
Purplish Colorado’s prisons have a crowding problem
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Mar 20, 2026 A deep look at Colorado’s crowded prisons and the immediate harms of cramped living conditions. Coverage explores why prison populations rose, from delayed releases to program backlogs. Listeners hear about staffing shortages, county jail overflow, and the heated budget fight over funding new beds. The conversation also examines calls for better planning and the politics shaping possible solutions.
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More People Staying Longer Drives Prison Growth
- Colorado's rise in prison population is driven by fewer people being released rather than more people entering prisons.
- Kyle McKinnon explains discretionary parole slowdowns and resource gaps are delaying releases.
Staff Shortages Block Parole Preparation
- Staff shortages prevent inmates from completing required classes and treatments that make them parole-eligible.
- Sgt. James Carr said teachers and case managers are reassigned, increasing violence and reducing rehabilitation prospects.
Broken Risk Scoring Is Slowing Releases
- The state's risk assessment for parole was frequently scored incorrectly, undermining trust in releases.
- Nine News found staff mis-scored forms about 98% of the time, prompting DOC re-evaluations and slowing parole.
