Pubdate: Sun, 29 May 2005 Source: Oklahoman, The (OK) Copyright: 2005 The Oklahoma Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.oklahoman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/318 Author: Rev. Stan Basler Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) SYSTEM'S 'BACK END' NEGLECTED Stan Basler During a recent forum hosted by the Citizens League of Central Oklahoma, panelists and the audience considered the paradoxical nature of prisoner re-entry policy: "Is $50 and a Bus Ticket Good Policy for Oklahoma?" Imagine that you have been locked up for at least three years in Oklahoma prisons and jails. You have made few choices for yourself. Today you are released with a $50 check and no place will cash it for you for free. Suddenly it's up to you to feed and clothe yourself, find a place to live (without a rental history or deposit money), find health care, address substance treatment needs, find transportation, look for work, and, if you are lucky, begin a job that likely will pay only subsistence wages for the foreseeable future. You have been accustomed to wearing penal clothing with "INMATE" stamped on the back. You would like respect and acceptance, but the court wants money, parole fees must be paid and many prospective employers will dismiss your application categorically because you are a convicted felon. You need companionship with positive, compassionate role models. The people you know are the "old crowd"-- folks with whom you did drugs or crime. Welcome back to society. We, the taxpayers, supported these people to the tune of $16,000 per year during their incarceration. Many people believe that $50 and a bus ticket is enough. They argue that investing resources in released prisoners rewards criminal behavior. Yet our hope is they will be productive, law-abiding taxpayers themselves upon release. If the social and economic hurdles are formidable, at some point many just give up and resume the old criminal lifestyle. Within three years of release, 67 percent are re-arrested and 26.2 percent return to prison. Isn't it good business to ensure the provision of the most basic human needs to ex-prisoners -- food, shelter, job, health care and treatment, transportation and acceptance? The average Oklahoma inmate leaves prison with $318; 30 percent are released with just $50. Usually inmates have at least $2,000 in court costs alone to repay, not to mention past-due child support, restitution and other fees. Family relationships must be rebuilt. Many have health needs. By statute, occupational licensure in a number of trades and professions is denied to felons. Every session, the Oklahoma Legislature creates new felony categories and increases some prison sentences. My 10th-grade civics teacher in Bartlesville once said: "When a person is released from prison, they have paid their debt to society. It is our duty as citizens to treat them accordingly." One principle of restorative justice, an alternative to a retributive system, is that true justice is recognizing that the victim, the offender and community all have needs. Justice requires addressing the needs of each. As a society we devote considerable attention to the "front end" of the criminal justice and corrections complex. The "back end," release and recidivism, affects the front end. Wouldn't it be wise policy to look at the system, and the people affected by it, on both ends? Basler, an ordained Methodist minister, is director of Criminal Justice and Mercy Ministries, of the Oklahoma United Methodist Conference. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth