In five pages the ongoing woes of River City's corrections system are discussed. Three sources are cited in the bibliography.
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memory that cannot be grasped, other than the chorus constantly repeating "trouble," trouble, trouble," until they danced or faded away. I have not thought of that song in a
kahzillion years, and now it pops into my head about California Corrections. Our mind, or the human memory can do tricks far beyond us sometimes. But that ancient bit
of memory seems very "right on," as far as corrections goes in California; it is "trouble, trouble, trouble." Bibliography lists 3 sources. BBpolthy.doc CORRECTIONS IN CALIFORNIA: Problems
in River City Written by B. Bryan Babcock for the Paperstore, Inc., March 2001 Introduction "River City" never was a real place; but somehow I remember it
from one of my mothers musical records. Some one sang, "there is trouble in River City, that starts with "T", and rhymes with ..." and the rest
of the song is some shadow of a memory that cannot be grasped, other than the chorus constantly repeating "trouble," trouble, trouble," until they danced or faded away. I
have not thought of that song in a kahzillion years, and now it pops into my head about California Corrections. Our mind, or the human memory can do tricks far
beyond us sometimes. But that ancient bit of memory seems very "right on," as far as corrections goes in California; it is "trouble, trouble, trouble." The numbers According
to Schlosser (1998), in 1977 the inmate population of California was 19,600. Today it is 159,000. After spending $5.2 billion on prison construction over the past fifteen years, California now
has not only the largest, but also the most overcrowded prison system in the United States. The state Department of Corrections estimates that it will need to spend an additional