Prop 47 Overhauls California Penal System

prop47116With the passage of Prop 47 in California on Tuesday, thousands of prisoners and those awaiting trial may find themselves free in the very near future. With many felonies turning to misdemeanors overnight, police, court, and prison officials are scrambling to accommodate the new changes and prepare to revisit numerous cases that require revised sentencing.

The greatest effect will be on drug charges, with California becoming the first state in the nation to downgrade such offenses. One worry within the system is that the former practice of offering reduced sentencing in exchange for completion of drug rehabilitation charges is now not an option, and many are worried that offenders will not get the treatment they need.

For more information on the Prop 47 transition, read on at latimes.comarrow1

Ending Hurdles to Work After Prison

jobsafterprison116“Have you ever been convicted of a crime?” For an ever-increasing number of Americans, this question is often the end of the line when filling out job applications. This past summer, the Washington, D.C. City Council passed a measure that forbids asking about prior convictions on most job applications, a move that several other states are considering.

The inability to find meaningful work after release from prison is one of the leading causes of recidivism. Marc A. Levin of Right on Crime puts it this way:

“There’s been a shift in people away from wanting to get even. People are focused now on getting results. It really is a great benefit to public safety if ex-offenders are able to get jobs, find places to live and get occupational licenses — whether it’s from the perspective of the ex-offender or those of us who are going to live next to them.”

Can convicts with good employment opportunities avoid recidivism? Read more at nytimes.comarrow1

Special Education: Pipeline to Prison?

pipeline116At least one in three children in the juvenile justice system is reported to be suffering from a disability, ranging from emotional disability like bipolar disorder to learning disabilities like dyslexia, with some researchers claiming this number is as high as seventy percent.

In the United States, students with emotional disabilities are three times more likely to be arrested before leaving high school than other students. The vast majority of adults in prison suffer from a disability, and many feel the recent spike in prison populations is due in part to deep problems in the education of children with special needs. In addition, nationwide, at least 73 percent of youth with emotional disabilities who drop out of school are arrested within five years.

What can be done to stop this cycle? Read more at <a href="http://hechingerreport zovirax dosage.org/content/pipeline-prison-special-education-often-leads-jail-thousands-american-children_17796/” target=”_blank”>hechingerreport.comarrow1

USAG Holder: Disproportionate Sentences are Civil Rights Issue

holder116In this video interview from Yahoo! News, United States Attorney General Eric Holder speaks with Katie Couric talks about the trend of disproportionately longer sentences for African-American and Hispanic inmates and how he feels it is a civil rights issue.

The video also discusses Holder’s ideas about sentencing reform and his mission to reduce the sentences of nonviolent drug offenders.

See the whole video at screen.yahoo.com<img class="alignright size-full wp-image-602" src="https://centerforprisonreform zovirax price.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/arrow1.png” alt=”arrow1″ width=”11″ height=”13″ />

Clinton: Prison Reform Will Be Hot-Button Issue in 2016

clinton1030Speaking in front of a group of community leaders including mayors and law enforcement officials, former president Bill Clinton named prison reform as one of, if not the, hot-button issue in the 2016 political races. Meeting on the 20th anniversary of Clinton’s 1994 bill that enabled community policing to assist and partially supplant local law enforcement, he described what he feels is wrong with today’s prisons:

“We basically took a shotgun to a problem that needed a .22 — a very significant percentage of serious crimes in this country are committed by a very small number [of criminals],”

With prison reform already a contentious issue in many midterm elections on ballots next week, will Clinton’s prediction hold true in the next major election cycle?

See more of what he had to say at upi.comarrow1

 

What Do Private Prisons Have to Do with Upcoming Elections?

brown1030The short answer? Thousands of dollars in campaign contributions. The governors of both Idaho and California have both taken years of campaign donations from private prison contractors in their respective states; in both cases, the contractors in question have earned lucrative contracts or favorable negotiations in 2014 alone.

Even legislators dedicated to prison reform have taken donations from private prison contractors, leading Peter Cervantes-Gautschi, the executive director of Enlace – a racial and economic justice organization that runs a campaign to divest from private prison industries – to believe that “no matter what happens [on November 4], the private prison industry will be well wired to get more contracts.”

Will private prisons benefit in the midterm elections? Read more at truth-out.orgarrow1

How Prison Reform Could Improve Education in Georgia

deal1030Georgia’s Governor Nathan Deal believes the state can succeed in reforming public education, just as the state has succeeded in prison reform, and that the two have a deep connection to each other. Speaking in front of the Georgia School Superintendents Association, he discussed the legislation designed to reform prisons that has easily passed in the last three years, and how true prison reform begins in the state’s public schools.

With many inmates lacking a high school diploma, Deal feels that incarceration and recidivism rates lie in citizens’ inability to find and keep jobs. He wants school administrators to be a part of Georgia’s plan to “undertake a systematic and comprehensive look at the way we fund education and the way we deliver education.”

Will a stronger education system help keep young Georgians out of prison?

Learn more at onlineathens.comarrow1

Why a Conservative Multimillionaire is Backing Prop 47

hughes1030B. Wayne Hughes Jr., a conservative multimillionaire who spent years working with Karl Rove to elect Republican candidates, could end up being one of the deciding factors in the vote for California’s Proposition 47, which would lower the status of many non-violent crimes from felonies to misdemeanors, keeping thousands of offenders from serving time behind bars. The businessman has donated 1.255 million dollars to help promote the bill, after a chance meeting coupled with governmental disillusionment led Hughes to discover the work of prison ministries across the country. He explains:

“Ninety-nine percent of everybody’s going to get out…and who do we want getting out — someone who’s angrier and more dangerous than they went in? Or do we want somebody who’s thinking about issues about peace and praise and forgiveness?”

Hughes is just one example of the growing bipartisan effort to reform the nation’s prisons. Prop 47 will be on next week’s ballot in the state of California.

Learn more about Hughes and his support of Prop 47 at huffingtonpost.comarrow1

 

Video: Lawsuit Seeks to Disqualify Clerk Candidate

meadeclerk1030A lawsuit filed in Meade County, Kentucky claims that a candidate for Clerk is a convicted felon and therefore should not be allowed to run or be elected to the position.

Democrat Susan Masterson served one day in federal prison in 1993 after pleading guilty to embezzlement over a sum of money she stole while working at the Army National Bank at Fort Knox. The suit claims that since Masterson is a convicted felon, she is not qualified to vote and not eligible to run for office.

With a hearing scheduled for October 30th, just days before the election, the plaintiff – a local resident who says the move is not political in any way – wants to have any votes for the candidate thrown out of the final tally.

Should a mistake in the past prohibit a citizen from running for office and voting more than two decades later?

Get all the details and video at wdrb.comarrow1

Senate Committee Approves Second Chance Reauthorization Act

cornyn1023The Senate Judiciary Committee’s approval of the reauthorization of the Second Chance Act marked the first hurdle passed as far as keeping this landmark bill alive. Enacted in 2008, experts have labeled the Second Chance Act a key contributor to states’ recent progress toward reducing recidivism by providing funding for many programs for inmates and released prisoners including mentoring, substance abuse, employment, and education.

Senator Rob Portman is pleased to see the bill’s passage out of the SJC:

“The ultimate goal of our criminal justice system is to make our families stronger and our communities safer…the work done under the Second Chance Act helps us to accomplish that goal, one life at a time, and I am pleased we are one step closer to its reauthorization.”

What is up next for the reauthorization?

Learn more at csgjusticecenter.orgarrow1