Pubdate: Thu, 11 Apr 2002 Source: Ithaca Journal, The (NY) Copyright: 2002, The Ithaca Journal Contact: http://www.theithacajournal.com/news/letters.html Website: http://www.theithacajournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1098 Author: Barbara Barry Note: Barry is a resident of Lansing and a member of the Tompkins Coalition Against the Death Penalty. OVERCROWDED PRISONS LEAVE LESS ROOM FOR REHABILITATION Looking For Balance, Justice In The Current Drug Laws On April 12, the New York Interfaith Prison Pilgrimage will walk into Ithaca as it journeys across New York state. This pilgrimage is an effort to raise awareness of our state's criminal justice system and what it is doing to our society. All are welcome to join. From Ithaca, marchers will travel to Elmira in the morning to visit the Elmira and Southport Correctional Facilities. In the afternoon, they will visit the Cayuga and Pharsalia Correctional Facilities. Every week in New York City a different type of pilgrimage takes place. People, mostly mothers, wives and children, line up early in the morning to take a four-to six-hour bus ride upstate to see their loved ones in prison. Often they reach the prison only to be turned away, depriving the prisoners - -- most of whom are serving long sentences for nonviolent crimes -- of their only contact with the outside world. In fact, many prisoners never get visitors. Their only human contacts take place inside the walls of the facility, and that is a pretty grim world. We might say, "That is what they deserve." They committed a crime and they have to pay their debt to society. It shouldn't be easy for them. Indeed, responsibility is one of the first principles of justice -- each act has consequences, and society, in its role as protector of public safety, has the obligation to impose those consequences. But the term "justice" also carries connotations of rightness and fairness, neither of which are reflected in our prison systems. Worse, the people who are enveloped in this system -- the prisoners, their families, the law enforcement personnel and the victims -- do not benefit from it. Over the past 30 years, the prison population in New York and the U.S. has ballooned. The U.S. incarceration rate is higher now than at any time in its history, and is several the rate of Western European nations. New York has 71 state prisons, not including youth facilities. Over half of these were built in the past 20 years. Building and maintaining prisons has become an economic growth industry, particularly in rural areas where the agricultural base is declining. In 1988 New York State spent twice as much on higher education as it did on prisons. In 1997, however, the state spent $100 million more on prisons than on higher education, an amount that pushed the state prisons' share of the General Fund from 9.55 percent to 24.4 percent. One reason for the surge in facilities and spending is that people are being imprisoned, often for long periods, for nonviolent crimes. This challenges the assumption that most prisoners are violent offenders. In 1980, 11 percent of the total commitments were drug related. By 1999 that number reached 44.5 percent. In contrast, in 1983, 63 percent of the commitments were violent offenders; in 1999, only 28.1 percent were. Many of the drug offenders would benefit from treatment and would be made more employable if they had education. A recent Rand study found that drug treatment reduces crime 15 times more than mandatory minimums and 10 times more than conventional sentences. But money for these programs has been reduced. And treatment, education and community service are often not allowed by law as alternatives to incarceration. Studies of recidivism show that with treatment and education, fewer offenders are reincarcerated. The costs of providing such programs outside of prison are much lower as well. Fairness is a large component of justice. But the picture our prisons present is anything but fair. In our state, the prison population is 58 percent African-American, 32 percent Hispanic and 10 percent white. Most of the prisoners come from urban centers, where poverty is rampant and the unemployment level is very high. In a Newsweek article from November 2000, interviews with African-American men revealed that many expected to spend part of their life in jail. Unemployment in their neighborhoods has gone down, but if these men were not incarcerated the unemployment rate would be almost 50 percent. In addition, prisoners are counted in the area in which they reside. This brings tax dollars to the rural areas where prisons are and deprives poor urban neighborhoods of revenue that is sorely needed. FBI studies show that whites make up the majority of people who consume drugs, and there is evidence that more than half of drug dealers are white. But 90 percent of the people in prison are African-American or Latino. We believe in the rule of law in this country. That means we expect our system of justice to be evenhanded in its treatment across all strata of society. It means that the punishment should fit the crime. It means that a person who has committed a crime should be treated with fairness and dignity and given a chance to change and make amends. The reality is that we imprison too many people who do not present a clear danger. And we punish beyond any fair measure the poor and people of color. Some progress is being made. Rural communities are beginning to question the idea of their towns being built on an economic base of human misery. A recent report from the Justice Policy Institute indicates that states are looking at ways to reduce correctional costs. Public opinion is supporting this and is embracing a wide array of prevention, rehabilitation and alternative sentencing approaches. The Rockefeller Drug Laws are being challenged and, as a result, reevaluated in the state Legislature. But we have a long way to go. The Prison Pilgrimage serves as a public act of conscience, and those participating are making a call for change. The more citizens who join the walk, the louder the call. For more on the Pilgrimage and how you can participate, as well as information about the community forum on these issues which will be held on April 12 from 7 to 9 p.m. at Southside Community Center, please contact Edie Reagan at 272-5062 or myself at 533-7563. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart