DOJ, Bureau of Justice Statistics - Jail Inmates at Midyear 2014, 2015
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U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics June 2015, NCJ 248629 Todd D. Minton and Zhen Zeng, Ph.D., BJS Statisticians T he number of inmates confined in county and city jails was an estimated 744,600 at midyear 2014 (figure 1, table 1). The jail population remained steady at the 2012 level and was significantly lower than the peak of an estimated 785,500 at midyear 2008. Since 2000, the jail inmate population increased about 1% each year. The jail incarceration rate—the confined jail population per 100,000 U.S. residents—decreased steadily from a peak of 259 inmates per 100,000 at midyear 2007 to 234 per 100,000 at midyear 2014. The adult only jail incarceration rate has also declined from a high of 340 inmates per 100,000 at midyear 2007 to 302 per 100,000 at midyear 2014. This report summarizes data from the Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ) which is conducted in years between the complete census of local jails. ASJ uses a stratified probability sample of jail jurisdictions to estimate the number and characteristics of local inmates nationwide. The 2014 ASJ sample consisted of 891 jail jurisdictions, represented by 942 jail facilities (referred to as reporting units). This sample represents about 2,750 jail jurisdictions nationwide. Local jail jurisdictions include counties (parishes in Louisiana) or municipal governments that administer one or more local jails. Bul l etin Jail Inmates at Midyear 2014 Figure 1 Inmates confined in local jails at midyear and percent change in the jail population, 2000–2014 Number of inmates at midyear 900,000 800,000 700,000 600,000 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 Annual percent change Percent change '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000–2004 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. HIGHLIGHTS The number of inmates confined in county and city jails was an estimated 744,600 at midyear 2014, which was significantly lower than the peak of 785,500 inmates at midyear 2008. Since 2000, the jail inmate population increased about 1% each year. The jail incarceration rate decreased from a peak of 259 per 100,000 in 2007 to 234 per 100,000 at midyear 2014. The female inmate population increased 18.1% between midyear 2010 and 2014, while the male population declined 3.2%. White inmates accounted for 47% of the total jail population, blacks represented 35%, and Hispanics represented 15%. About 4,200 juveniles age 17 or younger were held in local jails at midyear 2014. They accounted for 0.6% of the confined population, down from 1.2% at midyear 2000. Nearly 90% or 3,700 juvenile inmates were tried or awaiting trial in adult court. The number of juveniles not charged as an adult declined by 74% between midyear 2010 and 2014. Since 2000, 95% of the growth in the overall jail inmate population (123,500) was due to the increase in the unconvicted population (117,700 inmates). Local jails admitted about 11.4 million persons during the 12-month period ending June 30, 2014, which was down from a peak of 13.6 million in 2008. Celebrating 35 years Table 1 Inmates confined in local jails at midyear, average daily population, and incarceration rates, 2000–2014 Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014* Average annual change 2000–2013 2013–2014 Inmates confined at midyeara Year-to-year change Total Number Percent 621,149** 15,206 2.5% 631,240** 10,091 1.6 665,475** 34,235 5.4 691,301** 25,826 3.9 713,990** 22,689 3.3 747,529 33,539 4.7 765,819** 18,290 2.4 780,174** 14,355 1.9 785,533** 5,359 0.7 767,434** -18,099 -2.3 748,728 -18,706 -2.4 735,601 -13,127 -1.8 744,524 8,923 1.2 731,208 -13,316 -1.8 744,592 13,384 1.8 1.3% 1.8 Average daily populationb Year-to-year change Total Number Percent 618,319** 10,341 1.7% 625,966** 7,647 1.2 652,082** 26,116 4.2 680,760** 28,678 4.4 706,242** 25,482 3.7 733,442 27,200 3.9 755,320 21,878 3.0 773,138 17,818 2.4 776,573** 3,435 0.4 768,135** -8,438 -1.1 748,553 -19,582 -2.5 735,565 -12,988 -1.7 737,369 1,804 0.2 731,352 -6,017 -0.8 738,975 7,623 1.0 Jail incarceration ratec Adults and juvenilesd Adults only 220 292 222 294 231 307 238 315 243 322 252 334 256 338 259 340 258 338 250 327 242 315 236 307 237 308 231 299 234 302 1.3% 1.0 Note: Detail may not sum to total because of rounding. See appendix table 1 for standard errors. *Comparison year on confined inmates and average daily population. **Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. See Methodology for tests of significance. aNumber of inmates held on the last weekday in June. bSum of all inmates in jail each day for a year, divided by the number of days in the year. cNumber of inmates confined at midyear per 100,000 U.S. residents. dJuveniles are persons age 17 or younger at midyear. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000–2004 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 2 Males have made up at least 85% of the jail population since 2000. The female inmate population increased 18.1% (up 16,700 inmates) between midyear 2010 and 2014, while the male population declined 3.2% (down 20,900 inmates) (table 2, table 3). The female jail population grew by an average of about 1.6% every year between 2005 and 2014. In comparison, the male jail population declined by 0.3% every year since 2005 (not shown). White inmates accounted for 47% of the total jail population, blacks represented 35%, and Hispanics represented 15% at midyear 2014. From midyear 2010 to 2014, white inmates increased by 21,200, while black (19,400) and Hispanic (7,500) inmates declined. Table 2 Number of inmates in local jails, by characteristics, midyear 2000 and 2005–2014 Characteristic Totalb Sex Male Female Adult Male Female Juvenilec Held as adultd Held as juvenile Race/Hispanic origine Whitef Black/African Americanf Hispanic/Latino American Indian/ Alaska Nativef,g Asian/Native Hawaiian/ Other Pacific Islanderf,g Two or more racesf Conviction statuse,h Convicted Unconvicted 2000 621,149** 2005 747,529 2006 765,819** 2007 780,174** 2008 785,533** 2009 767,434** 2010 748,728 2011a 735,601 2012a 744,524 2013a 731,208 2014*a 744,592 550,162** 70,987** 613,534** 543,120** 70,414** 7,615** 6,126** 1,489** 652,958** 94,571** 740,770 646,807** 93,963** 6,759** 5,750** 1,009 666,819** 99,000** 759,717** 661,164** 98,552** 6,102** 4,835** 1,268 679,654** 100,520** 773,341** 673,346** 99,995** 6,833** 5,649** 1,184 685,862** 99,670** 777,829** 678,657** 99,172** 7,703** 6,410** 1,294 673,728** 93,706** 760,216** 667,039** 93,176** 7,218** 5,846** 1,373 656,360** 92,368** 741,168 649,284** 91,884** 7,560** 5,647** 1,912** 642,300 93,300** 729,700 636,900 92,800** 5,900** 4,600** 1,400 645,900 98,600** 739,100 640,900 98,100** 5,400** 4,600** 900 628,900 102,400** 726,600 624,700 101,900** 4,600 3,500 1,100 635,500 109,100 740,400 631,600 108,800 4,200 3,700 500 260,500** 256,300 94,100** 331,000** 290,500** 111,900 336,500** 295,900** 119,200** 338,200** 301,700** 125,500** 333,300** 308,000** 128,500** 326,400** 300,500** 124,000** 331,600** 283,200** 118,100** 329,400** 276,400** 113,900 341,100 274,600 112,700 344,900 261,500 107,900 352,800 263,800 110,600 5,500** 7,600** 8,400 8,600 9,000 9,400 9,900 9,400 9,300 10,200 10,400 4,700** ... 5,400** 1,000 5,100** 700 5,300** 800 5,500** 1,300 5,400** 1,800** 5,100** 800 5,300** 1,200 5,400 1,500** 290,000** 475,800 296,700** 483,500** 291,200** 494,200** 290,100** 477,300 291,300** 457,400 289,600** 446,000** 293,100** 451,400** 271,300 349,800** 284,400 463,200 5,100** 1,600** 278,000 453,200 6,000 1,000 277,100 467,500 Note: Detail may not sum to total because of rounding. See appendix table 2 for reported data and appendix table 3 for standard errors. …Not collected. *Comparison year for each characteristic. **Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. aData for 2011–2014 are adjusted for nonresponse and rounded to the nearest 100. bMidyear count is the number of inmates held on the last weekday in June. cPersons age 17 or younger at midyear. dIncludes juveniles who were tried or awaiting trial as adults. eData adjusted for nonresponse and rounded to the nearest 100. See Methodology. fExcludes persons of Hispanic or Latino origin. gPrevious reports combined American Indians and Alaska Natives and Asians, Native Hawaiians, and other Pacific Islanders into an Other race category. hIncludes juveniles who were tried or awaiting trial as adults. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 3 About 4,200 juveniles age 17 or younger were held in local jails at midyear 2014. They accounted for 0.6% of the confined population, down from 1.2% at midyear 2000. Nearly 90% or 3,700 juvenile inmates were tried or awaiting trial in adult court. The number of juveniles not charged as an adult declined by 74% between midyear 2010 and 2014 (from 1,900 to 500 inmates). offenders or convicted offenders awaiting sentencing. From midyear 2013 to 2014, the number of unconvicted inmates and the number of convicted inmates remained statistically the same. Since 2000, 95% of the growth in the overall jail inmate population (up 123,500) was due to the increase in the unconvicted population (up 117,700 inmates) and 5% was due to the increase in the convicted population (up 5,800 inmates). At midyear 2014, about 6 in 10 inmates were not convicted, but were in jail awaiting court action on a current charge—a rate unchanged since 2005. About 4 in 10 inmates were sentenced Table 3 Percent of inmates in local jails, by characteristics, midyear 2000 and 2005–2014 Characteristic Sex Male Female Adult Male Female Juvenilea Held as adultb Held as juvenile Race/Hispanic originc Whited Black/African Americand Hispanic/Latino American Indian/ Alaska Natived,e Asian/Native Hawaiian/ Other Pacific Islanderd,e Two or more racesd Conviction statusb,c Convicted Unconvicted 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 88.6% 11.4 98.8% 87.4 11.3 1.2% 1.0 0.2 87.3% 12.7 99.1% 86.5 12.6 0.9% 0.8 0.1 87.1% 12.9 99.2% 86.3 12.9 0.8% 0.6 0.2 87.1% 12.9 99.1% 86.3 12.8 0.9% 0.7 0.2 87.3% 12.7 99.0% 86.4 12.6 1.0% 0.8 0.2 87.8% 12.2 99.1% 86.9 12.1 0.9% 0.8 0.2 87.7% 12.3 99.0% 86.7 12.3 1.0% 0.8 0.3 87.3% 12.7 99.2% 86.6 12.6 0.8% 0.6 0.2 86.8% 13.2 99.3% 86.1 13.2 0.7% 0.6 0.1 86.0% 14.0 99.4% 85.4 13.9 0.6% 0.5 0.1 85.3% 14.7 99.4% 84.8 14.6 0.6% 0.5 0.1 41.9% 41.3 15.2 44.3% 38.9 15 43.9% 38.6 15.6 43.3% 38.7 16.1 42.5% 39.2 16.4 42.5% 39.2 16.2 44.3% 37.8 15.8 44.8% 37.6 15.5 45.8% 36.9 15.1 47.2% 35.8 14.8 47.4% 35.4 14.9 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.2 1.4 1.4 0.8 ... 0.7 0.1 0.7 0.1 0.7 0.1 0.7 0.2 0.7 0.2 0.7 0.1 0.7 0.2 0.7 0.2 0.7 0.2 0.8 0.1 44.0% 56.0 38.0% 62.0 37.9% 62.1 38.0% 62.0 37.1% 62.9 37.8% 62.2 38.9% 61.1 39.4% 60.6 39.4% 60.6 38.0% 62.0 37.2% 62.8 Note: Percentages are based on the total number of inmates held on the last weekday in June. Detail may not sum to total because of rounding. See table 2 for significance test. See appendix table 4 for standard error ratios. …Not collected. aPersons age 17 or younger at midyear. bIncludes juveniles who were tried or awaiting trial as adults. cData adjusted for nonresponse. See Methodology. dExcludes persons of Hispanic or Latino origin. ePrevious reports combined American Indians and Alaska Natives and Asians, Native Hawaiians, and other Pacific Islanders into an Other race category. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 4 Nearly half of jail inmates were held in less than 10% of jails The largest jails (those with an average daily population (ADP) of 1,000 or more inmates) held 47% of the jail inmate population at midyear 2014, but accounted for 6% of all jail jurisdictions nationwide (table 4). In comparison, the smallest jail jurisdictions (those with an ADP of less than 50 inmates) held 3% of the inmate population, but accounted for 38% of all jail jurisdictions. Jail jurisdictions with an ADP of 50 to 99 inmates and 100 to 249 inmates accounted for about 20% each of jail jurisdictions. Combined, these jail jurisdictions held 19% of all inmates. Jail jurisdictions with an ADP of 250 to 999 inmates accounted for 17% of all jail jurisdictions, but held 31% of all inmates at midyear 2014. Similar patterns were observed in 2013 for all categories. Table 4 Inmates confined in local jails at midyear, by size of jurisdiction, 2013–2014 Jurisdiction sizeb Total 49 or fewer 50–99 100–249 250–499 500–999 1,000 or more 2013 731,208 23,545 38,970 95,031 102,362 123,155 348,145 Inmates confined at midyeara 2014 Difference 744,592 13,384 25,058 1,513 42,172 3,202 96,443 1,412 101,609 -753 128,070 4,915 351,239 3,094 Percent change 1.8% 6.4 8.2 1.5 -0.7 4.0 0.9 Percent of all inmates 2013 2014 100% 100% 3.2 3.4 5.3 5.7 13.0 13.0 14.0 13.6 16.8 17.2 47.6 47.2 Note: Detail may not sum to total because of rounding. All comparisons by jurisdiction size are not significant at the 95%-confidence level. See appendix table 5 for standard errors. aNumber of inmates held on the last weekday in June. bStandardized on the average daily population (ADP) for the 12-month period ending June 30, 2006, the first year in the current Annual Survey of Jails sample. ADP is the sum of all inmates in jail each day for a year, divided by the number of days in the year. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2013–2014. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 5 Increase in new bed space between 2013 and 2014 was similar to the average annual increase between 2000 and 2013 Figure 2 Midyear custody population, average daily population (ADP), and rated capacity in local jails, 2000–2014 Rated capacity in jails reached an estimated 890,500 beds at midyear 2014, an increase of nearly 4% from 857,900 beds at midyear 2010 (figure 2, table 5). Rated capacity is the maximum number of beds or inmates allocated to each jail facility by a state or local rating official. Inmate population/bed space Since peaking in 2007 (96%), the percentage of rated capacity occupied at midyear 2014 (84%) was the lowest since 2000. At midyear 2014, jail jurisdictions holding 250 or more inmates reported a higher percentage of occupied bed space (85% to 87%) than smaller jail jurisdictions holding fewer than 250 inmates (67% to 79%) (table 6). In addition to the ratio of midyear jail population to rated capacity, two additional measures can be used to measure jail crowding—the ratio of ADP in a year to rated capacity, and the ratio of the number of inmates on the most crowded day in June to rated capacity. Using these measures, the nation’s jails operated at about 83% of rated capacity on an average day and about 89% of rated capacity on their most crowded day in June 2014. 900,000 Rated capacitya 800,000 ADPc 700,000 Inmates confined at midyearb 600,000 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 aMaximum number of beds or inmates assigned by a rating official to a facility, excluding separate temporary holding areas. bNumber of inmates held on the last weekday in June. cSum of all inmates in jail each day for a year, divided by the number of days in the year. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000–2004 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. Table 5 Rated capacity of local jails and percent of capacity occupied, 2000 and 2005–2014 Year 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014* Average annual change 2000–2013 2013–2014 Rated capacityc 677,787** 786,954** 794,984** 810,543** 828,714** 849,895** 857,918** 870,422 877,396 872,943 890,486 2.0% 2.0 Year-to-year change in rated capacitya Number Percent 25,466 3.9% 33,398 4.1 8,638 1.0 15,863 2.0 18,171 2.2 21,181 2.6 8,023 0.9 12,504 1.5 6,974 0.8 -4,453 -0.5 17,543 2.0 Percent of capacity occupiedb Midyeard Average daily populatione 92.0%** 91.2%** 95.0** 93.2** 96.3** 95.0** 96.3** 95.4** 94.8** 93.7** 90.3** 90.4** 87.3** 87.3** 84.5 84.5 84.9 84.0 83.8 83.8 83.6 83.0 17,199 17,543 Note: See appendix table 6 for standard errors. *Comparison year on rated capacity and percent of capacity occupied. **Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. aIncrease or reduction in the number of beds during the 12 months ending midyear of each year. Number and percentage change for 2000 are calculated using the rated capacity of 652,321 for 1999. bBased on the confined inmate population divided by the rated capacity and multiplied by 100. cMaximum number of beds or inmates assigned by a rating official to a facility, excluding separate temporary holding areas. dNumber of inmates held on the last weekday in June. eSum of all inmates in jail each day for a year, divided by the number of days in the year. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 6 While the confined population and rated jail capacity both increased at roughly comparable rates from 2000 through 2008, the growth rates have diverged since 2008. The confined population declined by 0.9% on average per year, while rated capacity increased by 1.2% on average per year. The increase in capacity and decrease in confined population almost equally contributed to the decline in the percentage of capacity occupied, from 95% at midyear 2008 to 84% at midyear 2014. From midyear 2008 to 2014, jail jurisdictions holding 100 to 249 inmates experienced the largest percentage increase in rated capacity relative to population change (figure 3). These jurisdictions reported an 18% increase in their rated capacity and a small increase (less than 1%) in their inmate population. The smallest jail jurisdictions, which held fewer than 50 inmates, reported the smallest percentage increase in rated capacity (up 4.9%) relative to population change (down 1.2%). Jails holding more than 250 inmates experienced a decline in their midyear jail population and an increase in their rated capacity. Table 6 Percent of jail capacity occupied at midyear, by size of jurisdiction, 2013–2014 Figure 3 Percent change in the midyear custody population and rated capacity between 2008 and 2014 Jurisdiction size Total 49 or fewer 50–99 100–249 250–499 500–999 1,000 or more Percent change 2013 83.8% 64.4 69.4 77.9 87.3 84.9 87.9** 2014* 83.6% 67.0 74.2 78.7 86.7 85.0 86.5 Note: Number of inmates held on the last weekday in June divided by the rated capacity multiplied by 100. Jurisdiction size is standardized on the average daily population for the 12-month period ending June 30, 2006, the first year in the current Annual Survey of Jails sample. See appendix table 7 for standard errors. *Comparison year on percent of capacity occupied at midyear. **Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2013–2014. 20 15 10 5 Rated capacitya 0 -5 -10 Number of inmatesb Total 49 or fewer 50 to 99 100 to 249 250 to 499 500 to 999 1,000 or more Note: Jail jurisdiction size is standardized to the average daily population (ADP) for the 12-month period ending June 30, 2006, the first year in the current Annual Survey of Jails sample. ADP is the sum of all inmates in jail each day for a year, divided by the number of days in the year. aMaximum number of beds or inmates assigned by a rating official to a facility, excluding separate temporary holding areas. bNumber of inmates held on the last weekday in June. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, 2008 and 2014. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 7 Local jails admitted 11.4 million persons during the 12-month period ending midyear 2014 Local jails admitted an estimated 11.4 million persons during the 12-month period ending June 30, 2014, a stable estimate since 2011 (11.8 million), but down from a peak of 13.6 million admissions in 2008. The number of persons admitted in 2014 was 15 times the size of the ADP (an estimated 739,000) during the 12-month period ending June 30, 2014. (See Methodology for methods used to estimate admissions.) Nearly 4 in 10 admissions to jail during the last week of June 2014 were to the largest jail jurisdictions (table 7). In comparison, jail jurisdictions holding fewer than 50 inmates accounted for 6% of all jail admissions. For these jurisdictions, the number of inmates admitted was 28 times the size of the ADP between midyear 2013 and 2014. These small jail jurisdictions also experienced the highest turnover rate (104%), measured as the change in admissions and releases by the ADP. (See Methodology for detail.) The turnover rate was the smallest in large jail jurisdictions (49%). Higher turnover rates mean larger numbers of admissions and releases relative to the size of the ADP. Table 7 Average daily jail population, admissions, and turnover rate, by size of jurisdiction, week ending June 30, 2013 and 2014 Jurisdiction sizec Total 49 or fewer 50–99 100–249 250–499 500–999 1,000 or more 2013 731,352 23,301 38,721 93,653 102,045 123,220 350,412 Average daily populationa 2014 Difference 738,975 7,623 23,490 189 40,554 1,833 96,200 2,547 99,889 -2,156 125,954 2,734 352,888 2,476 Estimated number of admissions during the last week in June 2013 2014* 224,536 218,924 15,296 12,610 16,315 18,763 32,470 32,087 35,003 33,527 46,806 35,430 78,645** 86,507 Weekly turnover rateb 2013 2014* 60.2% 58.1% 121.1 104.2 83.6 87.2 67.9 65.5 66.3 65.0 75.5 56.1 44.3** 48.5 Note: Detail may not sum to total because of rounding. See Methodology for more detail on estimation procedures. All comparisons by average daily population are not significant at the 95%-confidence level. See appendix table 8 for standard errors. *Comparison year on admissions and weekly turnover rate. **Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. aSum of all inmates in jail each day for a year. bCalculated by adding weekly admissions and releases, dividing by the average daily population (ADP), and multiplying by 100. cStandardized on the ADP for the 12-month period ending June 30, 2006, the first year in the current Annual Survey of Jails sample. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2013–2014. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 8 Other selected data from ASJ Table 8 Inmate population in jail jurisdictions reporting on confined persons being held for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), midyear 2002–2014 Year 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Jurisdictions reporting on holdings for ICEa 2,961 2,940 2,962 2,824 2,784 2,713 2,699 2,643 2,531 2,758 2,716 2,685 2,634 Inmates confined at midyearb 626,870 637,631 673,807 703,084 698,108 683,640 704,278 685,500 622,954 672,643 690,337 673,707 654,730 Confined persons held for ICE at midyear Percent of Number all inmates 12,501 2.0% 13,337 2.1 14,120 2.1 11,919 1.7 13,598 1.9 15,063 2.2 20,785 3.0 24,278 3.5 21,607 3.5 22,049 3.3 22,870 3.3 17,241 2.6 16,384 2.5 Note: Data are based on the reported data and were not estimated for survey item nonresponse. Comparisons were not tested due to changing coverage each year. See appendix table 9 for standard errors. aNot all jurisdictions reported on holdings for ICE. bNumber of inmates held on the last weekday in June in jails reporting complete data or the number of inmates held for ICE. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2002–2004 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. Table 9 Persons under jail supervision, by confinement status and type of program, midyear 2000 and 2006–2014 Confinement status and type of program Total Held in jaila Supervised outside of a jail facilityb Weekend programsc Electronic monitoring Home detentiond Day reporting Community service Other pretrial supervision Other work programse Treatment programsf Other 2000 687,033** 621,149** 65,884 14,523** 10,782** 332 3,969 13,592 6,279** 8,011 5,714** 2,682 2006 826,041 765,819** 60,222 11,421** 10,999** 807 4,841 14,667 6,409** 8,319** 1,486** 1,273** 2007 848,419** 780,174** 68,245 10,473 13,121 512 6,163** 15,327 11,148** 7,369 2,276 1,857** 2008 858,385** 785,533** 72,852** 12,325** 13,539 498 5,758** 18,475** 12,452** 5,808 2,259 1,739 2009 837,647** 767,434** 70,213** 11,212** 11,834** 738 6,492** 17,738** 12,439** 5,912 2,082 1,766** 2010 809,360 748,728 60,632 9,871 12,319 736 5,552** 14,646 9,375 4,351** 1,799 1,983** 2011 798,417 735,601 62,816 11,369** 11,950** 809 5,200 11,680 10,464 7,165 2,449 1,731** 2012 808,622 744,524 64,098 10,351 13,779 2,129** 3,890 14,761 7,738 7,137 2,164 2,149 2013 790,649 731,208 59,441 10,950 12,023** 1,337** 3,683 13,877 7,542 5,341** 2,002 2,687 2014* 808,070 744,592 63,478 9,698 14,223 646 4,413 14,331 8,634 7,003 2,100 2,430 Note: See appendix table 10 for standard errors. *Comparison year by status and program. **Difference with comparison year is significant at the 95% confidence level. aNumber of inmates held on the last weekday in June. bNumber of persons under jail supervision but not confined on the last weekday in June. Excludes persons supervised by a probation or parole agency. cOffenders serve their sentences of confinement on weekends only (i.e., Friday to Sunday). dIncludes only persons without electronic monitoring. eIncludes persons in work release programs, work gangs, and other alternative work programs. fIncludes persons in drug, alcohol, mental health, and other medical treatment. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 9 Methodology Response rate, nonresponse adjustment, and out-of-scope jail facilities Annual Survey of Jails The 2014 ASJ sample initially comprised 942 reporting units. However, 12 units were out-of-scope for the 2014 data collection because they had closed either permanently or temporarily, which resulted in a sample of 930 active respondents. Ninety-three percent (or 878) of the 930 active individual reporting units responded to the 2014 data collection, and 52 active individual reporting units did not respond to the survey. In years between the complete census of local jails, the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) conducts the Annual Survey of Jails (ASJ). ASJ uses a stratified probability sample of jail jurisdictions to estimate the number and characteristics of local inmates nationwide. The 2014 ASJ sample consisted of 891 jail jurisdictions, represented by 942 jail facilities (referred to as reporting units). This sample represents about 2,750 jail jurisdictions nationwide. Local jail jurisdictions include counties (parishes in Louisiana) or municipal governments that administer one or more local jails. In the sampling design, the jail jurisdictions nationwide were grouped into 10 strata. The 10 strata were defined by the interaction of two variables: the jail jurisdiction average daily population (ADP) in 2005, and whether in 2005 the jurisdiction held at least one juvenile. For 8 of the 10 strata, a random sample of jail jurisdictions was selected. For the remaining two strata, all jurisdictions were included in the sample. One stratum consisted of all jails (70) that were operated jointly by two or more jurisdictions (referred to as multi-jurisdictional jails). The other stratum (referred to as certainty stratum) consisted of all jail jurisdictions (267) that— held juvenile inmates at the time of the 2005 Census of Jail Inmates and had an ADP of 500 or more inmates during the 12 months ending June 30, 2005. held only adult inmates and had an ADP of 750 or more. The sampling design used for the 2014 ASJ is the same as the design used for the 2013 ASJ. The 2013 ASJ differed from the 2006–2012 ASJs in that it included in the sample, with a probability of one, all California jail jurisdictions in response to the two enacted laws—AB 109 and AB 117 by the California State Legislature and governor—to reduce the number of inmates housed in state prisons starting October 1, 2011. The inclusion of all California jail jurisdictions resulted in an additional 21 jail jurisdictions (for a total sample size of 891 jurisdictions). Since the enactment of the two laws in recent years, the California jail population has experienced changes in size that cannot be compared to the changes of any other state in the U.S. For this reason, the California jail jurisdictions were put in separate strata so that they could represent only California jurisdictions. The same sampling design was adopted for the California jurisdictions. BJS obtained data from sampled jail jurisdictions by mailed and web-based survey questionnaires. After follow-up phone calls and facsimiles, the item response rate for jails that responded to the survey was nearly 100% for critical items, such as the number of inmates confined, ADP, and rated capacity. (See appendix tables 1 to 7 for standard errors associated with reported estimates from the 2014 ASJ.) J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 BJS implemented nonresponse weight adjustment procedures to account for unit nonresponse, as it did in 2011 to 2013. Respondent indicators The respondent reporting unit indicator JAILRhij is set for each individual reporting unit j in jurisdiction i in stratum h on the file, based on the status of the individual reporting unit. { 1 if respondent or using prior year data, JAILRhij = 0 if nonrespondent, closed, or out‐of‐scope. The respondent jurisdiction indicator JURISRhi is set for each jurisdiction i in stratum h on the file, based on the value of JAILRhij for the reporting units within the jurisdiction. JURISRhi = n JAILR ∑ j=1 { 0 otherwise. i 1 if hij ≥ 1 Active indicators The active reporting unit indicator JAILAhij is set for each individual reporting unit j in jurisdiction i in stratum h on the file, based on the status of the individual reporting unit. { 1 if respondent, using prior year data, or nonrespondent JAILAhij = 0 if closed or out‐of‐scope. The active jurisdiction indicator JURISAhi is set for each jurisdiction i in stratum h on the file, based on the value of JAILAhij for the reporting units within the jurisdiction. n JAILA ∑ JURISA = { j=1 0 otherwise. i 1 if hij ≥ 1 hi Nonresponse weighting adjustment factor The nonresponse weighting adjustment factor is calculated within each stratum. BJS uses the sample weights in the nonresponse adjustment factor. The nonresponse weighting adjustment factor F2h is calculated as ∑ ni=1 W × JURISA ∑ ni=1 W × JURISR h F2h = h hi hi hi hi 10 where nh = number of jurisdictions sampled in stratum h, whi = sample weight for jurisdiction i in stratum h. In 2014, all 63 California jail jurisdictions responded, so their final weights post-stratification were 1. The post-stratification adjustment for non-California jail jurisdictions is computed as Final weight PSCAh = The final weight FWhi for each jail jurisdiction on the 2014 ASJ data file is calculated as FWhi = Whi × F2h × JURISRhi where whi = sample weight for jurisdiction i in stratum h. JAILRhi is used to set the final weight to 0 for units that are closed, out-of-scope, or nonrespondents. Final weight post-stratification: California jail jurisdictions and the Public Safety Realignment Because of the California Public Safety Realignment, between midyear 2011 and midyear 2014, California jails experienced a significant increase in the number of inmates (about 13,900 inmates) that was not experienced by jails nationwide. To capture this jail population growth in California more accurately, all California jurisdictions were added to the ASJ sample in 2013. Accordingly, BJS computed new weights to ensure that the sampled California jail jurisdictions represent California jurisdictions only. Without computing these new weights, the estimated nationwide jail population would be erroneously inflated. The post-stratification final weight adjustment is calculated for each stratum from which California jurisdictions were sampled. More specifically for each stratum, two new strata and set of weights were created: one for the California jurisdictions (PSCAh) and one for the nonCalifornia jurisdictions (PSCAh). In 2013, all California jail jurisdictions were included in the sample; however, not all of them responded. The weight adjustment for California jail jurisdictions is computed as PSCAh = ∑ NCAh nCAh JURISRCAhi i=1 where NCAh = number of active California jurisdictions in stratum h, nCAh = number of sampled California jurisdictions in stratum h J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 ∑ NCAh nCAh JURISRCAhi i=1 where NCAh = number of active non-California jail jurisdictions in stratum h, computed as NCAh = Wh × ∑ ni=1 JURISRA CAh CAhi nCAh = number of sampled non-California jail jurisdictions in stratum h. Item nonresponse imputation Critical items: Midyear inmate population, ADP, and rated capacity Based on the 2014 ASJ, about 99% of the 878 individual reporting units provided valid data on their midyear inmate population (872), ADP (864), and rated capacity (869). To calculate a national midyear inmate population, ADP, and rated capacity estimate, data were estimated for the reporting units that did not report specific data. Estimates were calculated based on the following criteria: Data for 1 individual reporting unit included midyear inmate population data based on the 2014 ASJ. Data for 5 individual reporting units included midyear inmate population data based on estimates from the 2013 ASJ. Data for 9 individual reporting units included ADP data based on their confined population at midyear 2014. Data for 5 individual reporting units included ADP data based on estimates from the 2013 ASJ. Data for 9 individual reporting units included rated capacity data based on estimates from the 2013 ASJ. Inmate characteristics Based on the 2014 ASJ, 90% to 95% of the 878 individual reporting units provided valid data on sex, age, race/Hispanic origin, and inmate conviction status. To calculate a national rate for inmate characteristics, data were estimated based on the ratio of the reported characteristic population to the total midyear confined population. 11 Weekly admission and release estimation procedures Based on the 2014 ASJ, 841 of the 878 individual reporting units (96%) provided valid data on weekly admissions or releases. To calculate an overall weekly estimate, data on offender flows through local jails were estimated for the 37 reporting units that did not report specific data on admissions and releases. Release data were estimated for 5 reporting units that reported data on admissions, but not on releases. Nonresponse weight adjustments account for the survey nonrespondents. Estimates were calculated based on the following criteria: Data for 3 individual reporting units included admission and release data based on estimates from the 2012 ASJ. Data for 29 individual reporting units included admission and release data based on estimates from the 2013 ASJ. Release data for 5 individual reporting units were based on admission data reported in 2014. Calculating annual admissions The ASJ collects data on weekly admissions. BJS determined that the June admission data from the 2004 Survey of Large Jails (SLJ) were a reliable source to calculate a nationwide annual admission estimate. Although the number of admissions to jails fluctuated throughout the year, the SLJ tracked monthly movements from January 2003 to January 2004 and showed that the June 2003 count (339,500) closely matched the annual average number of admissions (342,956). The number of annual admissions was calculated by multiplying the weekly admissions by 365 days and dividing by 7 days. Calculating weekly turnover rates Weekly jail turnover rates were modeled after the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey. Additional information on turnover rates is available at http:// www.bls.gov/jlt/. Jail turnover rates were calculated by adding admissions and releases, and then dividing by the ADP. The turnover rate takes into account jail admissions and releases and gives an indication of the fluctuation of the jail population. Jurisdiction size categories For the 2011 through 2014 reports, BJS categorized jurisdiction sizes based on the ADP during the 12 months ending midyear 2006 (the first year in the current ASJ series). For the 2010 report, comparisons of size categories from midyear 2009 to midyear 2010 were based on the ADP during the 12 months ending midyear 2009. In previous reports (2007 through 2009), J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 the size category comparisons were based on the 12 months ending midyear of the specific collection year. As a result, not all data in previous reports are comparable with data in this report. Standard errors and tests of significance As with any survey, the ASJ estimates are subject to error arising from sampling rather than using a complete enumeration of the jail population. A common way to express this sampling variability is to construct a 95% confidence interval around each survey estimate. Typically, multiplying the standard error by 1.96 and then adding or subtracting the result from the estimate produces the confidence interval. This interval expresses the range of values that could result among 95% of the different samples that could be drawn. Jail functions Jails in the ASJ include confinement facilities—usually administered by a local law enforcement agency—that are intended for adults but may hold juveniles before or after they are adjudicated. Facilities include jails and city or county correctional centers; special jail facilities, such as medical or treatment release centers, halfway houses, and work farms; and temporary holding or lockup facilities that are part of the jail’s combined function. Inmates sentenced to jail facilities usually have a sentence of 1 year or less. Within the ASJ, jails— receive individuals pending arraignment and hold them awaiting trial, conviction, or sentencing re-admit probation, parole, and bail bond violators and absconders temporarily detain juveniles pending their transfer to juvenile authorities hold mentally ill persons pending their movement to appropriate mental health facilities hold individuals for the military, for protective custody, for contempt, and for the courts as witnesses release convicted inmates to the community upon completion of sentence transfer inmates to federal, state, or other authorities house inmates for federal, state, or other authorities because of crowding of their facilities sometimes operate community-based programs as alternatives to incarceration. 12 Terms and definitions Admissions—Persons who are officially booked and housed in jails by formal legal document and the authority of the courts or some other official agency. Jail admissions include persons sentenced to weekend programs and those who are booked into the facility for the first time. Excluded from jail admissions are inmates re-entering the facility after an escape, work release, medical appointment or treatment facility appointment, and bail and court appearances. BJS collects jail admissions for the last 7 days in June. Average daily population (ADP)—The average is derived by the sum of inmates in jail each day for a year, divided by the number of days in the year (i.e., between July 1, 2013, and June 30, 2014). Average annual change—The mean average change across a 12-month time period. Calculating annual admissions—BJS collects the number of jail admissions during the last 7 days in June. Annual jail admissions are calculated by multiplying weekly admissions by the sum of 365 days divided by 7 days. Calculating weekly jail turnover rate—This rate is calculated by adding admissions and releases and dividing by the average daily population. See Calculating weekly turnover rates for additional information. Inmates confined at midyear—The number of inmates held in custody on the last weekday in June. Jail incarceration rate—The number of inmates held in the custody of local jails, per 100,000 U.S. residents. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 Percent of capacity occupied—This percentage is calculated by taking the number of inmates (midyear or average daily population), dividing by the rated capacity, and multiplying by 100. Rated capacity—The number of beds or inmates assigned by a rating official to a facility, excluding separate temporary holding areas. Releases—Persons released after a period of confinement (e.g., sentence completion, bail or bond releases, other pretrial releases, transfers to other jurisdictions, and deaths). Releases include those persons who have completed their weekend program and who are leaving the facility for the last time. Excluded from jail releases are temporary discharges including work release, medical appointment or treatment center, court appearance, furlough, day reporting, and transfers to other facilities within the jail’s jurisdiction. Under jail supervision but not confined—This classification includes all persons in community-based programs operated by a jail facility. These programs include electronic monitoring, house arrest, community service, day reporting, and work programs. The classification excludes persons on pretrial release and who are not in a community-based program run by the jail, as well as persons under supervision of probation, parole, or other agencies; inmates on weekend programs; and inmates who participate in work release programs and return to the jail at night. Weekend programs—Offenders in these programs are allowed to serve their sentences of confinement only on weekends (i.e., Friday to Sunday). 13 Appendix Table 1 Standard errors for table 1: Inmates confined in local jails at midyear, average daily population, and incarceration rates, 2000–2014 Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Inmates confined at midyear 2,504 2,721 3,213 3,572 3,919 ~ 3,552 3,720 4,016 4,231 5,430 6,009 7,684 8,042 8,382 Average daily population 2,265 2,648 2,980 3,448 3,748 ~ 3,230 3,549 3,883 4,109 5,359 5,879 7,769 7,943 8,430 ~Not applicable. Data represent a complete enumeration based on the 2005 Census of Jail Inmates. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000–2004 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. Appendix Table 2 Reported data for table 2: Number of inmates in local jails, by characteristics, midyear 2000 and 2005–2014 Characteristic Sex Male Female Adult Male Female Juvenile Held as adult Held as juvenile Race/Hispanic origin White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian/Alaska Native Asian/Native Hawaiian/ Other Pacific Islander Two or more races Conviction status Convicted Unconvicted 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 547,624 70,659 610,703 540,614 70,089 7,580 6,126 1,454 652,958 94,571 740,770 646,807 93,963 6,759 5,750 1,009 666,819 99,000 759,717 661,164 98,552 6,102 4,835 1,268 679,654 100,520 773,341 673,346 99,995 6,833 5,649 1,184 685,862 99,670 777,829 678,657 99,172 7,703 6,410 1,294 673,728 93,706 760,216 667,039 93,176 7,218 5,846 1,373 650,341 91,521 734,372 643,331 91,042 7,490 5,596 1,895 633,171 91,923 719,253 627,777 91,476 5,840 4,490 1,350 636,708 97,190 728,547 631,802 96,745 5,351 4,489 862 602,193 98,015 695,817 598,228 97,589 4,391 3,366 1,025 617,842 106,081 719,857 614,102 105,754 4,067 3,581 485 236,969 233,078 85,612 4,974 315,598 276,959 106,707 7,270 323,474 284,412 114,564 8,052 327,864 292,457 121,660 8,347 320,111 295,747 123,376 8,638 289,606 266,638 109,998 8,328 274,907 234,738 97,869 8,223 298,663 250,577 103,274 8,527 304,762 245,376 100,682 8,292 297,745 225,751 93,133 8,793 314,846 235,436 98,714 9,285 4,304 … 5,130 975 4,940 633 5,181 754 5,267 1,237 4,785 1,563 4,225 689 4,776 1,070 4,826 1,320 4,386 1,419 5,388 906 245,698 316,728 270,712 440,873 280,914 460,837 289,098 470,960 272,291 462,052 250,920 412,914 234,566 368,411 250,464 385,631 248,800 383,152 234,134 381,588 240,944 406,565 Note: See appendix table 3 for standard errors. …Not collected. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 14 Appendix Table 3 Standard errors for table 2: Number of inmates in local jails, by characteristics, midyear 2000 and 2005–2014 Characteristic Sex Male Female Adult Male Female Juvenile Held as adult Held as juvenile Race/Hispanic origin White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian/Alaska Native Asian/Native Hawaiian/ Other Pacific Islander Two or more races Conviction status Convicted Unconvicted 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2,235 548 2,492 2,223 542 211 181 132 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 3,146 979 3,554 3,144 978 148 152 144 3,298 950 3,697 3,276 948 166 157 147 3,570 1,125 4,012 3,568 1,123 170 149 88 3,729 912 4,190 3,692 909 195 167 107 4,832 999 5,400 4,794 994 263 246 255 5,278 1,179 6,004 5,241 1,177 172 151 77 6,776 1,404 7,655 6,685 1,398 241 230 84 7,088 1,469 8,049 7,025 1,467 199 143 139 7,015 1,532 8,004 6,961 1,531 164 158 46 2,676 1,853 1,075 363 ~ ~ ~ ~ 3,031 2,752 1,749 651 3,220 2,751 1,748 700 3,115 2,995 1,878 730 3,255 2,945 1,927 756 3,589 3,194 2,131 1,031 3,764 3,418 2,617 933 4,370 4,608 2,958 866 4,574 4,860 2,580 932 4,605 4,712 2,719 926 112 … ~ ~ 78 72 103 115 123 41 120 142 130 153 188 149 239 161 125 212 196 180 2,258 2,256 ~ ~ 2,749 3,321 2,892 3,392 2,978 3,552 3,122 3,710 3,292 4,515 3,521 4,819 3,750 5,918 3,619 6,740 4,156 5,691 Note: Standard errors are based on the reported data in appendix table 2 and were not estimated for survey item nonresponse. …Not collected. ~Not applicable. Data represent a complete enumeration based on the 2005 Census of Jail Inmates. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. Appendix Table 4 Standard error ratios for table 3: Percent of inmates in local jails, by characteristics, midyear 2000 and 2005–2014 Characteristic Sex Male Female Adult Male Female Juvenile Held as adult Held as juvenile Race/Hispanic origin White Black/African American Hispanic/Latino American Indian/Alaska Native Asian/Native Hawaiian/ Other Pacific Islander Two or more races Conviction status Convicted Unconvicted 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- 0.1% 0.1 -0.1% 0.1 ---- 0.2% 0.2 -0.1% 0.2 ---- 0.3% 0.3 0.2 0.1 ~ ~ ~ ~ 0.3% 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.3% 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.3% 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.3% 0.3 0.3 0.1 0.4% 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.4% 0.4 0.3 0.1 0.5% 0.5 0.4 0.1 0.5% 0.5 0.3 0.1 0.5% 0.5 0.3 0.1 -… ~ ~ --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- 0.3% 0.3 ~ ~ 0.3% 0.3 0.3% 0.3 0.3% 0.3 0.4% 0.4 0.4% 0.4 0.4% 0.4 0.5% 0.5 0.5% 0.5 0.5% 0.5 Note: Detail may not sum to total because of rounding. --Less than 0.05%. …Not collected. ~Not applicable. Data represent a complete enumeration based on the 2005 Census of Jail Inmates. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 15 Appendix Table 5 Standard errors for table 4: Inmates confined in local jails at midyear, by size of jurisdiction, 2013–2014 Number Jurisdiction size 49 or fewer 50–99 100–249 250–499 500–999 1,000 or more 2013 2,589 3,185 4,313 5,092 4,109 6,901 Percent 2014 2,719 3,218 4,398 4,988 4,166 7,248 2013 0.3% 0.4 0.6 0.7 0.6 0.7 2014 0.4% 0.4 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.7 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2013–2014. Appendix Table 7 Standard errors for table 6: Percent of jail capacity occupied at midyear, by size of jurisdiction, 2013–2014 Jurisdiction size Total 49 or fewer 50–99 100–249 250–499 500–999 1,000 or more 2013 0.5% 3.1 3.0 2.2 1.4 0.6 0.4 2014 0.4% 3.4 2.4 1.8 1.5 0.6 0.4 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2013–2014. Appendix Table 6 Standard errors for table 5: Rated capacity of local jails and percent of capacity occupied, 2000 and 2005–2014 Year 2000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Rated capacity 3,425 ~ 4,741 5,056 5,063 6,460 11,013 11,776 10,217 13,198 11,082 Percent of capacity occupied Midyear Average daily population 0.4% 0.4% ~ ~ 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.5 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.4 0.4 ~Not applicable. Data represent a complete enumeration based on the 2005 Census of Jail Inmates. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014, and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. Appendix Table 8 Standard errors for table 7: Average daily jail population, admissions, and turnover rate, by size of jurisdiction, week ending June 30, 2013 and 2014 Estimated number of admissions during the— Jurisdiction size Total 49 or fewer 50–99 100–249 250–499 500–999 1,000 or more Average daily population 2013 2014 7,943 8,430 2,422 2,471 3,119 3,110 4,165 4,397 4,956 4,835 4,128 4,093 6,974 7,455 Last week in June 2013 2014 13,198 3,937 1,785 1,526 2,173 2,109 2,446 2,210 2,391 2,327 13,009 1,312 1,584 1,825 Weekly turnover rate 2013 2014 11.1% 0.9% 12.8 12.8 9.1 7.7 3.7 3.5 3.7 3.6 20.5 1.1 0.5 0.5 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2013–2014. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 16 Appendix Table 9 Standard errors for table 8: Inmate population in jail jurisdictions reporting on confined persons being held for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), midyear 2002–2014 Year 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Confined persons held for ICE at midyear 804 935 976 ~ 959 740 729 851 977 1,533 1,670 2,136 2,157 Note: The standard errors are based on the reported data and were not estimated for survey item nonresponse. ~Not applicable. Data represent a complete enumeration based on the 2005 Census of Jail Inmates. Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2002–2004 and midyear 2006–2014; and Census of Jail Inmates, midyear 2005. Appendix Table 10 Standard errors for table 9: Persons under jail supervision, by confinement status and type of program, midyear 2000 and 2006–2014 Confinement status and type of program Total Held in jail Supervised outside of a jail facility Weekend programs Electronic monitoring Home detention Day reporting Community service Other pretrial supervision Other work programs Treatment programs Other 2000 2,728 2,504 996 457 320 17 70 286 350 440 66 47 2006 3,783 3,552 1,151 381 352 184 336 547 131 382 59 147 2007 4,041 3,720 1267 347 519 512 475 587 183 257 104 99 2008 4,732 4,016 2,327 477 469 41 340 796 392 572 122 619 2009 4,548 4,231 1,535 350 328 41 300 1,152 300 446 67 71 2010 5,897 5,430 1,960 296 574 74 360 1,319 411 428 153 114 2011 6,446 6,009 1,832 514 581 89 301 845 708 497 153 151 2012 8,438 7,684 2,418 369 747 386 396 1,089 909 334 261 196 2013 8,692 8,042 2,351 508 624 232 348 1,133 698 390 230 512 2014 9,248 8,382 2,707 399 788 188 429 1,262 845 491 270 179 Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Annual Survey of Jails, midyear 2000 and midyear 2006–2014. J A I L I N M AT E S AT M I DY E A R 2014 | J U N E 2015 17 The Bureau of Justice Statistics of the U.S. Department of Justice is the principal federal agency responsible for measuring crime, criminal victimization, criminal offenders, victims of crime, correlates of crime, and the operation of criminal and civil justice systems at the federal, state, tribal, and local levels. BJS collects, analyzes, and disseminates reliable and valid statistics on crime and justice systems in the United States, supports improvements to state and local criminal justice information systems, and participates with national and international organizations to develop and recommend national standards for justice statistics. William J. Sabol is director. This report was written by Todd D. Minton and Zhen Zeng, Ph.D. Tracy L. Snell provided statistical review and verified the report. Leslie Miller carried out the data collection and processing under the supervision of Nicole Adolph and Crecilla Scott, Economic Reimbursable Surveys Division, Census Bureau, U.S. Department of Commerce. Suzanne Dorinski and Rekha Kudlur provided statistical and technical assistance. Irene Cooperman and Jill Thomas edited the report. Barbara Quinn produced the report. June 2015, NCJ 248629 Celebrating 35 years Office of Justice Programs Innovation • Partnerships • Safer Neighborhoods www.ojp.usdoj.gov