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Longer sentences push Michigan prisons closer to capacity

March 10, 2026

Michigan's prison population has grown by 3% between 2021 and 2023, reversing years of decline, primarily due to inmates serving significantly longer sentences rather than increased admissions. The average minimum sentence has jumped 30% over the past decade, reaching 12 years compared to the national average of under three years, making Michigan an outlier among states. This growth is occurring while available prison beds have decreased due to facility closures, pushing occupancy rates from 92% to 95% and leaving minimal capacity for expansion.

Who is affected

  • Michigan prison inmates (32,986 as of 2023, with over 65% serving sentences of 10 years or more)
  • Correctional staff working in Michigan's 26 facilities (facing 16% overall vacancy rate, with some facilities at 30% or higher)
  • Individuals aged 55 or older in prison (nearly 20% of the prison population)
  • Michigan taxpayers (bearing costs of approximately $52,050 per prisoner in 2025)
  • Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC)
  • Michigan Citizens for Prison Reform
  • Crime and Justice Institute

What action is being taken

  • The Michigan Department of Corrections is operating prisons at near-capacity levels (95% occupied)
  • The MDOC is analyzing each unit closure or bed reduction to account for staff resources, prisoner programming, and security needs
  • Correctional officers are managing populations differently due to overcrowding and understaffing, including implementing more lockdowns and bringing food to prisoners rather than using cafeterias

Why it matters

  • This situation matters because Michigan has become a significant outlier nationally in sentence length, which creates substantial financial burdens on the state and makes prisoner reintegration into society extremely difficult. The combination of longer sentences, facility closures, chronic understaffing, and an aging prison population is creating a crisis where inmates cannot access necessary assessments, evaluations, and rehabilitative programs in a timely manner. The rising costs per prisoner (over $52,000 annually) raise important questions about resource allocation and whether these funds could be better spent on alternative approaches to public safety and rehabilitation.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com

Longer sentences push Michigan prisons closer to capacity