Pubdate: Fri, 06 Dec 2002 Source: Kansas City Star (MO) Copyright: 2002 The Kansas City Star Contact: http://www.kcstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221 Author: Lewis W. Diuguid Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) THE HIGH COSTS OF BAD POLICY MOBERLY, Mo. - African-Americans must do more to create a better future for themselves and their children. Several speakers delivered that self-help message last week at the 29th Annual Freedom Fund Banquet of NAACP Branch 4071 in the Moberly Correctional Center. Willie Henderson, head of prison evangelistic outreach at the Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ in Kansas City, told the men they were behind bars, and "it's nobody's fault but your own." It's actually more complicated than that. A new report explains that states for years have reduced funding for education to balance budgets but increased financing for prisons. The shift has made prisons a national solution to social problems and disproportionately hurt African-American men, the study said. The Justice Policy Institute report released last month is titled "Cellblocks or Classrooms? The Funding of Higher Education and Corrections and its Impact on African American Men." Among its findings: More black men are in prisons and jails than institutions of higher education. "America's burgeoning prison system has been fueled by the incarceration of nonwhites, particularly African-American men," said the study by the Washington-based research and advocacy group promoting alternatives to incarceration. A black man born in the 1990s has a one-in-four chance of spending some time in prison during his lifetime, the study said. Between 1980 and 2000 the U.S. population behind bars jumped from 500,000 to 2 million. In 2000, 791,600 of them were African-American men compared with 603,032 black men in higher education. But that's not always been the case. The study said in 1980 there were 143,000 African-American men in state and federal prisons and 463,700 black men in colleges and universities. Missouri was among the top offenders, with more black men under the jurisdiction of state prison systems in 1999-2000 than in college, the study said. In Missouri, 11,600 black men were behind bars compared with 11,216 in higher education. In Kansas, 3,000 black men were behind bars compared with 4,230 in higher education. The study said states' investments in the future of African-American men also shifted from education to prisons. Higher-education funding cuts have increased the burden on students and families of paying for college. The study said state spending on colleges and universities doubled from 1950 to 1980 while corrections budgets then were mostly unchanged. But from 1985 to 2000, state spending on corrections grew 166 percent, rising to $32 billion compared with state higher education funding, which went up 24 percent to $55.5 billion. The study showed that Kansas' higher education spending from 1985 to 2000 grew 30 percent to $638 million. But corrections funding jumped 192 percent to $263 million. In that period, higher education spending in Missouri rose 52 percent to $927 million in 2000. But corrections funding jumped 236 percent to $423 million. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's summer issue of The New Crisis magazine notes that the rise in felony convictions has caused 4 million people, 1.4 million of them black, to currently or permanently lose their right to vote. That hurts the black community's voting power to change the awful trend of cellblocks over classrooms. The Justice Policy Institute study urged reforms in parole practices, drug laws and the repeal of mandatory sentencing to get more people to be productive members of society and "unlock resources (states) need to stave off cuts to higher education." Byron X Britton, president of the NAACP branch in the Moberly prison, said the trend meant black men must eliminate hatred, envy, distrust and fear in themselves to end violence, crime and incarceration. African-Americans need that self-help answer now more than ever. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh