While Illinois has been struggling to balance its budget, most efforts still seem to be focused on cutting programs. This tactic often has been pursued past the point of common sense, costing the state money in the long term in order to save money now. These penny wise, pound foolish tactics are now getting push-back not just from the expected liberals and advocates for particular groups, but even the police and other authorities are pointing out the problem.<\/p>\n
The group \u201cFight Crime: Invest in Kids Illinois\u201d is a group of police chiefs, prosecuting attorneys, crime survivors and others interested in reducing crime rates. A recent release<\/a> from the group advocates spending more on children\u2019s early interventions. The group notes that in 2010, Illinois spent $1.3 billion on corrections but only $342 million on pre-school.<\/p>\n The importance of this discrepancy is that cutting programs for young people does not save money, it merely shifts when we spend money on people \u2013 as children educating them, or as adults keeping them in a prison cell. A study of the Perry preschool program<\/a> in Michigan found that children left out of the program were more likely to become offenders later in life. By age 40, non-participants were 86 percent more likely to have been sentenced to prison.<\/p>\n Students who did not participate in a Chicago pre-kindergarten plan were 70 percent more likely to be imprisoned for a violent crime, according to the Fight Crime in Illinois group.<\/p>\n So, how much does it cost to imprison a person? Illinois is likely to spend on average<\/a> $2.5 million for every individual who ends up imprisoned by the age of 18, over the course of the individual\u2019s life. It really does seem like spending a little now is the better option than spending a whole lot latter. In fact, savings for Illinois taxpayers have been calculated to be in the realm of hundreds of thousands of dollars per child<\/a>.<\/p>\n