January 31, 2004 - Syndicated Columnist Neal Peirce
Bush's "Prisoner Re-Entry"-- Mighty Modest But
A Start
By Neal Peirce
WASHINGTON -- If President Bush is serious about the "Prisoner
Re-Entry" program he mentioned in the waning moments of
his State of-the-Union address, it could mark a historic first
step back from the harshly punitive direction American penal
policy has taken since the 1970s.
The President noted that 600,000 ex-offenders will return
to our communities this year. Many, he correctly observed, "can't
find work, or a home or help," meaning they're "much
more likely to commit more crimes and return to prison."
So in the spirit of America as "the land of the second
chance," Bush urged a four-year, $300 million program of
job training, placement services, transitional housing and mentoring.
It sounds great -- but. Many critical questions are raised.
First, is the White House willing to back change of laws that
now force judges to impose prison terms of 10, 15, or 20 years,
even for less serious crimes? As U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner
wrote in the Boston Globe last week: "Too many prisoners
are serving sentences that are too long under conditions that
are not remotely conducive to rehabilitation. We must change
our approach long before reentry."
Indeed, a very big reason we're now the world's biggest incarcerator,
with over 2 million people behind bars, is the flood of prosecutions
of non-violent drug users and small-time sellers. There's zero
proof that imprisoning all these offenders, throwing them into
hateful and sometimes violent penitentiary environments, reduces
drug consumption or makes our communities safer.
So Mr. President, how about restoring full sentencing discretion
to judges? Why not shift federal prosecutors away from the clearly
unwinnable "war on drugs," substituting treatment for
arrest of non-violent offenders?
Second, isn't it hypocritical for government to declare its
concern for released prisoners when it's jiggered so many rules
to doom their chances of successful readjustment to society?
In 1996, Congress banned anyone ever convicted of using or
selling drugs from welfare assistance or food stamps -- for life.
Among the victims, notes Sacramento Bee columnist Peter Schrag,
are "breast-feeding women, the old, the ill, parents of
young children, many of them convicted only on possession charges
and long cured of their addiction." States can choose to
opt out of the federal ban, but 20 enforce it in full.
A 1998 federal statute bars convicted drug users from receiving
college tuition assistance; another effectively denies public
housing if anyone in the family not just the first-listed
tenant -- has ever been engaged in "any drug-related"
activity.
If the President really believes in "second chances,"
he could start by urging Congress to revoke these vengeful and
counterproductive laws.
Not that the states are much more welcoming to the convict
who walks out of prison with a few dollars in his hand and maybe
no place to sleep for the night. Illinois, for example, bars
more than 50 job titles to ex-offenders. Among them: barber,
beautician, hospital worker, embalmer, private detective, horse
meat dealer or operator of a hazardous waste crane or hoisting
equipment.
And those prohibitions aren't just temporary -- they're for
life.
Well before President Bush's "Re-Entry" program
surfaced, Rep. Danny K. Davis (D-Ill.), was pushing a "Public
Safety Ex-Offender Self-Sufficiency Act" providing an attractive
investor tax credit to stimulate building of 100,000 housing
units for former convicts. His goal: providing released offenders
with the stability of a place to live, wrapped around services
including education, job placement, transportation, drug counseling,
anger management and basic medical care.
Several dozen House members, including conservative Rep. Henry
Hyde, are co-sponsoring Davis' bill.
Davis himself would go further, to help ex-convicts expunge
their felony records -- or, alternatively, win executive clemency
or certificates of rehabilitation to help them gain employment.
Just listing a felony on a job application, reader Eileen
Engel e-mailed me recently, is like "wearing a huge letter
F," a modern scarlet letter inviting instant rejection.
Educator Shabaka Tecumseh wrote that he's an "ex-felon"
of 30 years. After his drug conviction he went back to school,
earned his degree, got a teaching license and taught for six
years in California. But when he started teaching in another
state, even after acknowledging the felony, he was suddenly discharged
as "unfit to teach." "After 30 years," Tecumseh
asserts, "I think it's pretty damn cruel."
Several readers asked: Why not "sunset rules," sealing
records of past convictions after several years free of new offenses?
Some dozen states now permit that. Many more could safely and
appropriately do the same -- even if they make necessary exceptions
for such cases as convicted sex molesters seeking school employment,
or embezzlers trying to land a bank job.
Add in related issues like restoration of voting rights to
ex-felons, and it's clear Mr. Bush's "Re-Entry" proposal
just nibbles at the edge of a deep-seated national problem.
But let's take heart: at least the president mentioned the
issue!
|