Pubdate: Wed, 29 Oct 2008 Source: Santa Barbara Independent, The (CA) Copyright: 2008 The Santa Barbara Independent, Inc. Contact: http://www.independent.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4348 Author: Rick Roney Note: Rick Roney, chairperson of the Santa Barbara County Reentry Project, chairperson of the Sheriff's Blue Ribbon Commission of Jail Overcrowding Cited: Proposition 5 http://www.prop5yes.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) NO ON PROP 5 For the past several years, I have been involved in efforts to improve the reentry process for ex-offenders returning to our County from state prison. Currently the recidivism rate in California is about 70 percent. Approximately 85 percent of parolees are addicts of one sort or another, desperately needing help in breaking their addiction and learning to live a productive life when they are paroled from prison. In Santa Barbara County, we have established a pilot program that is managed by a steering committee that includes Sheriff Bill Brown, District Attorney Christie Stanley, County representatives, local service providers, parole and several other law enforcement officials. This project has received statewide recognition and is considered a model program. In 2007-8, I chaired the Sheriff's Blue Ribbon Commission on Jail Overcrowding. In February 2008 we issued our report recommending that the county build a 304-bed jail in North County, and simultaneously invest significant funds in rehabilitation, recovery, and community corrections programs that would help keep people out of jail. I say this in introduction because I am strongly pro-rehabilitation and strongly supportive of efforts to help ex-offenders change their lives. And I'm voting a strong NO on Prop 5. Here's why: 1) I have a strong bias against initiatives, and, unless there is an overarching reason to support one, and I'm convinced it's well thought out and well written, I vote NO on all propositions. Initiatives are written by special interest groups and never undergo the back and forth of creative critical review necessary for good legislation. The headline of the initiative always contains a good idea. Who wouldn't be for rehabilitation of non-violent offenders? However, initiatives are long, complex laws that implement very detailed prescriptions. As a result, they produce unintended consequences. Once passed, initiatives are very difficult to amend, adjust, or correct. Prop 5 requires an 80 percent agreement from the legislature to change. In other words, it will be impossible to change. 2) This specific initiative, Prop 5, was written by a group (George Soros's foundation) whose basic agenda is legalization of drugs. While I personally think there may be merit in this idea, I don't think it should be snuck in through the back door. And because the public would not generally accept drug legalization, it makes close scrutiny of the details of the initiative important. 3) Some of the troublesome pieces of this legislation to me are: It creates a parallel administration in the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation by creating a second secretary-level position in the department. This secretary would be responsible for rehabilitation programs and activities in the prison system. This position has significant authority (and a huge budget) but does not report to and is not accountable to the governor or the legislature. It's appointed by an independent, newly created commission that, in turn, is not accountable to the governor or legislature either. It's not clear to me who they're accountable to. Prop 5 defines a large amount of money to be spent on rehabilitation in prisons and in communities. It starts out at nearly $500 million per year and increases with inflation and population. The expenditure of this money is not subject to legislative review. It's baked in forever. California has huge fiscal requirements and constraints defined by past initiatives. There are no funding sources for this initiative. This is very bad budget process and is bankrupting the state. There are several parts of the legislation that make me wonder what the real agenda is. For example, while all this money to be spent on rehabilitation, none can be spent on testing participants for alcohol or drug use. This means there is no real accountability for the people in treatment. It would be like telling schools they can teach kids but they can't test them. No professional treatment providers I know of would run a substance abuse program without testing. Prop 5 gives offenders lots more chances at breaking laws without any sanctions in the treatment process. This is bad (and ineffective) rehabilitation. 4) All the law enforcement officials involved in our Reentry Project here in Santa Barbara County are also recommending a "No" vote. They are individually and collectively committed to rehabilitation but do not believe Prop 5 will accomplish what it purports to do because it removes accountability from offenders. In summary, I'm 100% for rehabilitation of non-violent (and violent) offenders. Addiction is the key obstacle to this. Unfortunately, Prop 5, in my view, will set the process backwards. It will promise something it won't deliver. It will cost hundreds of millions of dollars. It will create a large, new, and unaccountable bureaucracy. It will very likely reduce public safety. And eventually it will turn the public against rehabilitation because it didn't work. Vote No on Prop 5. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake