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2005 Census St. & Fed. Corr. Facilities [1] (2005)

handle is hein.death/csfcf0004 and id is 1 raw text is: U.S. Department of Justice
Office of Justice Programs

October 2008, NCJ 222182

National Prisoner Statistics Pro2ran

Census of State and Federal
Correctional Facilities, 2005

by James J. Stephan
BJS Statistician
The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) conducted a national
census-Census of State and Federal Correctional Facili-
ties (CSFCF)-of adult correctional facilities operating
under state or federal authority as of December 2005. The
census also included private and local facilities operating
under contract to house inmates for federal or state correc-
tional authorities.
Facilities that housed primarily state or federal prisoners
and that were operational on the day of the census and
physically, functionally, and administratively separate from
other facilities were included in the 2005 CSFCF. The types
of facilities included were prisons and prison farms; prison
hospitals; centers for medical treatment and psychiatric
confinement; boot camps; centers for reception; diagnosis;
classification; alcohol and drug treatment; community cor-
rectional facilities; facilities for parole violators and other
persons returned to custody; institutions for youthful offend-
ers; and institutions for geriatric inmates.
The 2005 CSFCF excluded city, county, and regional jails
and private facilities that did not house primarily state or
federal inmates. It also excluded facilities for the military,
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Bureau
of Indian Affairs (BIA), U.S. Marshals Service (USMS), and
correctional hospital wards not operated by correctional
authorities.
Selected findings from the Census of State and Federal
Correctional Facilities, 2005
- From June 30, 2000, to December 30, 2005, the number
of state and federal correctional facilities increased by
9%, from 1,668 to 1,821. The number of prisoners held
in custody increased by 10%, from 1,305,253 to
1,430,208.

 Private correctional facilities (up 151) accounted for
nearly all of the increase in the number of adult correc-
tional facilities between June 30, 2000, and December
30, 2005. Most of the growth in private correctional facil-
ities during this period was in facilities under contract to
the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
 From 2000 to 2005, the number of private facilities
increased from 16% (264) to 23% (415) of all institu-
tions. About two-thirds of all private facilities were under
contract to state authorities and a third were under con-
tract to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
 Inmates housed in private facilities increased from
91,184 in 2000 to 105,451 in 2005. In both years,
inmates housed in private facilities made up about 7% of
the nation's average daily prisoner population.
 Between 2000 and 2005, facilities housing fewer than
500 inmates as an average daily population increased
by 86. Facilities housing 500 to 999 inmates was rela-
tively unchanged between 2000 (305) and 2005 (304).
Facilities housing 1,000 to 2,499 inmates increased by
57 and the number of facilities housing 2,500 inmates or
more rose by 11.
 The number of minimum (up 155) and maximum (up 40)
security facilities increased between 2000 and 2005.
The number of medium-security facilities declined (down
42) during this period.
 The number of facilities under court order or consent
decree to limit the size of their inmate population
declined from 145 in 2000 to 44 in 2005. Facilities under
court order or consent decree for specific conditions also
declined, from 320 to 218.

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