 Kentucky counties are caught in a cycle of trying to cover the costs of incarceration by locking up more people and building bigger jails. And a new report says the problem has stymied efforts for criminal justice reform. At the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy Research Director and report author Ashley Spalding explains local jails in some counties receive up to 86% of their jail revenue by jailing individuals for the Kentucky Department of Corrections. And so what ends up happening then is that county jails they benefit financially from holding holding people for for the state. Kentucky along with Louisiana incarcerates the largest share of people serving felony sentences in county jails. The report calls on lawmakers to develop a plan to completely phase out the use of local jails for people in state custody in partnership with local governments and the Department of Corrections. Holding people pretrial who can't afford bail is another way counties balance their budgets. The report highlights how local governments save money by organizing incarcerated people into work crews. Jails also charge the people housed there a range of fees for booking food and even e-cigarettes. Spalding points out their commissaries made more than $1.3 million for Kentucky jails in 2018. And so in order for us to move forward with the necessary criminal justice reforms that would reduce incarceration in Kentucky, we have to address this broken financial system. The report says decriminalizing drug possession and implementing policies to release more people before their trials could help address the problem. The pandemic also has spurred some action in Kentucky. Last April, Governor Andy Bashir commuted 186 sentences of people with felony convictions. Later, he added 646 people with medical vulnerabilities or less than six months left to serve for nonviolent and nonsexual crimes. This is Nadia Ram Lagan for Kentucky News Connection. Find our eight trust indicators to support transparency and accuracy at publicnewservice.org.