Pubdate: Tue, 16 Apr 2002 Source: The Dominion Post (WV) Copyright: 2002 The Dominion Post Contact: http://www.dominionpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1426 Author: Katie Long GROUP SEEKS TAXPAYERS' SUPPORT TO STOP MANDATORY PRISON SENTENCES Post Office Has Lots Of Foot Traffic Monday The post office on South High Street was a busy place Monday as taxpayers hurried in and out to meet the April 15 deadline, making it an ideal place for local folks to peddle their platforms. Members of the local chapter of Families Against Mandatory Minimums took advantage of the heavy foot traffic at the post office to hand out flyers that read, "Do you know where your taxes go?" "Basically, we are out here because there is a lot of tax money being spent for incarcerating nonviolent drug offenders, first offenders, and it could be a heck of a lot better for us and everyone else if we spent that money on rehab instead," said Connie DeVore, co-organizer of the local FAMM chapter. "What we're trying to do isn't say don't punish people, but there are lots of ways of punishment that are more positive and cost a heck of a lot less money for the taxpayer," she said. DeVore said that's why FAMM chose April 15 to spread the word. What better day to bring people's attention to the question of where tax money goes? According to FAMM literature, it costs $22,000 per year to incarcerate someone. But it takes only $7,000 per year to educate each American child. DeVore said the reception Monday was good, noting that she and her four helpers had handed out all but a few of their pamphlets. A couple of people looked over the material and asked for more to give to their friends, she said. "With the mandatory sentencing, there is a chart," DeVore said. "If you are caught with so many grams of a controlled substance, you have to serve a specific time in jail. There is no discretion for the judges; the facts of the case can't be weighed. The sentences are just laid down." And at $22,000 a year, those sentences are overcrowding jails and breaking taxpayers, she said. "Prisons have become big business," she said. "Just think, $22,000. You could send a child to college with that amount of money, instead of just sending him to jail." But the cost to society is not just a monetary consideration, said Michael Lemery, co-organizer of the local FAMM. "The ultimate consideration is that the punishment does more harm to society than does the offense," he said. "It hurts the prisoner, family and friends, the prisoner's work, everyone involved." Rehab, they said, is far more cost effective and yields better results in terms of reducing recidivism. According to the FAMM brochure DeVore and her cohorts handed out Monday, every dollar spent on drug treatment saves $7 in societal and medical costs. FAMM maintains that mandatory sentences add to prison costs by requiring long, predetermined sentences for first-offenders. "There are a lot of conspiracy cases, too," DeVore said, "where someone was in the same house when a drug deal gets made and they weren't involved, but they receive the same sentence." FAMM also believes that low-level offenders receive harsher sentences than drug "kingpins," because the higher-ups often trade information for reduced sentences -- something low-level offenders can't do, because they don't have the information to trade. Devore said the local chapter of FAMM grew out of the Peace and Social Justice Committee of the Quakers meeting. "We found that others were interested in the idea," she said. "And then we went from there." FAMM holds quarterly meetings, she said. This Friday the group will show a Court TV video, "Guilt By Association," at 7:15 p.m. at the Quaker Meeting House. The public is welcome, and those who would like to come for dinner at 6:30 p.m. can bring a dish and have some food before the show. Info: Connie DeVore, 599-3107; Michael Lemery, 296-5980. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth