Defendant pleaded guilty in the Bay Circuit Court of attempting to carry a concealed weapon, MCL 750.227; MSA 28.424; MCL 750.92; MSA 28.287. In exchange for the plea, the prosecutor dismissed a charge of carrying a concealed weapon and a charge of receiving and concealing stolen property over $100. The trial court subsequently sentenced defendant to five years’ probation with the condition that defendant serve a term in the county jail from December 7, 1992, until June 7, 1993. In a postconviction motion, defendant moved to amend the order of probation, arguing that the imposition of a specific jail term with a specified release date was invalid pursuant to MCL 51.282; MSA 5.883(2) because it denied him good-time credit. The trial court denied the motion. We reverse the order of probation and remand for further proceedings.
Although defendant’s issue is technically moot because it is now past his set release date, we will review the merits of the issue because it is one of public significance and is likely to recur in the future yet evade appellate review.
In re Closure of Jury Voir Dire,
The issue before us is one of statutory interpretation. Statutory interpretation is a question of law.
Smeets v Genesee Co Clerk,
193 Mich App
*655
628, 633;
A fundamental rule of statutory interpretation is to determine the purpose and intent of the Legislature in enacting a provision.
Farrington v Total Petroleum, Inc,
Const 1963, art 7, § 4 provides for the office of the sheriff. Pursuant to MCL 51.75; MSA 5.868, the "sheriff shall have the charge and custody of the jails of his county, and of the prisoners in the same.” The provision at issue states:
Every prisoner whose record shows that there are no violations of the rules and regulations shall be entitled to a reduction from his or her sentence as follows: 1 day for each 6 days of sentence. The sheriff may, by general rule, subject to amendment from time to time, prescribe how much of the good time earned under this subsection a prisoner shall forfeit for any infraction of the general rules and regulations, and for any act of insubordination the sheriff may by special order take away any portion of or the whole of the good time made by any prisoner up to the date of such offense. The sheriff may as a reward for especially good conduct, in case of insubordination, restore to any prisoner the whole or any portion of the good time lost because of any minor infraction of the rules. [MCL 51.282(2); MSA 5.883(2)(2).]
We find the above provision to be clear and unam *656 biguous. In clear and unmistakable terms, the Legislature has stated that every county prisoner shall be entitled to a reduction of sentence of one day for every six days served where there are no violations of the rules and regulations. There are no exceptions in the provision for probationers or otherwise. Further, the sheriff is to prescribe how much good-time is to be forfeited for any infraction of the general rules and regulations.
In
People v Fleming,
Therefore, it follows that a court may not deprive a prisoner of good-time credit to which the prisoner may be entitled under statute before that prisoner has even begun serving the term of im *657 prisonment. Here, MCL 51.282(2); MSA 5.883(2)(2) clearly states that "[ejvery prisoner whose record shows that there are no violations of the rules and regulations shall be entitled to a reduction from his or her sentence” by one day for each six days of the sentence (emphasis added). The trial court could not deprive defendant of his statutory right to earn good-time credit by setting a specific term of imprisonment with a set release date in the order of probation. By denying the defendant his entitlement to good-time credit, a trial court frustrates the purposes behind the statute of encouraging good behavior of prisoners while incarcerated and of reducing jail overcrowding.
The prosecutor’s argument that the term of imprisonment in this case is merely a condition of probation and not a sentence is disingenuous. Probation is an actual sentence. MCL 771.3(1); MSA 28.1133(1);
People v
Moon,
We hold that the trial court erred in setting a specific term of imprisonment in the county jail, with a specific release date, as a condition of probation. Such a condition violated MCL 51.282(2); MSA 5.883(2)(2) because it prohibited defendant from obtaining good-time credit that he was lawfully entitled to earn.
Reversed and remanded for entry of an amended order of probation consistent with this opinion. Jurisdiction is not retained.
