSCC). All federal inmates are assigned both a security and medical classification and then assigned to an institution with a commensurate security level (i.e., minimum, low, medium, high, or administrative) and medical care level (i.e., Care Level I through IV, see below). An inmate's assignment to a particular institution is based primarily on

Other factors that might influence the initial designation for an inmate include

Inmates can be reclassified and reassigned to a new facility based on a review by the DSCC at the request of the staff at the institution where the inmate is incarcerated. Inmates are also assigned custody levels (i.e., community, out, in, or maximum) in addition to their security classifications.14 Each custody level dictates the amount of staff supervision the inmate requires.15 An inmate's custody classification is based on the inmate's criminal history, current offense, and institutional adjustment.16 An inmate's custody level is routinely reviewed and often changes during the period of incarceration.

The BOP considers proper management of the housing units in each facility to be one of the hallmarks of its inmate management philosophy.17 Unit staff (e.g., the unit manager, case manager, and correctional counselor) have offices in inmate living units. This management structure facilitates regular contact between staff and inmates and allows BOP employees to identify inmate concerns and potential problems.18 Unit staff are responsible for involving the inmates housed in their units in programs designed to meet their needs (see below). Unit staff meet with inmates on a regular basis to develop, review, and discuss their work assignments, program opportunities, and progress, as well as to address any other concerns the inmate might have.19

Providing for the Safekeeping, Care, and Subsistence of Inmates

All inmates undergo a comprehensive intake screening when they are admitted to a BOP facility. The intake screening includes

After intake, newly admitted inmates complete an Admission and Orientation (A&O) program.21 Each institution's A&O program provides inmates with information on

The program also provides institutional staff with an opportunity to identify and assist inmates who may be experiencing difficulty with adjusting to being incarcerated.23

Each inmate is assigned a "Care Level" based on the level of health care the inmate requires. Care Levels range from Care Level I, which is assigned to inmates with no health care needs or needs that are easily managed, to Care Level IV, which is assigned to inmates with complicated medical needs that may require hospitalization. BOP then ensures that inmates are assigned to a facility that is able to care for an inmate's specific health care needs or is in close proximity to a community hospital that may provide the appropriate health care.

All BOP facilities operate outpatient ambulatory care clinics.24 In instances where inmates have an emergency medical situation that cannot be treated at the facility, they are transported to the nearest community hospital emergency department.25 The BOP contracts with local hospitals to provide care to inmates who cannot be cared for in the facility's clinic. Each BOP facility solicits medical contracts that cover health care facility and physician services. Institutions may solicit comprehensive contracts in which costs are based on the prevailing Operating Federal Medicare rate for the applicable area for inpatient facility services, and the prevailing Medicare fee schedule amounts for the geographic area for outpatient and physician services.26 In cases where comprehensive medical contracts are not available, institutions may use blanket purchase agreements for a negotiated rate, but the rate may not be benchmarked to prevailing Medicare rates.27 The BOP operates six medical referral centers that provide care to inmates with a variety of chronic and sub-acute medical and psychiatric conditions.28

The BOP also provides a variety of mental health services through staff psychologists and psychiatrists, including formal counseling and treatment on an individual or group basis.29 The BOP's policies dictate that all inmates receive an initial mental health screening (which consists of psychological interviews, social history reviews, and behavioral observation) upon admission to a BOP facility.30 The purpose of the interview is to

Inmates with acute mental illness may receive psychiatric services within one of the BOP's medical referral centers, but most mental health treatment is provided in regular BOP facilities.32

Providing for the Protection, Instruction, and Discipline of Inmates

The BOP has an established inmate disciplinary system whereby sanctions are imposed on inmates for committing prohibited acts. Prohibited acts are divided into four categories based on severity: greatest, high, moderate, and low.33 Penalties for committing a prohibited act include losing good time credit,34 placement in disciplinary segregation, fines, or the loss of privileges.35 The severity of the penalty is based on the severity of the offense the inmate committed.36 Incidents are resolved by either a Unit Disciplinary Committee (UDC) or a Disciplinary Hearing Officer (DHO). Allegations of misconduct are initially reviewed by a UDC. If the UDC determines that the inmate committed the prohibited act(s), the committee can impose any authorized sanction other than the loss of good time credit, disciplinary segregation, or fines. Inmates are allowed to appear before the UDC (unless it would jeopardize institutional security), where they can make a statement and present documentary evidence on their behalves.

The DHO is an independent officer who holds hearings and imposes sanctions for incidents of misconduct. The DHO can only hold hearings on cases referred by the UDC. All inmates charged with the two highest levels of prohibited acts (i.e., "greatest" or "high") or who are facing the loss of good time credit as a mandatory sanction have their cases forwarded to a DHO. In addition, the UDC, at its discretion, can forward a case to the DHO based on the seriousness of the charges. Accused inmates are allowed to appear at a DHO hearing (unless it would jeopardize institutional security) and they are permitted to have a staff representative to assist them at the hearing. Like a hearing before the UDC, inmates are allowed to make a statement and present documentary evidence on their behalves; however, the DHO can call and question witnesses, and inmates can request that witnesses appear at the hearing to testify on their behalves. If the DHO determines that the inmate committed the prohibited act(s), the DHO can impose any authorized sanction. Misconduct that rises to the level of criminal behavior is referred to the United States Attorneys for prosecution.

At times, inmates might be placed in the institution's Special Housing Unit (SHU) in order to ensure the safe, secure, and orderly operation of the facility.37 Inmates placed in the SHU are separated from the general population. Inmates in the SHU are either on administrative detention status, which is non-punitive and includes inmates placed in segregation to protect them from other inmates, or disciplinary segregation status, which is punitive and is a sanction for violating regulations concerning inmate behavior. An inmate's status is reviewed regularly by BOP while he or she is housed in the SHU.

In some instances, inmates who demonstrate that they are unable or unwilling to comply with institutional rules and who engage in repeated acts of serious misconduct are transferred to Special Management Units (SMUs). Currently, five BOP facilities have SMUs.38 Transfer to a SMU is non-punitive and is meant to help inmates habituate so that they can be returned to the general population without posing a threat to the safe, secure, and orderly operations of BOP correctional facilities and the public.39 Candidates for transfer to a SMU are inmates who

Inmates are expected to complete the four-level SMU program in 18-24 months, though inmates who continue to demonstrate disruptive conduct can be held in a SMU beyond 24 months.41 When inmates complete the program they are returned to the general population at another facility that is appropriate for their security and supervision level. Inmates housed in SMUs are separated from the general inmate population in the facility, and their movements and interaction with other inmates are more controlled and restricted than they would be if they were housed in the general population, but they are granted more freedom of movement as they progress through the levels of the program.42 Inmates also have access to rehabilitative programming while in a SMU, albeit with some restrictions.43

In addition to SMUs, the BOP also operates Communications Management Units (CMUs) at two facilities.44 Inmates housed in CMUs are subject to increased monitoring of their communications with persons in the community.45 Like SMUs, inmates housed in CMUs are separated from the general inmate population, but inmates' movements are not as restricted and controlled as they would be in a SMU.46 Examples of inmates who might be housed in a CMU include inmates who

An inmate is allowed to request a review of his or her conditions of confinement through the BOP's Administrative Remedy Program. Before an inmate can submit a formal request for an administrative remedy, the inmate is ordinarily required to present the issue informally to staff, and staff must attempt to remedy the issue.48 Formal requests for administrative remedies are first reviewed and investigated at the institutional level. Wardens can also waive the requirement for inmates to first attempt to resolve the issue informally if the warden determines that the sensitivity of the issue makes informal resolution inappropriate.49 If an inmate is not satisfied with the warden's response, he or she can appeal the claim to the regional office; and if the inmate is not satisfied with the regional office's response, he or she can appeal to the central office.50 Inmates can appeal rejections of claims through the same process. Inmates may file appeals of disciplinary actions (e.g., confinement in a SHU) directly with the regional office. Inmates can submit a formal request for an administrative remedy directly to the regional office if the inmate reasonably believes the issue is sensitive and his or her safety would be in jeopardy if someone in the institution was aware that the inmate was pursuing a claim.51

Preparing Inmates for Reentry

The BOP offers a variety of rehabilitative programs to federal inmates, including

The BOP has developed a coordinated prisoner reentry strategy. The strategy involves assessing each inmate's strengths and weaknesses as they relate to the inmate's readiness for release, using the assessment to develop a skill development plan, and linking inmates with certain deficiencies to programs to address those needs.54 The BOP also collaborates with other agencies to ensure that inmates with certain needs are provided targeted services.55

In addition to the rehabilitative programming offered to federal inmates, the BOP has a release preparation program for inmates who are within 18 months of release. The program includes classes on résumé writing and job search and retention skills.56 The BOP's Inmate Transition Branch (ITB) provides inmates with pre-release employment assistance. The ITB holds mock job fairs in BOP facilities to provide inmates with an opportunity to test their job interview skills and to put inmates in touch with potential post-release employers.57 The ITB also helps inmates prepare release folders that contain a résumé, education certificates, diplomas, transcripts, and other documentation that might be required during a job interview.58

The BOP contracts for Residential Reentry Centers (RRCs, i.e., halfway houses) to provide assistance to inmates nearing release.59 RRCs provide inmates with a structured and supervised environment along with employment counseling, job placement services, financial management assistance, and other community-based social services and programs.60 RRCs facilitate inmates' efforts at reestablishing ties to the community while allowing staff at the RRC to supervise inmates' activities. Pre-release inmates placed in a RRC remain under the jurisdiction of BOP until their sentences are completed. Inmates are expected to be employed in a full-time job within 15 days of arriving at a RRC and 25% of their gross income (not to exceed the negotiated per diem rate under the contract the BOP signed with the RRC) goes to a subsistence fee paid directly to the RRC contractor to contribute toward the cost of their confinement.61 RRC staff can assist inmates with obtaining employment or locating post-release housing.62 While housed in RRCs, inmates are eligible to receive mental health, sex offender, and substance abuse treatment services. Inmates who completed a residential substance abuse treatment program while incarcerated are required to participate in a transitional drug abuse treatment program while placed at a RRC.63

BOP Appropriations

Nearly all of the BOP's operations are funded through annual appropriations provided by Congress.64 The BOP's annual budget is divided between two major accounts: Salaries and Expenses (S&E) and Buildings and Facilities (B&F). The S&E account (i.e., the operating budget) provides for the custody and care of federal inmates and for the daily maintenance and operations of correctional facilities, regional offices, and the BOP's central office in Washington, DC. It also provides funding for the incarceration of federal inmates in state, local, and private facilities. The B&F account (i.e., the capital budget) provides funding for the construction of new facilities and the modernization, repair, and expansion of existing facilities.65 Appropriations for both accounts are presented in Table 1.

Table 1. Appropriations for the Bureau of Prisons, FY1980-FY2014

Appropriations in thousands of dollars

Fiscal Year

Salaries and Expenses

Buildings and Facilities

Total

1980

$323,884

$5,960

$329,844

1981

351,759

10,020

361,779

1982

378,016

56,481

434,497

1983

412,133

66,667

478,800

1984

464,850

47,711

512,561

1985

536,932

86,043

622,975

1986

561,480

44,082

605,562

1987

656,941

219,249

876,190

1988

772,013

297,076

1,069,089

1989

962,016

612,914

1,574,930

1990

1,138,778

1,511,953

2,650,731

1991

1,363,645

374,358

1,738,003

1992

1,649,121

462,090

2,111,211

1993

1,793,470

339,225

2,132,695

1994

1,962,605

269,543

2,232,148

1995

2,319,722

276,301

2,596,023

1996

2,546,893a

334,728

2,881,621

1997

2,748,427b

435,200

3,183,627

1998

2,847,777c

255,133

3,102,910

1999

2,888,853d

410,997

3,299,850

2000

3,111,073e

556,780

3,667,853

2001

3,469,739

833,822

4,303,561

2002

3,805,118

807,808

4,612,926

2003

4,044,788

396,632

4,441,420

2004

4,414,313

393,515

4,807,828

2005

4,571,385

205,076

4,776,461

2006

4,830,160

99,961

4,930,121

2007

5,012,433

432,425

5,444,858

2008

5,346,740

372,720

5,719,460

2009

5,600,792

575,807

6,176,599

2010

6,106,231

99,155

6,205,386

2011

6,282,410

98,957

6,381,367

2012

6,551,281

90,000

6,641,281

2013f

6,349,248

95,356

6,444,604

2014

6,769,000

90,000

6,859,000

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons.

Notes: Amounts in Table 1 include all supplemental appropriations and any rescissions of enacted budget authority, but they do not include rescissions of unobligated balances. From FY1980 to FY1995, funding for the National Institute of Corrections (NIC) was included in a separate account. Since FY1996, funding for the NIC has been included in the S&E account. In Table 1, funding for the NIC for FY1980-FY1995 was added to the S&E account to make funding for the S&E account comparable across fiscal years.

a. Includes $13.5 million appropriated from the Violent Crime Reduction Trust Fund (VCRTF).

b. Includes $25.2 million appropriated from the VCRTF.

c. Includes $26.1 million appropriated from the VCRTF.

d. Includes $26.5 million appropriated from the VCRTF.

e. Includes $22.5 million appropriated from the VCRTF.

f. The FY2013-enacted amount includes the amount sequestered per the Budget Control Act of 2011(P.L. 112-25).

Figure 2. Appropriations for the BOP, FY1980-FY2014

Appropriations in billions of nominal dollars

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons.

Notes: Amounts in Figure 2 include all supplemental appropriations and any rescissions of enacted budget
authority, but they do not include rescissions of unobligated balances. From FY1980 to FY1995, funding for the
National Institute of Corrections (NIC) was included in a separate account. Since FY1996, funding for the NIC
has been included in the S&E account. In Figure 2, funding for the NIC for FY1980-FY1995 was added to the
S&E account to make funding for the S&E account comparable across fiscal years. The FY2013-enacted amount
includes the amount sequestered per the Budget Control Act of 2011(P.L. 112-25).

A review of the appropriations presented in Table 1 shows two trends in the BOP's appropriations. First, while there has been a nearly continuous increase in the overall appropriations for the BOP, it is in large part driven by an unbroken year-by-year increase in appropriations for the BOP's Salaries and Expenses (S&E) account since FY1980 (see Figure 2). The one exception to this trend is the appropriation for FY2013, which is lower than the FY2012 appropriation for the S&E account due to the sequestration ordered pursuant to the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25). It is not surprising that Congress would appropriate increasing amounts for the S&E account in light of the steadily growing federal prison population. Appropriations for the S&E account pay the salaries and benefits of both correctional officers and other institutional employees. The BOP has had to hire more officers and other employees as it opens more prisons and supervises more inmates. In addition, not only has the cost of operating the federal prison system increased because the BOP is responsible for confining more inmates, but the per capita cost of incarceration has also increased over the years. In FY2000, the nominal per capita cost for all inmates was $21,603; by FY2013, the nominal per capita cost of incarceration had increased to $29,291.66 The increasing per capita cost of confinement is largely due to inflationary pressures, such as the increasing cost of health care, food, clothing, and utilities and the cost of hiring additional personnel to properly manage the inmate population.

Second, funding for the Buildings and Facilities (B&F) account is more irregular, with Congress appropriating more in some fiscal years and less in others. Congress appropriated more funding in fiscal years where the BOP expanded its prison capacity in an effort to relieve overcrowding. Also, there is a lag between when Congress appropriates funding for construction of a new prison and when the prison is operational because the BOP must first plan the prison's construction, acquire the land, and then contract for the construction of the facility. It can take several years after construction begins before a prison is ready to accept inmates. For example, there was a noticeable spike in appropriations for the B&F account in FY1990, followed by three fiscal years of above-average funding for the account.67 Between FY1990 and FY1997, the BOP opened 27 new prisons. There was another increase in funding for the B&F account between FY1999 and FY2004. Appropriations for the B&F account during this time period averaged approximately $567.0 million per fiscal year. Between FY1999 and FY2005, the BOP opened 22 new prisons.

Each of the BOP's two appropriations accounts are divided into specific decision units, each of which fund more specific BOP operations. An examination of funding for the decision units under the S&E and B&F accounts provides more insight into how the BOP allocates its annual appropriation in light of the challenges it faces as it becomes responsible for confining more inmates. The S&E account is divided into four decision units, which are as follows:

The B&F account is divided into two decision units:

Table 2. Appropriations for the BOP, by Decision Unit, FY1999-FY2014

Appropriations in thousands of dollars

 

Salaries and Expenses

Buildings and Facilities

Fiscal Year

Inmate Care and Programs

Institution Security and Administration

Contract Confinement

Management and Administration

New Construction

Modernization and Repair

1999

$1,090,148

$1,401,349

$255,062

$142,249

$322,963

$88,034

2000

1,123,856

1,494,809

344,773

147,635

441,003

115,777

2001

1,208,480

1,601,518

511,579

148,162

710,816

123,006

2002

1,311,335

1,722,567

620,145

151,071

675,040

132,768

2003

1,454,481

1,868,538

567,365

154,404

262,956

133,676

2004

1,624,308

2,050,417

574,473

165,115

177,620

164,000

2005

1,682,656

2,094,917

627,135

166,677

25,372

179,704

2006

1,740,011

2,227,223

683,031

179,895

48,115

51,846

2007

1,774,048

2,297,055

757,851

183,479

368,875

63,550

2008

1,942,077

2,409,112

814,529

181,022

302,720

70,000

2009

2,070,002

2,495,196

840,933

194,661

465,180

110,627

2010

2,215,992

2,708,651

981,112

200,476

25,386

73,769

2011

2,294,174

2,783,664

996,772

207,800

25,335

73,622

2012

2,421,272

2,880,290

1,040,213

209,506

23,035

66,695

2013a

2,424,620

2,717,938

1,017,297

189,393

23,649

71,707

2014

2,525,039

2,966,364

1,074,808

202,789

22,852

67,148

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons.

Notes: Amounts in Table 2 include all supplemental appropriations and any rescissions of enacted budget authority, but they do not include rescissions of unobligated balances.

a. The FY2013-enacted amount includes the amount sequestered per the Budget Control Act of 2011(P.L. 112-25).

As shown in Table 2, since FY1999 approximately 80% of the BOP's S&E funding has gone to combined appropriations for the Inmate Care and Programs and the Institution Security and Administration decision units. Funding for the Inmate Care and Programs and the Institution Security and Administration decision units have increased at about the same rate as funding for the S&E account overall. Between FY1999 and FY2014, funding for the Inmate Care and Programs decision unit increased 128.6% and funding for the Institution Security and Administration decision unit increased 110.6%. In comparison, funding for the S&E account increased 134.3% over the same time period. Funding for the Contract Confinement decision unit increased 337.0% between FY1999 and FY2014. The steeper increase in funding for the Contract Confinement decision unit comes as the BOP has relied on confining more inmates in contract facilities. For example, in FY1990 about 6,900 inmates under the BOP's jurisdiction were held in contract facilities; by FY2013, approximately 42,400 inmates were placed in contract facilities. Funding from the Contract Confinement decision unit covers the cost of contracts that the BOP signs with RRCs, and since the growing prison population also means that there will be more inmates released from federal prison each year, there has been a growing demand for RRC bedspace. While funding for the Contract Confinement decision unit outpaced the growth of funding for the S&E account overall, funding for the Management and Administration decision unit grew at a rate below that of the S&E account. Between FY1999 and FY2014, funding for the Management and Administration decision unit increased 48.3%.

The data presented in Table 2 also show that in most fiscal years since FY1999 a majority of the funding for the B&F account has been dedicated for new prison construction, which is probably not surprising given the BOP's need to expand prison capacity to handle an ever growing prison population. The BOP has, and continues to, face problems with prison overcrowding. Between FY1999 and FY2013, the BOP increased its capacity by more than 40,100 beds.68 Even though the BOP has expanded prison capacity, crowding in the federal prison system increased from 31% over rated capacity to 36% over rated capacity between FY1999 and FY2013,69 and even with the planned addition of nearly 7,000 beds by FY2018, the BOP expects prison crowding to increase one percentage point to 41% over rated capacity.70

As shown in Table 2, in most fiscal years between FY1999 and FY2014, a majority of the appropriation for the B&F account was for new prison construction rather than maintenance of existing facilities. Over this time period, the average appropriation for the New Construction decision unit was $248.3 million while the average appropriation for the Modernization and Repair decision unit was $99.1 million. However, funding for the Modernization and Repair decision unit has exceeded that of the New Construction decision unit in the five most recent fiscal years, but this was not the result of increased funding for modernization and repair projects. Rather, it was the result of Congress appropriating less funding for the B&F account overall. The total appropriation for the B&F account was less than $100.0 million between FY2010 and FY2014, which is approximately 75% less than the average appropriation for the B&F account between FY1999 and FY2009. The lack of funding for maintenance projects could place as much strain on the BOP's future budget as prison overcrowding. The BOP reports that about one-third of its current facilities are over 50 years old.71 Moreover, failure to perform adequate maintenance on existing facilities could result in larger capital investment in future years as prisons and utility systems deteriorate and, according to the BOP, could cause direct and/or indirect security problems.72 It is possible that the demand for maintenance funding would increase in the future as greater demands are placed on an aging infrastructure by prison overcrowding, unless Congress provides funding for a large-scale expansion of new prisons, which could potentially allow the BOP to close some older facilities.

Congress could choose to mitigate some of the issues related to federal prison population growth by appropriating more funding so the BOP could expand prison capacity to alleviate overcrowding, but this would only continue the upward climb in the BOP's appropriations. There is a concern that the rate of growth in the BOP's appropriations is not sustainable in light of efforts to reduce discretionary spending in order to reduce the federal budget deficit.73

Congress could also consider ways to reduce the number of inmates held in federal prison through methods such as increasing good time credit for inmates who participate in certain rehabilitative programs, placing more low-level offenders on community supervision in lieu of incarceration, or reducing mandatory minimum penalties for some offenses. Reducing the federal prison population could help bring down the cost of the federal prison system since the BOP would be housing and caring for fewer inmates. A smaller prison population would help alleviate prison crowding and it could improve staff-to-inmate ratios. Shrinking the size of the federal prison population could possibly help the BOP deal with its aging infrastructure, assuming that the prison population decreased enough to allow the BOP to close some of its older facilities. If nothing else, fewer inmates would allow the BOP to shift funding from building prisons to properly maintaining the bureau's current facilities.

Footnotes

1.

E. Ann Carson and Daniela Golinelli, Prisoners in 2012: Trends in Admissions and Releases, 1991-2012, U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, NCJ 243920, Washington, DC, December 2013, p. 39.

2.

Based on a CRS analysis of the BOP's annual appropriation for FY1980-FY2014 (see Table 1). Annual appropriations were adjusted using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U).

3.

Data provided by the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons.

4.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, About the Bureau of Prisons, p. 1; hereinafter, About the Bureau of Prisons.

5.

18 U.S.C. §4042(a).

6.

In some cases, USPs can be designated to house medium security inmates. For example, USP Marion, USP Leavenworth, and USP Atlanta house medium security inmates.

7.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, About Our Facilities, Federal Prisons, http://www.bop.gov/about/facilities/federal_prisons.jsp.

8.

Ibid.

9.

Ibid.

10.

Ibid.

11.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Inmate Security Designation and Custody Classification, Program Statement 5100.08, p. 1, http://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5100_008.pdf; hereinafter, Security Designation.

12.

It is the BOP's policy to try to incarcerate an inmate in a facility that is within 500 miles of the inmate's release residence. U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Custody & Care, Designations, http://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/designations.jsp.

13.

Security Designation, pp. 1-2.

14.

An inmate's custody level (i.e., community, out, in, or maximum) refers to the level of staff supervision the inmate requires. For example, an inmate with a "community" custody level may be eligible for the least secure housing, including any that is outside the institution's perimeter; may work on outside details with minimal supervision; and may participate in community-based program activities if other eligibility requirements are satisfied. However, an inmate with an "in" custody level is assigned to regular quarters and is eligible for all regular work assignments and activities under a normal level of supervision, but these inmates are not eligible for work details or programs outside the institution's secure perimeter.

15.

Security Designation, p. 2.

16.

Ibid.

17.

Traditionally, each BOP facility is divided into multiple housing units to which inmates are assigned. About the Federal Bureau of Prisons, p. 4.

18.

Ibid.

19.

Ibid.

20.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, FY2014 Performance Budget, Congressional Submission, Salaries and Expenses, p. 20; hereinafter, BOP's FY2014 S&E Budget Justification.

21.

Pretrial and holdover (e.g., inmates who are temporarily held in the institution while awaiting transfer to another institution) inmates are not required to complete the Admission and Orientation program. U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Admission and Orientation Program, Program Statement 5290.14, p. 1, http://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5290_014.pdf.

22.

Ibid.

23.

Ibid.

24.

BOP's FY2014 S&E Budget Justification, p. 20.

25.

Ibid.

26.

Ibid., p. 21.

27.

Ibid.

28.

Ibid.

29.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Custody & Care, Mental Health, http://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/mental_health.jsp.

30.

BOP's FY2014 S&E Budget Justification, p. 28.

31.

Ibid.

32.

Ibid.

33.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Inmate Discipline Program, Program Statement 5270.09, p. 9, http://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5270_009.pdf; hereinafter, "Inmate Discipline Program."

34.

Each prisoner serving a term of imprisonment of more than one year, but not prisoners serving a life sentence, can receive a good time credit of up to 54 days per year to count toward serving the sentence. The amount of the credit is subject to the determination of BOP. 18 U.S.C. §3624(b).

35.

Inmate Discipline Program, pp. 44-54.

36.

Inmates sentenced for a federal offense after September 13, 1994, but before April 26, 1996, and who committed a crime of violence (as defined by the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, P.L. 103-322), inmates who were sentenced for a federal offense after April 26, 1996, and inmates who were sentenced for a District of Columbia Code offense after August 5, 2000, all lose some amount of good time credit as a mandatory sanction for committing a prohibited act. Ibid., p. 11.

37.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Special Housing Units, Program Statement 5270.10, http://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5270_010.pdf.

38.

Facilities with SMUs are USP Allenwood, USP Lewisburg, FCI Talladega, FCC Florence, and FCC Oakdale.

39.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Special Management Units, Program Statement 5217.01, pp. 1-2, http://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5217_001.pdf.

40.

Ibid., p. 2.

41.

Ibid.

42.

Ibid., p. 5.

43.

Ibid., pp. 7-10.

44.

Facilities with CMUs are FCC Terre Haute and USP Marion.

45.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, State of the Bureau 2009, p. 37, http://www.bop.gov/resources/pdfs/sob09.pdf.

46.

Ibid.

47.

Ibid.

48.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Administrative Remedy Program, Program Statement 1330.13, p. 4, http://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/1330_013.pdf.

49.

Ibid.

50.

Ibid., p. 7.

51.

Ibid.

52.

The FPI is a government-owned corporation that employs federal inmates. For more information on the FPI, see CRS Report RL32380, Federal Prison Industries: Overview and Legislative History, by [author name scrubbed].

53.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, State of the Bureau 2008, pp. 2-3, http://www.bop.gov/resources/pdfs/sob08.pdf.

54.

BOP's FY2014 S&E Budget Submission, pp. 35-36.

55.

Ibid.

56.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Custody & Care, Reentry Programs, http://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/reentry.jsp.

57.

Ibid.

58.

Ibid.

59.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, About Our Facilities, Reentry Centers, http://www.bop.gov/about/facilities/residential_reentry_management_centers.jsp.

60.

Ibid.

61.

Ibid.

62.

Ibid.

63.

Ibid.

64.

The operations of the Federal Prison Industries (FPI) are supported by revenue generated through the sale of prisoner-made goods to federal agencies. In addition, some programs, goods, and services (such as compensation for inmates participating in non-FPI jobs) are paid for by funds generated through the sale of goods to inmates through the prison commissary.

65.

In addition to appropriations for the S&E and B&F accounts, Congress usually places a cap on the amount of revenue generated by the FPI that can be used for administrative expenses in the annual Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies appropriations act. Although Congress does not appropriate funding for the administrative expenses of FPI, the administrative expenses cap is scored as enacted budget authority.

66.

Data provided by the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons.

67.

Between FY1980 and FY2012, the average appropriation for the B&F account was approximately $299.0 million per fiscal year. This average excludes FY1990 funding for the B&F account because it was an outlier and including it would skew the average upwards (if FY1990 funding for the B&F account is included, the average appropriation for the account was approximately $336.0 million per fiscal year).

68.

Data provided by the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons.

69.

Data provided by the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons.

70.

BOP's FY2014 S&E Budget Submission, p. 3.

71.

U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, FY2014 Performance Budget, Congressional Submission, Buildings and Facilities, p. 13.

72.

Ibid.

73.

In the conference report for the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2012 (i.e., the "minibus," P.L. 112-55), the conferees expressed concern that "the current upward trend in the prison inmate population is unsustainable and, if left unchecked, will eventually engulf the [Department of Justice's] budgetary resources." U.S. Congress, House of Representatives, Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and the Related Agencies Programs for the Fiscal Year Ending September 30, 2012, and for Other Purposes, Conference Report to Accompany H.R. 2112, 112th Cong., 1st sess., November 14, 2011, H.Rept. 112-284 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2011), p. 241.