May 5, 2015

States moving away from traditional prison approaches with popular support

Susan K. Urahn, Governing -  The federal prison population has grown nearly 800 percent since 1980 as lawmakers created new criminal penalties, mandated longer sentences and abolished parole. During this period, federal inmates' average time served increased from 15.9 months to 40.1. Taxpayers now spend $6.7 billion each year on federal prisons, with corrections costs growing twice as fast as all other Justice Department spending. Yet a third of the inmates who leave federal prison under community supervision return to custody for violating the terms of their releas...
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While many in Washington are debating how to improve the federal correctional system, states -- in their traditional role as laboratories for innovation -- have moved from talk to action. Since 2007, more than half the states have made research-based policy changes to control prison growth, hold offenders accountable and protect public safety......

Georgia and Oregon revised mandatory-minimum-sentencing laws to give judges more flexibility when imposing penalties. Delaware and Mississippi expanded prison-release policies to allow inmates to earn credits for good behavior or participation in educational or substance-abuse programs. South Dakota and West Virginia created or expanded drug courts to divert low-level offenders from prison into community-based programs. Although the specifics differ from state to state, all of these recent efforts focus states' limited corrections resources on serious offenders while improving community supervision and other interventions for those convicted of lower-level crimes.

These innovative policies have earned overwhelming bipartisan support. Last month, Utah became the latest justice-reinvestment state to pass corrections legislation; only two lawmakers voted against converting all first- and second-time drug-possession charges from felonies to misdemeanors. Nationally, justice reinvestment has received more than 5,700 "aye" votes in state legislatures, compared with fewer than 500 "no" votes. These bills also received strong support from each state's judicial and executive branches.

The results of these and other recent justice reforms are promising. After rising for decades, the total number of state prisoners has leveled off in recent years while crime continues its long-term decline. As illustrated in this Pew Charitable Trusts infographic, crime rates fell more in the 33 states that cut their imprisonment rates over the past five years than in the 17 states that increased imprisonment. The implications for taxpayers are equally encouraging. An independent analysis of 17 justice-reinvestment states by the Urban Institute found that they expect to avert as much as $4.6 billion in corrections spending in the years ahead.

1 comment:

Capt. America said...

Nothing will work until they stop lying. You can't keep saying that education is an answer to the lack of jobs. The technological singularity keeps coming, jobs keep disappearing, and it is foolish in the extreme to promise what you can never deliver. People don't need jobs. They need money. They should be taught that you don't need to work more than a very few hours a week to have a good life. Now. Period. American business should be supported for the taxes, not the jobs. The best don't bring jobs, they use robots. Middle of the road is no way to go if the road goes off a cliff, and it does.