November 10, 2003 - Associated Press
States Starting to Reverse Get-tough Prison Policies, Reformers
Say
By Wiley Hall, Associated Press Writer
BALTIMORE -- Faced in recent years with burgeoning budget
deficits, half of the legislatures in the country have rolled-back
at least some of the get-tough on crime provisions of the past
two decades, prison reform advocates were told Monday.
States have repealed mandatory sentencing laws, re-established
parole, and diverted nonviolent offenders from prison and into
treatment programs, said Judith A. Green, of Families Against
Mandatory Minimums.
Speaking at the opening session of a two-day national conference
on criminal justice reform, Green said the public appears to
have reached a "tipping point" where reform efforts
will continue even after the budget crisis is over.
"The dark days are behind us," said Green.
The conference was hosted by the New York-based Open Society
Institute and sponsored by several organizations advocating sentencing
reform and alternatives to incarceration.
It comes on the heels of a Justice Department report this
summer that more than 1.3 million Americans were in state or
federal prison in 2001, giving the United States the highest
incarceration rate in the world. At the same time, growing federal
and state deficits have led policy-makers to search for ways
of cutting corrections budgets.
"The get-tough movement is giving way to a push to get-smart
about crime," said Laura Jones, a spokeswoman for the Justice
Policy Institute in Washington, D.C., a sponsor of the conference.
Advocates said Monday that the shift in policy is driven by
changing attitudes as well as by budgetary necessities.
"The growing movement to get smart on crime is not driven
solely by dollars," said Laura Sager, executive director
of Families Against Mandatory Minimums. "There's been a
broad public awareness of the fiscal and social cost of mass
incarcerations."
In Michigan, for example, key support in overturning what
had been the harshest mandatory sentencing laws in the nation
came from a state legislator who described himself as being to
the right of Atilla the Hun. In Texas, bitter enemies on issues
such as the death penalty and abortion came together in an uneasy
partnership to put money into drug treatment and rehabilitation
programs, the 200 conference participants were told.
"It was a difficult arrangement but absolutely critical,"
said Will Harrell, executive director of the American Civil Liberties
Union of Texas, speaking of the political alliance between left
and right. "We couldn't have done it without it."
Speakers also described how they galvanized support from at
the grass roots level -- civil rights and civil liberties advocates,
inmates and their families -- and from what they called the "grass
tops," of prosecutors, attorneys, judges and bureaucrats.
"There is a pent-up demand for alternatives to incarceration
from politicians and ordinary people," said Green.
There also was evidence Monday of pent-up frustration.
A workshop on reform accomplishments ended with members of
the audience complaining angrily that blacks, Hispanics and inmates
and their families were not represented among the morning panelists
and speakers.
"We are never the 'experts,' there is always someone
speaking for us, we are never allowed to speak for ourselves,"
complained Dorsey Nunn, a former inmate who operates a legal
services program for inmates in California.
Roseanna Ruiz, who works with inmate families in Houston,
Tex., agreed.
"We need to hear the voices of those most affected by
these policies," she said.
Copyright © 2003, The Associated Press
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