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老澳门开奖结果 Joins Republicans and Democrats to Streamline Maryland鈥檚 Bloated Prison System

Inimai Chettiar,
Director,
Brennan Center's Justice Program
Rebecca McCray,
Former Managing Editor,
老澳门开奖结果
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February 11, 2011

The 老澳门开奖结果 has joined forces with a to support a bill that would make great strides toward easing the strain of Maryland鈥檚 overpopulated prison system. The bill (), introduced by Republican , would create a pilot program to streamline the state鈥檚 parole system with a 鈥済raduated sanctions program.鈥 It鈥檚 a mouthful, but the concept is ultimately about equipping .

Rather than responding to all types of parole violations with a revocation of parole and a return trip to prison, the new system would provide other types of disciplinary actions for parolees whose violations are minor and do not warrant incarceration. Instead of a blanket solution for every person on parole, the bill would create proactive solutions to individual violations, tailored to match the severity of the infraction. The bill would prevent sending people to prison for long periods of time for minor rule violations 鈥 such as forgetting about a parole meeting, being unable to pay court-imposed fees or missing their community service hours.

It鈥檚 hard to believe, but there are actually people behind bars around the country just because they missed parole meetings. Over of prison admissions across the country are the result of parole violations like this 鈥 not of criminal convictions. Imprisoning people for violations like this does nothing to improve our public safety, and at the same time drains our state budgets. States like Kansas, Hawaii and Wyoming have already implemented parole sanctions systems, like the one proposed in Maryland, 鈥 reducing prison populations and their corrections budgets while maintaining public safety.

As Melissa Goemann, Public Policy Director of the , 鈥淭his bill has the potential to not only create a more just criminal system, but also to achieve considerable benefits for the state鈥檚 budget and for Maryland taxpayers. Maryland spends over a year on corrections 鈥 we should put that money to better use.鈥

In the midst of a fiscal crisis, Maryland, like so many other states, simply can鈥檛 afford to spend such an obscene amount of money on corrections when viable alternatives exist. Maryland鈥檚 incarceration rate has tripled since 1980, disproportionately affecting communities of color. In Baltimore alone, more between the ages of 20 and 30 are under the control of the corrections system 鈥 most serving lengthy sentences for nonviolent offenses. Even after eventual release, the dark shadow cast by a criminal record leaves a large segment of Maryland鈥檚 population facing significant barriers to employment.

Because of statistics like these, there is a growing consensus around the country 鈥 and now in Maryland 鈥 that we are throwing too many people into prison who don鈥檛 deserve to be there. With reforms like the parole sanctions bill in Maryland, we can finally get to a criminal justice system that protects public safety and civil rights and liberties, while also saving taxpayer dollars. It鈥檚 a long road, but S.B. 801 is an excellent opportunity for legislators to begin to chip away at the incarceration epidemic that is wreaking havoc not only on Maryland鈥檚 communities, but also its taxpayers鈥 pockets.

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